Good afternoon, everyone... First, a little bit about the system configuration so you can more easily understand the scope of the problem: This is CentOS/RedHat with all current patches This is Jed Jed Version: 0.99.16 S-Lang Version: 1.4.9 I use Jed nearly entirely as a default text editor/composer, and write both technical and non-technical manuals extensively in it every day. It is by far the best editor for my purposes. However, in the latest permutation of Aspell a number of minor glitches have arisen. Since there is a bit of business where Aspell is going to eventually replace Ispell, when you execute the "fake" Ispell binary, Ispell returns the following information: @(#) International Ispell Version 3.1.20 (but really Aspell 0.50.5) The spelling lookup in Jed works *better* than Ispell ever did, with more words and a greater likelihood of preventing misspelled words, not to mention it offers more related words than Ispell. However, if a word is *not* misspelled, and probably should be placed in the personal dictionary, there is no means to do that from within an editing session, short of manually adding it later. Is there a work-around that will allow a user to add a new word to the personal dictionary, typically called .aspell.en.pws in the user's home directory, while within a Jed editing session? Short of that, could someone on the Jed development team consider writing an interface to Aspell for the current ispell configuration? (such as aspell_init.sl, aspell_common and aspell.sl). Thus far, I have compiled and run Jed on the following diverse Linux machines, all with pretty much the same configuration: RedHat 9 (Nash), as well as 6,7 and 8.x CentOS 3.x,4.x and now 4.1 Debian Sarge FreeBSD 5.x Mandrake (Mandriva for the politically-correct) 9.0, 10 & 10.1 I've been closely following the continuing development of Jed, but this little glitch, which isn't *really* a Jed issue, but affects it directly, has thus far eluded me entirely. Any hints, anyone? Dave -- Dave Laird (Dave@xxxxxxxxxx) The Used Kharma Lot / The Phoenix Project An automatic & random fortune for the Minute: Without fools there would be no wisdom.
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