On Tuesday 21 Jul 2009 21:53:12 Aaron Konstam wrote: > On Tue, 2009-07-21 at 17:46 +0100, Anne Wilson wrote: > > On Tuesday 21 Jul 2009 16:18:15 Aaron Konstam wrote: > > > No one responded to my question of the absence of dictionaries for > > > aspell and ispell so I looked further. > > > > > > The aspell rpm at least through f9 put the dictionaries > > > in /usr/lib/aspell-0.60/ > > > They are not there or anywhere I can find in F11. Could someone > > > confirm this so I can do a Bugzilla on aspell? Or maybe no one else > > > cares. > > > > > > What is used in its place. Maybe huspell. > > > > My F11 netbook uses kde-fedora repos, so may be more up to date than > > straight F11. However, /usr/lib/aspell does have the dictionaries here. > > My aspell is 0.60 > > > > Anne > > Well there is always something to learn. I created a kde.repo. My aspell > is also aspell-o-60.6-5.fc11.i586 and the directory under /usr/lib is > also aspell-0.60 but no dictionaries within. If the aspell on your > system is later yum does not think so on my machine. > > I am boggled by the idea that kde has its own separate repository for > f11. What would that be. I installed kde through the fedora repos so I > would expect all kde updates would come from fedora repos. > kde-fedora is where packages are built for kde and go through a testing phase. It's a bit like running a stable f11 with a rawhide kde, except that you can choose which level you want to work at. I have one system that has both the unstable and unstable-testing enabled. Packages that behave well and cause ew problems go into the main fedora repo shortly after, so you are not missing anything. > Can someone explain all this? Especially since aspell is not a > particularly kde product. > The kde-fedora repo has little to do with your aspell problem. As has been explained, the developer decided against putting a dictionary into the package. Now that may look nonsense to you, but to the rest of the world having an en-US dictionary installed is not helpful. :-) > Any further testimony on this matter. Is it Bugzilla time or not? > If you feel that the developer made a wrong decision, by all means tell him so in bugzilla, but as I said, think about the rest of us. As long as it is documented that you have to install dictionaries, and it is, I personally think that's OK. I don't actually remember doing it, but obviously I must have seen the documentation and done it, since it is working fine. Anne -- New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org Just found a cool new feature? Add it to UserBase
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
-- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines