On 2020-09-06 16:08, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 9/6/20 2:53 PM, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
I removed "yo" from
/usr/lib64/thunderbird/dictionaries/en_US.dic, line 48294
/usr/lib64/thunderbird/dictionaries is a link to /usr/share/myspell so
you've modified the system en_US dictionary. Your change will be
reverted with the next update to that file.
but no happy camping with that either
Removing that line affected the command line spell checking for me.
However, after extensive investigation and testing, I have no idea where
Thunderbird gets the en_US dictionary from. It must be builtin
somewhere, but I can't find that either. If you change the spell
checking to a different "language", it loads the dictionary files for
that language. But it never loads the en_US one under any conditions
that I've tried.
I wonder if this has anything to do with it. This is my
dictionary entries from prefs.js:
user_pref("dictionarysearch.accesskey2", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.accesskey3", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.accesskey4", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.menutext1", "Dictionary Search for \"$\"");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.menutext2", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.menutext3", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.menutext4", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.url1",
"http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=$"); <------- Huh?
user_pref("dictionarysearch.url2", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.url3", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.url4", "");
Look like Thunderbird is look at the web!
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=yo
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