On Mon, 15 Apr 2019 15:14:49 +0000 jonathon <toki.kantoor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 4/15/19 12:26 PM, Eike Rathke wrote: > > Adding arbitrary dictionary languages (as long as they strictly > > follow the BCP 47 language tag specification) works since quite a > > while (2014?) already. Only if you hacked the text to declare the CTL or CJK language as appropriate to be the one of the dictionary. Otherwise, you could only use such a dictionary for a 'Western' script. As recently as 2015, another issue was that I was having to regenerate hunspell/utf_info.cxx for a LibreOffice build so that it would accept word characters as word characters. I don't know how well that file tracks the Unicode standard nowadays. When should Pali spell-checking in the extended Lao script (Pali support to 1930's standards was only added this year) only have problems due to the inadequacy of the dictionaries? > > New(er) in the mentioned mechanism is the > > ability to add a language also to the CTL or CJK sections where > > previously it was only possible to add to the (misnamed) "Western" > > section, and give the language list entries a proper UI name > > instead of showing just the language tag. > Thanks. > I wasn't aware that that functionality was present. > I'll play with over the next month or so, then write about in my > long-neglected blog. An interesting experiment would be to try adding a language to both Western and CTL (as with Mongolian and some minor SEA languages) or Western and CJK (various Zhuang writing systems), though I suppose it won't hurt to simply disambiguate by script. In general, tagging has the potential to get very messy, e.g. Pali in Lanna script as used in Northern Thailand as opposed to Pali in Lanna script as used in North-eastern Thailand. (Yes, there are systematic spelling differences between the two.) Richard. _______________________________________________ LibreOffice mailing list LibreOffice@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice