On 2019-03-16 14:00:34 -0600, Rob Sargent wrote: > What sort of content is in your field of type text? Certainly, in > English > prose, “rob” is different than “Rob” > > > I disagree. While the grammar for written English has rules when to > write "rob" and when to write "Rob", that distinction usually carries no > semantic difference. Consider: [...] > I don’t think it’s solely about the semantics. One might be contractually > obligated to always spell a name in some exact way including it capitalization. > For instance if referring to "Rob Sargent” as a quote or accreditation, then > it’s not okay to let a typo “rob Sargent” go through. 1) Such contracts might exist, but they are only binding to the signing parties, they don't affect what is commonly understood as "the English language". Everybody else will see it as an obvious typo and won't assume that this refers to some "rob Sargent" who is a different person than "Rob Sargent". 2) I don't think the OP was talking about spell-checking. And in any case spell-checking is more complicated than simply comparing strings byte by byte. hp -- _ | Peter J. Holzer | we build much bigger, better disasters now |_|_) | | because we have much more sophisticated | | | hjp@xxxxxx | management tools. __/ | http://www.hjp.at/ | -- Ross Anderson <https://www.edge.org/>
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