[EMAIL PROTECTED] suggested (thank you):
Why don't you try useing a hard space character instead of just a normal
space to delimit sentences. A hard space is a blank ascii character of fixed
width that wont wrap at the end of a line. At least on the mac you make them
by typing
Hello.
When a user clicks on a word in a sentence (not a cr-line but a
grammatical sentence), how could I find out the number of that sentence?
I'd like to create sound files for each of the sentences in a paragraph,
and then label each sound file with a corresponding number. For example,
I'd
Hello.
When a user clicks on a word in a sentence (not a cr-line but a
grammatical sentence), how could I find out the number of that sentence?
I'd like to create sound files for each of the sentences in a paragraph,
and then label each sound file with a corresponding number. For example,
I'd
At 8:16 PM +0900 1/2/2000, Nicolas R Cueto wrote:
Hello.
When a user clicks on a word in a sentence (not a cr-line but a
grammatical sentence), how could I find out the number of that sentence?
I'd like to create sound files for each of the sentences in a paragraph,
and then label each sound
Here's an approach that handles text where all sentences end with a
period (.) - admittedly not very real-world, but maybe it will stir some
thoughts. This handler converts the user's click on a word to a sentence
number:
on mouseUp
set the itemDelimiter to "."
put the clickChunk into
Dave Cragg wrote:
I'm sure there's no way to accurately identify an English sentence
through a script unless you can doctor your text in some way with
your own delimeters. (Double spaces between sentences and only
between sentences, for example.)
The text is already delimited, with a "/".
Nicolas R Cueto [EMAIL PROTECTED] asked.
Hello.
When a user clicks on a word in a sentence (not a cr-line but a
grammatical sentence), how could I find out the number of that sentence?
I'd like to create sound files for each of the sentences in a paragraph,
and then label each sound file