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http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=67500
User discoleo changed the following:
What |Old value |New value
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CC|'' |'cloph,sba'
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------- Additional comments from [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sun Aug 6 11:49:07 -0700
2006 -------
The single most important feature in OOo Writer is the replacement list. Non of
the other features helps me so much and eases my work as this one. Indeed, while
most special features are useful only to a limited number of people and only
sometimes, I use the replacemnt list every time I write something (AND THE
WRITER IS USED OF COURSE FOR WRITING).
It is strange how little the office software has evolved in all these years. The
most consistent feature that would ease working would be to enhance the writing
speed and shortcuts are to date the only thing to do this.
I will therefore defend my point again. Shortcuts will greatly enhance the
writing speed and IF SOMEONE DOES NOT USE THEM, he should be encouraged to try
it. They really offer speed, ALL THE TIME.
CORRECTION TO MY LAST POST
==========================
When I mentioned that adjectives do NOT change in German, I meant they do not
change based on gender (m/f/n), BUT THEY DO change in plural, e.g.:
resistent (engl. resistant)
sg. der resistente Keim (the resistant microbe)
pl. die resistenten Keime
Therefore, in the German language, both the adjectives and the nouns do change
in plural.
SUMMARY
=======
I will shortly describe the grammatical changes in various languages:
LATIN LANGUAGES (French, Romanian, Italian, Spanish, ...)
nouns: singular vs plural (some other forms exist in various languages)
in Romanian: the+'noun', as well as a special form: 'noun'+the
e.g. (un) microb (a microbe), microbul (microbe-the)
adjectives: gender and number (some other forms exist, too)
verbs: gender and number, multiple tenses, very complex conjugation
SLAVIC LANGUAGES (Serbo-Croation, Russian, other)
nouns: singular vs plural, and subject vs non-subject
e.g. sg. subject: 'pjesma' je ljepa (pjesma (Serbo-Croatian) = song)
sg. complement: ti pevas 'pjesmu'
pl. subject: 'pjesme' su ljepe (complement identical in pl)
adjectives: gender, number
verbs: gender, number, a number of tenses (less than in latin, but still
enough; in Russian there are special froms for transitive vs intransitive)
GERMAN
nouns: only number
adjectives: number
verbs: gender, number and multiple tenses
(English is a germanic language, too, but its grammatic is far more easier.)
I know that Hungarian grammatic is awful, but I do not speak hungarian,
therefore I cannot reliably describe what conjugates when (but I understand that
everything conjugates in a very complex fashion). This is mostly true of
Finnish, too.
I hope that this will encourage the developers to try to implement wildcards (or
as a minimal feature, a second replacement list, where any occurence is
replaced, even if inside a word).
VERBS
=====
A last note is pertinent. I have not mentioned verbs in my first post. Indeed, I
do not have any shortcuts for verbs:
- most verbs are short (except technical verbs, BUT see later)
- most languages have very complex conjugation for verbs (6+ forms for present
tense)
- therefore I would need at least 6 shortcuts for basic verb conjugation and
this is completely impractical (in english are only 2 forms, but there are still
different tenses)
Without wildcards, verb shortucts are completely impossible (even in English).
Another problem of verbs is their different morphology based on transitive vs
intransitive use (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intransitive_verbs for more
details), which is quite complex in various languages.
WILDCARDS IN ENGLISH
=====================
Even when writing english text, I would benefit from wildcards in my shortcut
list. One use would be for verbs (he/she/it vs all other forms and different
tenses). But there are other words like nouns derived from verbs or adjectives/
nouns, where I would like to have only one shortcut. This is particularly true
for technical terms, where one uses them both as nouns, verbs or adjectives/
adverbs.
a pertinent example:
process, processes, processed, processor, processors, processing
Instead of writing process, consider using only px, and you will write many
IT-texts a little bit faster (at least if there are wildcards implemented).
(This is even faster then the minimum 3 letters needed for word suggestion, and
if you had 'procedure' into your suggestion list, you wouldn't benefit from that
list at all, because of course, 'procedure' is ranked higher than 'process',
i.e. it comes first.)
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