That is what i was planning although i have already spend the last week (about 20 frustrating hours) working on my own.  Thus far it works and extremely fast too. ( The console version i use to test is slow because of output but when i nix all but the essentials it does the look up in a fraction of a second and caches 5500 words in less than a second.) It is not done yet.  I have been doing it in C++ (does it make a difference?) and i will look at yours but i'd hate to abandon so much work (also i'm not too familiar with C).
 
I must admit i don't understand where it will be applied (i'm new to linux and open office.org) but i think that it will work from anywhere when done.  I could use some pointers on what type of output i can return from this program so that it will integrate better.  If you have any suggestions please let me know.
 
Walter
 
P.S. -- What does "Vriendelijke groet" mean, i'm multinationaly illiterate.

Simon Brouwer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Walter,

At 17:35 4-4-2005, you wrote:
>I have volunteered to take up the task of writing the
>hyphenation program. Does anyone have any more info
>than was available on the web site? Any tips or
>suggestions?

Do you mean something like the TeX patgen hyphenation program?

Quite some time ago I converted this program into C source, using the web2c
tool. But somehow I never came around to build and debug it.

If you are interested, you can download the files here:
simonbr.xs4all.nl/patgen.zip


Vriendelijke groet,
Simon Brouwer.

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