Andas, I found one oddity, though. In Hungrarian, which uses UTF-8, the byte offset into the first data is 6. Which makes sense. For English, which uses ISO8859-1, the byte offset is 10. Again fine. However, in the file I generated, the byte offset is 9. I wonder if there is something there...
-e. On 22 September 2011 17:31, Elanjelian Venugopal <[email protected]> wrote: > Yes. I see OpenOffice.org New Thesaurus, below Hunspell SpellChecker. Both > ticked. -e. > > > On 22 September 2011 17:18, Andras Timar <[email protected]> wrote: > >> 2011/9/22 Elanjelian Venugopal <[email protected]>: >> > Hi Andas, >> > >> > Most other thesauri are created in ISO8859-1 encoding, except Hungarian, >> > which uses UTF-8. The dat and idx files I created look pretty much look >> like >> > the Hun files to me. So, I'm not sure why it's not working... -e. >> > >> >> Did you register it with LibreOffice? I mean via dictionaries.xcu. Do >> you see your thesaurus in Tools - Options - Language Settings - >> Writing Aids? >> >> -- >> Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to [email protected] >> Problems? >> http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ >> Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette >> List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/l10n/ >> All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be >> deleted >> > > -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to [email protected] Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/l10n/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
