Re: Re: mark a region not to be spell-checked

2002-08-19 Thread Guenter Milde

On Mon, 19 Aug 2002 08:18:45 +0200 wrote Andre Poenitz [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 On Mon, Aug 19, 2002 at 12:19:47AM +1000, Ben Stanley wrote:
  My thesis contains some things like algorithms and a few words that just 
  should not be spellchecked. Is there any way that I can tel LyX not to 
  spell-check them?
 
 None that I am aware of. I usually accept these words for the session
 ...

Wouldn't it be an option to let the spellchecker ignore all words that are
not in the documents default language (i.e. blue underlined in the GUI)?

Guenter



--
G.Milde at physik.tu-dresden.de




Re: Re: mark a region not to be spell-checked

2002-08-19 Thread Guenter Milde

On Mon, 19 Aug 2002 08:18:45 +0200 wrote Andre Poenitz [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 On Mon, Aug 19, 2002 at 12:19:47AM +1000, Ben Stanley wrote:
  My thesis contains some things like algorithms and a few words that just 
  should not be spellchecked. Is there any way that I can tel LyX not to 
  spell-check them?
 
 None that I am aware of. I usually accept these words for the session
 ...

Wouldn't it be an option to let the spellchecker ignore all words that are
not in the documents default language (i.e. blue underlined in the GUI)?

Guenter



--
G.Milde at physik.tu-dresden.de




Re: Re: mark a region not to be spell-checked

2002-08-19 Thread Guenter Milde

On Mon, 19 Aug 2002 08:18:45 +0200 wrote Andre Poenitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> On Mon, Aug 19, 2002 at 12:19:47AM +1000, Ben Stanley wrote:
> > My thesis contains some things like algorithms and a few words that just 
> > should not be spellchecked. Is there any way that I can tel LyX not to 
> > spell-check them?
 
> None that I am aware of. I usually "accept these words for the session"
> ...

Wouldn't it be an option to let the spellchecker ignore all words that are
not in the documents default language (i.e. blue underlined in the GUI)?

Guenter



--
G.Milde at physik.tu-dresden.de




Re: mark a region not to be spell-checked

2002-08-18 Thread Andre Poenitz

On Mon, Aug 19, 2002 at 12:19:47AM +1000, Ben Stanley wrote:
 My thesis contains some things like algorithms and a few words that just 
 should not be spellchecked. Is there any way that I can tel LyX not to 
 spell-check them?
 
 In Microsoft Word, there used to be a special 'language' that you could 
 mark text with which basically told the spell-checker to ignore it. I 
 can't find any similar or equivalent feature in LyX.

None that I am aware of. I usually accept these words for the session
...

Andre'

-- 
Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security,
will not have, nor do they deserve, either one. (T. Jefferson)



Re: mark a region not to be spell-checked

2002-08-18 Thread Andre Poenitz

On Mon, Aug 19, 2002 at 12:19:47AM +1000, Ben Stanley wrote:
 My thesis contains some things like algorithms and a few words that just 
 should not be spellchecked. Is there any way that I can tel LyX not to 
 spell-check them?
 
 In Microsoft Word, there used to be a special 'language' that you could 
 mark text with which basically told the spell-checker to ignore it. I 
 can't find any similar or equivalent feature in LyX.

None that I am aware of. I usually accept these words for the session
...

Andre'

-- 
Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security,
will not have, nor do they deserve, either one. (T. Jefferson)



Re: mark a region not to be spell-checked

2002-08-18 Thread Andre Poenitz

On Mon, Aug 19, 2002 at 12:19:47AM +1000, Ben Stanley wrote:
> My thesis contains some things like algorithms and a few words that just 
> should not be spellchecked. Is there any way that I can tel LyX not to 
> spell-check them?
> 
> In Microsoft Word, there used to be a special 'language' that you could 
> mark text with which basically told the spell-checker to ignore it. I 
> can't find any similar or equivalent feature in LyX.

None that I am aware of. I usually "accept these words for the session"
...

Andre'

-- 
Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security,
will not have, nor do they deserve, either one. (T. Jefferson)