>Thanks, Christopher. Was assuming care would need to be taken along those and
>similar lines.
Yep. It also can be tripped up by words that have different hyphenations
depending on context, like proj-ect vs pro-ject.
Still, it seems to do a good job most of the time, including on those difficu
Thanks, Christopher. Was assuming care would need to be taken along those and
similar lines.
Don
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 5, 2013, at 11:24 AM, Christopher Smith
wrote:
> I've been using it for a long time. Check carefully, though, because it
> doesn't give you common slang hyphenations
I've been using it for a long time. Check carefully, though, because it doesn't
give you common slang hyphenations like "gon-na", and because it has a
liturgical user base, it returns "bless-ed" instead of "blessed" and "pleas-ed"
instead of "pleased."
Christopher
On Fri Apr 5, at FridayApr 5
This is terrific, Greg! Been wishing for something on this order for a
long time. Thank you for sharing!
Don Hart
On Fri, Apr 5, 2013 at 9:39 AM, Gregory Theisen wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> This is my first post. I simply want to share a very useful tool that I
> found on a website. It is a Lyric
Hello,
This is my first post. I simply want to share a very useful tool that I found
on a website. It is a Lyric Hyphenator (english only). I've been using it for
about a year. It works great and it's free! You simply copy and paste lyrics
into the text box, and it automatically hyphenates