Tks for that - it worked - at last...
Richard Neal wrote:
I installed Thunderbird and I got the same problem.
I looked in the install log under ~/./thunderbird/*default* and what its
trying to do is install the dictionary in a system folder that needs
"root" permissions.
East way to get around this is just run mozilla-thunderbird as root
(type su then root password in a terminal then type mozilla-thunderbird)
When Thunderbird tries to do a setup just skip it.
Open the extensions menu drag and drop the dictionary file on the
extensions window, bingo installed.
Now start Thunderbird under your user account per normal.
Goto Edit->Preferences click on the Composition Icon then the Spelling
Tab, and in the drop down menu is the Australian dictionary.
in a On Thu, 2006-05-18 at 19:22 +1000, Howard Lowndes wrote:
I have been trying to install an en-AU dictionary in TB.
It downloads fine and I have the file located and TB says that it has
been installed, but it still fails to show up in the spell checker.
Any help...?
--
Howard.
LANNet Computing Associates - Your Linux people <http://lannetlinux.com>
When you want a computer system that works, just choose Linux;
When you want a computer system that works, just, choose Microsoft.
--
Flatter government, not fatter government; abolish the Australian states.
Regards
Richard Neal
Real Men don't make backups. They upload it via ftp and let the world
mirror it.
-- Linus Torvalds
--
Howard.
LANNet Computing Associates - Your Linux people <http://lannetlinux.com>
When you want a computer system that works, just choose Linux;
When you want a computer system that works, just, choose Microsoft.
--
Flatter government, not fatter government; abolish the Australian states.
--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/
Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html