Hi :)

This is something that MS Word does really really badly.  I think documents 
should revert to the language set by the operating system's set-up, the global 
settings for the user.  Specific paragraphs should be easy to set as soemthing 
else but if it's going to revert please lets not take the MS route of reverting 
to en-US at random moments for no reason whatsoever.

Regards from
Tom :)






________________________________
From: Barbara Duprey <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, 26 January, 2011 20:12:15
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Re: Help File

On 1/26/2011 1:53 PM, crl64 wrote:
>
> GRUMPY_BA5TARD wrote:
>>
>> However, your suggestion did give me an idea. I went into
>> Tools\Options\Language Settings\Languages\ and noticed that the User
>> Interface was set to English (USA). Once I changed this to English (UK) it
>> was able to find the UK help file.
>>
>> The developers may want to look at this as it's going to fox a lot of
>> people here in the UK and very possibly a great many other non US users
>> too. I'm guessing that having the User interface default to the same as
>> the Locale setting after installation isn't a big job.
>>
>> Tony
>>
> Just a reminder that language settings, as well as facilities for working in
> at least two languages in the same document, are absolutely vital for an
> application with the ambitions of this one. Two languages can mean a
> document in UK or OZ English that contains a quotation in what they call
> English in the US of A ;-)). For languages like Greek, French&  German, a
> grammar checker is also vital, because everybody makes and misses mistakes
> which look horrible to the reader.
>
> > From my own experience, word processors that try to detect which language
> you're in always get it wrong. Defining user requirements is quite
> difficult. I suppose one solution would be to indicate which languages are
> in use in Document Properties. Another would be to have a way to set the
> language of each paragraph.
>
> Regards

In LibreOffice, as in OpenOffice.org, one of the settings on the Font page of a 
paragraph style 

definition is the language for that paragraph. So if you're using multiple 
languages, all you need 

is to use separate paragraph styles (based on the same style) for each one. 
Note 
that this also 

activates the appropriate installed dictionary for spell checking. Grammar 
checking is another story....

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