Thanks, Jonathan.
This seems all well and good if document A is for an American (US) audience, document B is for a British audience, and document C is for a Canadian audience. What about a single document with an audience in all three countries? A travel article to be published in both a US and a UK publication, for example. It's not clear to me that multiple templates are an optimum solution compared with Select All / Format / Character / Language x / Spell check / Save.
Regards, Dom
Jonathon Coombes wrote:
On Thu, 2005-05-12 at 15:35 -0400, Dominic Morris wrote:
Counter intuitive, I know, but text language is set via Format / Character ...
<tip author="Jonathon Coombes" subject="Language templates"
category="Writer">
If you are working with specific languages, it is recommended that
you have a separate template for each one. This can be done by setting the language via Format > Character and save as a template,
or even the default template if you use that languague more. This can also be used to allow multiple languages in one document to be
spellchecked with different dictionaries.
</tip>
David Garson wrote:
It is very urgent and your help would be very much appreciated!
I am a travel writer, writing my articles in English (GreatBritain). However, some of my articles have to be "americanised" and however much I try to change the language under Extra-Options-Languages etc. it always slips back to Great Britain English.
Any idea, what to do?
Thank you very much.
David
-- Namaste! Dom Morris
The ocean refuses no river
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