Hi! I do a fair amount of LaTeXing, across a wider selection of subjects. Since most of these subjects have their own jargon, I usually add quite a few words to my local spell files (using zg).
The problem is that since there are a lot of acronyms, there is a good chance that the spellchecker misses a typo because it is a proper word/acronym in a different context/document. So ideally, I'd be able to have a spell file per directory (this would also make using version control easier). All this while still using the user-global spell file in ~/.vim. Algorithmically: - Load system-global word lists* - Load word lists from runtimepath* - if there is a possibly empty local spellfile conforming to some naming scheme, load it, implicitly creating the .spl file When spellchecking - When using zg/zw, use local-to-directory spell file, keeping .spl up-to-date, of course. If there is no dir-local spell file, just use the user-global file (usually in ~/.vim). While I'm sure I could come up with a vim script to do all of this, I'd very much prefer to use something already done. My vim script skills are waaaay rusty and why reinvent a wheel (badly at that). Even better would to achieve this (or some close approximation) using vim options. Regards, Tobias -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php
