HunSpell, remove words from .dic
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@Pan-Jan, ich bitte Dir an das wir dein Problem nochmal ausführlich diskutieren und bin bereit Dir dies in Deutsch zu erläutern.
Ich erwarte aber, dass Du da mitarbeitest, soll heißen ich werde auf konkrete Frage antworten.
Ich werde aber nicht deine Hand halten und dich Schritt für Schritt zur Lösung begleiten.Meine erste Frage hierzu wäre, was ist eigentlich das Problem.
Hinweis: ich erwarte keine Antwort ala “ich will ein Wort aus einem Wörterbuch entfernen” sondern eher "mein Ziel ist es mit Applikation A
das und jenes zu machen und muß hierbei das polnische Wörtbuch ändern. Die muß ich während der Laufzeit oder bei jedem Start … was auch immer - weißt Du worauf ich hinaus ziele? Nur wenn wir verstehen was das eigentliche Ziel ist können wir auch vernünftige Lösungen zu einem Problem geben.Nun bist Du an der Reihe.
@Pan-Jan, please let us discuss your problem in detail and I am ready to explain it to you in German.
But I expect you to cooperate, that means I will work on answer a specific question.
But I will not hold your hand and accompany you step by step to the solution.My first question would be, what is actually the problem.
Note: I don’t expect an answer like “I want to remove a word from a dictionary” but rather "my goal is to use application A
to do this and that and must change the Polish dictionary. I have to do that during runtime or at every start … whatever - you know what I’m aiming at? Only if we understand what the real goal is we can give reasonable solutions to a problem.Now it is your turn.
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@PeterJones said in HunSpell, remove words from .dic:
So I did a bit of searching, and found that the Hunspell library has a man 4 hunspell manpage describing the dictionary file. You can see it online on sites like https://linux.die.net/man/4/hunspell
:-(
You missed my link, didn’t you? -
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@Ekopalypse
Your German is not bad. I expected worse.
But I found some bugs.
You can compare both texts. Remember the principle of using ss and ß and: Dein, Deine, Dich.Ich bitte Dir an das wir Dein Problem nochmal ausführlich diskutieren und bin bereit Dir dies in Deutsch zu erläutern.
Ich erwarte aber, dass Du da mitarbeitest, soll heißen ich werde auf konkrete Frage antworten.
Ich werde aber nicht Deine Hand halten und Dich Schritt für Schritt zur Lösung begleiten.Meine erste Frage hierzu wäre, was ist eigentlich das Problem.
Hinweis: ich erwarte keine Antwort ala “ich will ein Wort aus einem Wörterbuch entfernen”, sondern eher mein Ziel ist es mit Applikation A
das und jenes zu machen und muss hierbei das polnische Wörterbuch ändern. Die muss ich während der Laufzeit oder bei jedem Start … was auch immer – weißt Du worauf ich hinaus ziele? Nur, wenn wir verstehen was das eigentliche Ziel ist, können wir auch vernünftige Lösungen zu einem Problem geben.I will not react to your statements.
They are very destructive.
Very negative energy emanates from them.- “My opinion - you are a troll, but you are free to prove that this is not the case”.
- I’m sure it’s Your merit that such nonsense came out.
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Nun was soll ich sagen, ich habe bekommen was ich erwartet habe.
Wieder hast Du in einer Diskussion die Richtung geändert.
Ich gebe dir Recht, eine weitere Kommunikation macht wenig/keinen Sinn.Eines noch zum Schluß. Ja, die Kommas fehlen und “muß” muss nach der Rechtschreibreform als “muss” geschrieben werden.
Dein, deine und dich müssen aber nicht groß geschrieben werden. Auch nach der Reform ist dies nur eine Empfehlung.
Den offensichtlichsten Fehler, welchen ich absichtlich gemacht habe, da ich dachte, es wird bestimmt wieder eine Diskussion über Online-Übersetzer starten, hast Du nicht gefunden. Seltsam …
Also, solltest Du weitere Rechtschreib- oder Grammatikfehler finden, so darfst Du sie gerne behalten, ansonsten wünsche ich viel Glück mit deiner Art und Weise.Well what can I say, I got what I expected.
Again, you changed direction in a discussion.
I agree with you, further communication makes little/no sense.One more thing in conclusion. Yes, the commas are missing and “muß” must be written as “muss” after the spelling reform.
But dein, deine and ihr don’t have to be capitalized. Even after the reform this is only a recommendation.
The most obvious mistake, which I made intentionally, because I thought it will certainly start a discussion about online translators again, you have not found. Strange…
Well, if you find any more spelling or grammar mistakes, you are welcome to keep them, otherwise I wish you good luck with your way. -
You’re right. We finally agree!
“dein, deine, dich” it is recommended to write in lowercase
to make it clear that we do not respect the interlocutor
or we consider him a troll.
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@Ekopalypse I see you are new to the Internet. Please allow me to elucidate how to answer a question on said Internet: answer the question.
You see it does not matter who asked the question or why they asked: people will find this question in the future. This may be difficult for you to comprehend but when you “answer” a question on the Internet you’re not writing out a telegraph to the person asking the question, you are making a broadcast transmission to everyone that is also asking this question. When you say silly things like, “Haven’t you already asked this question?” You’re demonstrating you don’t really know anything about how searches work, thus demonstrating your “answer” lacks any credibility.
Not that you actually gave an answer. Instead you demonstrated the thing people hate the most about kids that think they know something but are really just demonstrating how the Dunning-Kruger effect works. I’ll wait for you to look that up.
In closing, to paraphrase Thumper, “If you can’t say an answer, don’t say nothing at all.”
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@AnswersOrDont said in HunSpell, remove words from .dic:
I see you are new to the Internet
I see you are also new to the Internet.
Internet-savvy people don’t revive a 4-year-old thread just to berate someone.
You also say “answer the question” and then don’t state what question wasn’t answered.
So, basically, your posting was nothing of value, and mildly annoying. -
I see you are new to the Internet.
Not really.
Please allow me to elucidate how to answer a question on said Internet: answer the question.
My English teacher always said that you can’t explain a word by using it to explain something.
You see it does not matter who asked the question or why they asked: people will find this question in the future.
Exactly, that is the reason not to ask the same question on the same forum multiple times by the same person.
This may be difficult for you to comprehend but when you “answer” a question on the Internet you’re not writing out a telegraph
to the person asking the question, you are making a broadcast transmission to everyone that is also asking this question.You are wrong, I sent my reply with Tcp. Udp is not reliable enough.
When you say silly things like, “Haven’t you already asked this question?”
Where is the context that makes this question seem stupid? If X has already asked this question, then this answer is not stupid
You’re demonstrating you don’t really know anything about how searches work,
I have the impression that I was able to find the previously asked questions, so I seem to know how the search works.
thus demonstrating your “answer” lacks any credibility.
I don’t believe in faith at all.
Not that you actually gave an answer. Instead you demonstrated the thing people hate the most about kids that think they know something but are really just demonstrating how the Dunning-Kruger effect works. I’ll wait for you to look that up.
I don’t need to look it up, I don’t believe in these pseudo-psychologists.
I could already do it in kindergarten, on one leg.
I learnt it in Mandarin on the way to school, always uphill, there and back.In closing, to paraphrase Thumper, “If you can’t say an answer, don’t say nothing at all.”
I tried that at school, but it didn’t work well, so I’d rather not.
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Some topics are troll magnets. Are they seeking, HunSpell, .dic, or something deeper?