
- #SPELL CHECKER ON AQUAMACS HOW TO#
- #SPELL CHECKER ON AQUAMACS INSTALL#
- #SPELL CHECKER ON AQUAMACS UPDATE#
With a single click multiple mistakes are corrected. Spell checking has never been easier and faster. Ginger corrects your typos, phonetic mistakes, severe spelling mistakes, and misused words based on the context of a sentence.
#SPELL CHECKER ON AQUAMACS HOW TO#
I haven't mapped out any of this in detail yet, but I'm interested in any thoughts about how to go about it, and in finding out if anyone is interested in working on it. Ginger Spell Checker corrects even the most severe spelling mistakes with unmatched accuracy. Or you might have some other ideas about how to approach this. Similarly, we could work on more isolated pieces of the merging the C/Obj-C code, although some of it will of course be a bit tangled.

With a group working on it, we could break it out by focusing small pieces of work on the Aquamacs features and Lisp files, stubbing out anything that needs a new or changed interface in the C/Obj-C code. Other changes around the edges (documentation, auxiliary files, etc.)I.Aquamacs changes to base Emacs C/Objective C code.Aquamacs changes to base Emacs Lisp code.Bundled packages from elsewhere (e.g, AUCTeX, ESS).Aquamacs-specific addons and configuration in Lisp code.Aspell is also available as a Windows executable.
#SPELL CHECKER ON AQUAMACS INSTALL#
On Ubuntu/Debian, this can be installed using: sudo aptitude install aspell. In rough terms, we have the following big areas of Aquamacs code: The option -c tells aspell to check the file, -t puts it in TeX mode, and -d gives the base name of the main dictionary to use. If some of you are interested in helping out, we can approach it a different way.
#SPELL CHECKER ON AQUAMACS UPDATE#
If I were undertaking the update entirely on my own, I would be tempted to run a giant merge with the current Emacs code, hack through the merge conflicts, and the debug the result. Ultimately, it would be nice if Aquamacs was a fairly clean add-on to the base Emacs, but there's a lot of work to get there. I'd like to end up bringing them closer together, without sacrificing places where Aquamacs has improvements. The core Emacs code for the Mac has changed a lot since Aquamacs was first created, and diverged because there were different ideas at different times. Whichever way we approach it, I want to try to maintain the git history as best we can. There are a couple of ways to approach this, and I'd appreciate any thoughts about what might work best. Furthermore grammar error's are highlighted in yellow. Errors will be underlined in different colours: we will mark seplling errors with red underilnes. Write or paste your text here too have it checked continuously. It's a big jump, and there will probably be some messy parts. LanguageTool is your intelligent writing assistant for all common browsers and word processors. The next major release, tentatively called 4.0, will be Aquamacs based on Emacs 28. Right now, there is no plan for a 3.7 release, but it could happen if needed. It has many bug fixes to the current codebase, which is based on Emacs 25.3.

The next planned release of Aquamacs is 3.6, which should be in beta soon. This note is the beginning of a discussion about how to get Aquamacs updated to a current version of the main Emacs distribution.
