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{{Deprecated|Vim now has built-in spell checking. See <tt>:help spell</tt>}}
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I have written an HTML document to help others use Vim as a basic text processing application. It discusses how to integrate spell checking, dictionary, and thesaurus applications. It also talks about wrapping lines, indentation, justification, and the vim settings that effect the behavior of these operations. The document can be found at:
 
I have written an HTML document to help others use Vim as a basic text processing application. It discusses how to integrate spell checking, dictionary, and thesaurus applications. It also talks about wrapping lines, indentation, justification, and the vim settings that effect the behavior of these operations. The document can be found at:
   

Revision as of 03:33, 22 July 2009

Tip 290 Printable Monobook Previous Next

created July 26, 2002 · complexity intermediate · author David Highley · version 6.0


This tip is deprecated for the following reasons:

Vim now has built-in spell checking. See :help spell

I have written an HTML document to help others use Vim as a basic text processing application. It discusses how to integrate spell checking, dictionary, and thesaurus applications. It also talks about wrapping lines, indentation, justification, and the vim settings that effect the behavior of these operations. The document can be found at:

http://www.highley-recommended.com/text-processing.html

Everything has been tested with UNIX, Linux, Windows, and Windows with Cygwin patforms.

Comments

I used above successfully

If you happen to use Aspell on a Unix "shell" eg MKS on Win32 you may want

:set shellslash (unix forward slash)

Also if you map the full path to aspell in your map eg c:/vim/aspell/aspell.exe you wont need an environment variable

map <Leader>s <Esc>:!c:/vim/aspell/aspell.exe -c --dont-backup %<CR>:e! %<CR><CR>
or
map <Leader>s <Esc>:!c:\vim\aspell\aspell.exe -c --dont-backup %<CR>:e! %<CR><CR>

People love to put spaces in their file names in MS Windows these days. I used the aspell lines provided with the full path as noted by zzapper, david at tvis dot co dot uk. At first his example did not work because I was using someone's file with a space in it for testing. I then changed

map <Leader>s <Esc>:!c:\vim\aspell\aspell.exe -c --dont-backup %<CR>:e! %<CR><CR>
to
map <Leader>s <Esc>:!c:\vim\aspell\aspell.exe -c --dont-backup "%"<CR>:e! "%"<CR><CR>

Please note the quotes around the percent sign, "%". Both the tip and David's note are very effective. You'd want to do something similar on Linux too. Especially if you are serving up files with Samba. See http://www.samba.org