And why doesn't it define 'gullible'?How does the OED define "verbose?"
And why doesn't it define 'gullible'?How does the OED define "verbose?"
Maybe, but if not the original author of the software, I suspect that those users must have been thinking about key positions on a keyboard. As I just wrote, I seriously doubt that (m)any people who didn't know about keyboards would even suspect that "ijcoereft" was meant to be "incorrect".I believe the alternatives offered are those that users who have signed up to the "help Microsoft improve..." program eventually settled for, i.e. the software collects the user responses and uses those to amend the internal dictionary.
Agreed, but the probability (sorry EFLI!) of anyone making that particular combination of typos when trying to type "incorrect" must be incredibly small (and the number of possible mis-typings of "incorrect" with 3 or 4 'key errors' extremely large). Even with my pretty awful typing, I don't usually hit the wrong key more than once or twice in any one wordNo, but if a number of people had corrected "ijcoereft" to "incorrect" then the software would have learnt that.
Another interesting thing (I would say an 'undesirable' functionality) about the Word spell-checker is that is seems unable to deal with any mis-spelling of a word that has been user-added to its dictionary....No, but if a number of people had corrected "ijcoereft" to "incorrect" then the software would have learnt that.
In any event, BAS seemed to be implying that he didn't think that spell-checkers were very good with 'nearby key errors'.
How you can infer that I was, or might have been, saying that they all have that problem, I really don't know.am I the only one who sometimes looks at the list of suggestions offered by a spelling checker....
Next time I encounter an example, I'll hopefully remember this, and come and tell you about it.I think I've at least partially disproved that belief, regardless of whether it is coping with such errors because of the way the algorithms were originally written or because of subsequent 'learning' on the basis of user input.
I've just realised that my previous comments all related to the Word 2000 spell-checker. The Word 2010 one is a bit different, in at least some senses 'inferior' ....... I have just added "presbyopia" (which wasn't previously recognised) to my Word dictionary. It now correctly recognises that word if I type it correctly, but does not suggest the correct spelling (or any other spelling) even if I make a single simple typing error - even a phonetic one like "prezbyopia".
Thanks - but, as I've just written, it appears that the spell-checker I was examining does not 'think' about 'nearby keys' - once a character is incorrect, it seems to make the same suggestion(s) whether the erroneous character relates to a nearby key on the keyboard or a randomly-chosen one whose key is at the other end of the keyboard. However, that's just one checker - there may be some which do 'think about nearby keys'.Next time I encounter an example, I'll hopefully remember this, and come and tell you about it.
Well, I've now played a fair bit with the two Word spell-checkers, and have yet to find any case in which it suggests the correct word when there is an 'adjacent key error' but does not suggest the same correct word when one changes that erroneous character to anything else incorrect (not 'adjacent key').Maybe/probably. ... The thing is, you wouldn't know, for if you make a miss-hit error and the checker offers you the right word, it would have done it's job, and you'd not know how it had done it. It's only when it doesn't offer you the right one that you realise it's trying to find one close to what you typed without considering the possibility of an adjacent key miss-hit.
Now there's a thing.... incredibly commonplace ...
That's certainly consistent with my conclusion in relation to the two spell-checkers I've looked at.I think it's a sound conclusion. I've not done any testing, but I have, frequently enough for it to register as something which often happens, noticed it not suggesting the word I wanted when that word is both incredibly commonplace and is found by considering adjacent key miss-hits.
Quite so - it's what is known in the trade as "evolution of language"Now there's a thing. When did a word meaning not believable come to mean very? I could have just as well written "unbelievably commonplace" and prompted the same question.
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