T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
373.1 | | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Thu Jul 02 1987 19:09 | 3 |
| A fine list. I answer to all of them except Brownie.
B...
|
373.2 | Crap systems | WELSWS::MANNION | | Mon Jul 06 1987 07:24 | 15 |
| OSI comes out as EASY OOZY ICY, which is near enough for jazz.
Spelling checkers have a deficiency though - they are only spelling
checkers. If someone puts in the wrong word spelled correctly, and
no-one proof reads the text, or they read it and say "Hm, must be
right" then DECspell will not help.
An example - I recently read an old proposal which had gone out
to a prospect. In it was a section on redundancy of data, where
the author had talked about a central suppository of data. I kid
you not. No-one had questioned this, and out it had gone.
We didn't get the business.
Phillip
|
373.3 | SPELL Not Thesaurus or Use Checker | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Digital Internal Use Only | Mon Jul 06 1987 12:12 | 4 |
| > We didn't get the business.
I'll bet we did but not the kind you mean.
|
373.4 | The butt of our jokes... | IOSG::DUTT | | Tue Jul 07 1987 07:00 | 2 |
| .....I heard there was an enquiry to get to the bottom of it!
|
373.5 | What a cheek! | SED750::GIBBONS | | Tue Jul 07 1987 07:56 | 1 |
| It must have been written by an analyst ...
|
373.6 | As in turn the other? | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Tue Jul 07 1987 09:44 | 2 |
| I'm sure we were told where to put *that* data...
|
373.7 | | AKOV76::BOYAJIAN | I want a hat with cherries | Fri Jul 17 1987 07:25 | 5 |
| Someone certainly made an ass of himself.
But that's nether here not there.
--- jerry
|
373.8 | Fun with SPELL | ATLAST::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T... | Thu Sep 22 1988 15:56 | 64 |
| I too have had fun with SPELL. My writing group requires that
everything we produce be run through it. Though it's great for
catching those typos, it has so many false alarms and missed
signals, I sometimes wonder if it's worth it. Though most
everything's been added to personal dictionaries by now, I
still remember things like substituting dactylic for DECalc
and stuff like that.
Just for fun, I ran a list of all the members in my group
through it. We got stuff like Cowhide E. Fuel (Cody E. Faile),
Giant Marrows (Janet Myers), and -- to continue the scatological
theme of this note -- Anal Portal (who shall remain nameless,
poor guy).
Since you probably wouldn't enjoy that list as much as we did
here, here's a list of the presidents (plus whoever will be the
41st) that I ran through SPELL:
Garage Washington
Join Idioms
Thermos Jefferson
Jimmies Metazoan
Jams Moonier
Join Queens Idioms
Andrew Jackson
Martin Van Barren
Whilom Henry Horizon
Join Taller
Gammas Nix Folk
Zachary Tiller
Milord Filmier
Franklin Pierce
Games Buchanan
Abraham Lincoln
Andrew Johnson
Ulysses S. Grant
Rutherford B. Hiatus
Gammas Garfield
Chaster Earthier
Groovier Cleveland
Benjamin Horizon
Whelm McKinley
Theatre Roosevelt
Whilom Toward Tuft
Woodier Wilson
Warren Hoarding
Kelvin Collage
Herbert Whoever
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Harry Trombone
Dwight Eisenhower
Join Canoed
London Johnson
Dike Nixon
Gooey Ford
Jimmies Critter
Runny Region
Garage Bush
Mutual Dukakis
I can't decide if mmy favorite's Rutherford B. Hiatus, Herbert
Whoever, or Harry Trombone.
-- Cliff Undersign
|
373.9 | | CNTROL::HENRIKSON | | Mon Jan 02 1989 16:37 | 7 |
| > Ulysses S. Grant
I'll never forget 8th grade history class when one of my classmates
prounounced this name as "useless grunt". I guess it was only flatulence after
all. :^)
Pete
|
373.10 | Can you ear me? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Fri Apr 24 1992 08:50 | 5 |
| Seems this is as good aplace as any to list funny phrases that get past
spell checkers. I've noticed more and more of these in books lately.
I guess proofreaders are no longer used. But some are funny; here's
one I came across this morning. In a sentence mentioning a dog's
ears, the phrase was instead "dogs hears".
|
373.11 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Fri Apr 24 1992 09:11 | 12 |
|
My personal favorite came up when checking the /PRIVILEGE=NOSAME
qualifier to the VMS $RUN command. DECspell suggested "nauseum" for
NOSAME and the Houghton-Mifflin corrector suggested that and "noisome"
as well. I could but agree with these evaluations.
My hot button is how spelling correctors handle "fro" -- you'd think
they'd be clever enough allow it only if a preceding "to and" was
found. I think it's much more likely to be a misspelling of "for" and I
can't think of any other usage of "fro."
JP
|
373.12 | gotta love it | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Apr 24 1992 09:54 | 7 |
|
The one time that I used the spell checker, it suggested
I change someone's last name from "Gillis" to "guileless",
which I didn't think he'd appreciate all that much.
Di
|
373.13 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Apr 24 1992 12:14 | 2 |
| The spell checker always suggests changing my name from "Eggers" to
"Augers", which I do not appreciate given my hobby is flying.
|
373.14 | Did I say that?! | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Fri Apr 24 1992 12:56 | 3 |
| RE: .11
What about the movie "Fro Mamma From the Train"? 8^}
|
373.15 | This augurs badly ... | ULYSSE::WADE | | Thu May 07 1992 13:21 | 9 |
| >> The spell checker always suggests changing my name from "Eggers" to
>> "Augers", which I do not appreciate given my hobby is flying.
Duh? Aren't augers boring tools (for boring wood, that is)?
Is it only me that misses the point of your comment? Please
explain it anyway ....
|
373.16 | I believe the expression for dying as your plane spins in... | RDVAX::KALIKOW | The Gods of the Mill grind slowly... | Thu May 07 1992 16:04 | 10 |
| ... is something like "going in like an auger" or "augering in"...
BTW Tom, I concur fully with Jim's suggestion that you change your name
to something more "PROP-itious" like Augurs, which, imho, contrary to
Jim's opinion, I think well.
(And I give MONGO MEGA odds that the preceding paragraph has NEVER been
written down before. But if you act quickly, you can in fact be the
first to speak it aloud, as I also happen to think it's entirely too
dumb to commit it to sound waves, even were I alone in a forest. :-)
|
373.17 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Thu May 07 1992 18:57 | 1 |
| Anyone who flies can't be boring, much less a boring tool
|
373.18 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu May 07 1992 23:26 | 10 |
| Re: .16
>> (And I give MONGO MEGA odds that the preceding paragraph has
>> NEVER been written down before.
I hope you're right. :-)
twe
P.S. What was that "PROP-itious" bit about?
|
373.19 | re .18 that 'PROP-itious' bit | RDVAX::KALIKOW | LANshock! | Fri May 08 1992 05:47 | 8 |
| Hmmm. On reparsing & reconsidering your personal_name, perhaps you
actually don't fly powered aircraft at all... My first thought was
that you fly jets, but now I surmise from your apparent innocence of
PROPellers that you're a glider or balloon pilot...? :-)
If the latter, dis explains your presence in a hot-air-driven
conference like this'un. :-)x10+6
|
373.20 | there must be a better air line here somewhere | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Fri May 08 1992 08:59 | 15 |
| G'day,
Surely it is plane to see, that all theturbo fans would jet down to
see his propitious giro-ations. They would go boeing boeing along the
tarmac, effect a small delta, and head Northwest, later turning Eastern
as they trans world. All craft would use low voltage dc-10 power to
operate the air india.
Ohh thiis is a sopwith camel of a terrible note for which I totally
apologize..
derek
*-|
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373.21 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri May 08 1992 09:31 | 3 |
| I fly gliders. It does appear, per the earlier suggestion, that many
of the noters in this topic fly hot-air balloons. I will remember who
has the right of way. :-)
|