• Spell checker?

    From Hustler@1:103/705 to All on Friday, April 26, 2019 10:08:40
    Do any of the online editors compatable with Synchronet BBS have spellcheck?

    Hustler

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  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Hustler on Friday, April 26, 2019 09:46:16
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to All on Fri Apr 26 2019 10:08 am

    Do any of the online editors compatable with Synchronet BBS have spellcheck?

    I think either DCT Edit or IceEdit have spell check.

    Nightfox

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  • From Digital Man@1:103/705 to Hustler on Friday, April 26, 2019 11:54:28
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to All on Fri Apr 26 2019 10:08 am

    Do any of the online editors compatable with Synchronet BBS have spellcheck?

    WWIVedit... I think.

    digital man

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  • From DesotoFireflite@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Friday, April 26, 2019 17:02:25
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to Hustler on Fri Apr 26 2019 09:46 am

    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to All on Fri Apr 26 2019 10:08 am

    Do any of the online editors compatable with Synchronet BBS have
    spellcheck?

    I think either DCT Edit or IceEdit have spell check.

    They both do, but are very slow at checking for spelling.

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  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to DesotoFireflite on Friday, April 26, 2019 16:51:22
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: DesotoFireflite to Nightfox on Fri Apr 26 2019 05:02 pm

    I think either DCT Edit or IceEdit have spell check.

    They both do, but are very slow at checking for spelling.

    I had considered adding a spell checker to SlyEdit, but I wasn't sure there was much demand for a spell checker. However, the main reason I created SlyEdit is that a JS message editor runs noticeably faster than a DOS-based message editor on a modern Windows (at least, I noticed a slowness in the DOS message editors).

    Perhaps at some point I'll add a spell check feature to SlyEdit if I have some time to implement it. Do you think it would be more useful to do spell checking only on demand (with a hotkey, perhaps when you're done writing a message) or after you type each word, or perhaps both? I was thinking if it's on-demand, you could press a hotkey and it could look at each word and for ones that aren't recognized, it could highlight them (letting you fix it) or give a list of possible 'correct' words to choose from and let you choose one. If it's after you type each word, it could possibly momenterily highlight the word if it doesn't recognize the word (something similar to a red underline that's done in modern software, except text-based BBS software can't really underline words, that I know of).

    Nightfox

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  • From Hustler@1:103/705 to DesotoFireflite on Saturday, April 27, 2019 08:03:44
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: DesotoFireflite to Nightfox on Fri Apr 26 2019 05:02 pm

    Do any of the online editors compatable with Synchronet BBS have
    spellcheck?

    I think either DCT Edit or IceEdit have spell check.

    They both do, but are very slow at checking for spelling.

    Is the "list text replacements" considered spell check? If it is it doesnt do a vry goof job

    Hustler

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  • From Hustler@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Saturday, April 27, 2019 08:12:42
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to DesotoFireflite on Fri Apr 26 2019 04:51 pm

    Perhaps at some point I'll add a spell check feature to SlyEdit if I have some time to implement it. Do you think it would be more useful to do spell checking only on demand (with a hotkey, perhaps when you're done writing a message) or after you type each word, or perhaps both? I was (letting you fix it) or give a list of possible 'correct' words to choose

    That'a what I would like to see. Spell check when done typing. The misspelled work would get highlighted with the option to replace the word with a "suggested" word from a dictionary or you could fix it yourself or ignore it. The same way the editor in "Alpine" works.

    Hustler

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  • From DesotoFireflite@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Saturday, April 27, 2019 18:17:57
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to DesotoFireflite on Fri Apr 26 2019 04:51 pm

    Perhaps at some point I'll add a spell check feature to SlyEdit if I have some time to implement it. Do you think it would be more useful to do spell checking only on demand (with a hotkey, perhaps when you're done writing a message) or after you type each word, or perhaps both? I was thinking if it's on-demand, you could press a hotkey and it could look at each word and for ones that aren't recognized, it could highlight them (letting you fix it) or give a list of possible 'correct' words to choose from and let you choose one. If it's after you type each word, it could possibly momenterily highlight the word if it doesn't recognize the word (something similar to a red underline that's done in modern software, except text-based BBS software can't really underline words, that I know of).

    It depends on the speed. Until you get it all prefected, I would go with on demand. It would be nice to have a per user option to go on demand, or check as you type.

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  • From DesotoFireflite@1:103/705 to Hustler on Saturday, April 27, 2019 18:21:06
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to DesotoFireflite on Sat Apr 27 2019 08:03 am

    Is the "list text replacements" considered spell check? If it is it doesnt do a vry goof job

    I think ice does the list replacements, but it compaires it to a huge dictionary file first. I'm not sure about dce. I've got ice running on my bbs, but it's been a long while since i've used it. I stick with SlyEdit these days.

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  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Hustler on Saturday, April 27, 2019 15:21:53
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to Nightfox on Sat Apr 27 2019 08:12 am

    That'a what I would like to see. Spell check when done typing. The misspelled work would get highlighted with the option to replace the word with a "suggested" word from a dictionary or you could fix it yourself or ignore it. The same way the editor in "Alpine" works.

    What is Alpine? Is that a BBS message editor?

    Nightfox

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  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Hustler on Saturday, April 27, 2019 15:25:26
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to DesotoFireflite on Sat Apr 27 2019 08:03 am

    Is the "list text replacements" considered spell check? If it is it doesnt do a vry goof job

    How would you consider spell check to work? If it can't find just one match for a close word, it doesn't necessarily know which word you wanted to type.

    Nightfox

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  • From Hustler@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Sunday, April 28, 2019 08:59:57
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to Hustler on Sat Apr 27 2019 03:21 pm

    yourself or ignore it. The same way the editor in "Alpine" works.

    What is Alpine? Is that a BBS message editor?


    Alpine is a popular email client/editor with spell check used on most unix/linux systems. The newer version is called Nano. They are good examples of how a command line editor should work that also has a spell checker.

    Hustler

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  • From Hustler@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Sunday, April 28, 2019 09:02:03
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to Hustler on Sat Apr 27 2019 03:25 pm

    How would you consider spell check to work? If it can't find just one match for a close word, it doesn't necessarily know which word you wanted to type.

    I'm good at spelling. I suck at typing so just pointing out my typos would make me very happy. ;-)

    Hustler

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  • From Dumas Walker@1:103/705 to NIGHTFOX on Sunday, April 28, 2019 09:27:00
    What is Alpine? Is that a BBS message editor?

    It is the successor to Pine, which is a *nix terminal/console mode email software.

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  • From MRO@1:103/705 to Hustler on Sunday, April 28, 2019 13:04:30
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to Nightfox on Sun Apr 28 2019 08:59 am

    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to Hustler on Sat Apr 27 2019 03:21 pm

    yourself or ignore it. The same way the editor in "Alpine" works.

    What is Alpine? Is that a BBS message editor?


    Alpine is a popular email client/editor with spell check used on most unix/linux systems. The newer version is called Nano. They are good examples of how a command line editor should work that also has a spell checker.

    Hustler


    i'm a joe man.
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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@1:103/705 to Hustler on Sunday, April 28, 2019 10:28:00
    Hustler wrote to Nightfox <=-

    Alpine is a popular email client/editor with spell check used on most unix/linux systems. The newer version is called Nano. They are good examples of how a command line editor should work that also has a spell checker.

    Sorry to nitpick, but Pine and Pico came first, from the University of Washington. Pine (Pine is not Elm) is the email client, Pico (Pine
    Composer) was the editor, which worked as a standalone editor, too.

    Alpine and Nano are clones of Pine/Pico - don't know if they forked from
    the Pine/Pico code, but they're released under GPL versus the more
    restrictive license Pine/Pico were released under, if memory serves.

    Pine/Pico were a fundamental part of my internet experience growing
    up.



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  • From echicken@1:103/705 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sunday, April 28, 2019 15:43:12
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Hustler on Sun Apr 28 2019 10:28:00

    Pine/Pico were a fundamental part of my internet experience growing
    up.

    Likewise. I once had to explain "BBS" to someone, and they had trouble understanding the idea of a textmode user interface. I knew they had attended a local university about 15 years earlier, and at the time most students accessed their school email using Pine. So I started with "remember how you used to have to check your email at school ..." and led on from there. At least now they could then relate to using telnet or SSH, keyboard-only, and that little black-and-white window of text.

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  • From HusTler@1:103/705 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sunday, April 28, 2019 14:48:16
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Hustler on Sun Apr 28 2019 10:28 am

    Alpine is a popular email client/editor with spell check used on
    Sorry to nitpick, but Pine and Pico came first, from the University of Washington. Pine (Pine is not Elm) is the email client, Pico (Pine Composer) was the editor, which worked as a standalone editor, too.

    Alpine and Nano are clones of Pine/Pico - don't know if they forked from the Pine/Pico code, but they're released under GPL versus the more restrictive license Pine/Pico were released under, if memory serves.

    Thanks for the "history" but I was trying to explain the spell checking feature in all of those editors. Something that should have been written into BBS editors a long time ago. That's my 2 cents.

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  • From Dan Clough@1:103/705 to Hustler on Sunday, April 28, 2019 11:26:00
    Hustler wrote to Nightfox <=-

    yourself or ignore it. The same way the editor in "Alpine" works.

    What is Alpine? Is that a BBS message editor?

    Alpine is a popular email client/editor with spell check used
    on most unix/linux systems. The newer version is called Nano.
    They are good examples of how a command line editor should work
    that also has a spell checker.

    Just to clarify a little... Alpine is indeed a CLI email client,
    but not really an "editor". It includes an editor called 'pico'.
    The 'nano' editor is a fork of pico with a different licensing
    arrangement. Alpine itself is a fork of the original 'Pine'.

    As far as I know, all three are included by default in most Linux distributions.


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  • From Daryl Stout@1:19/33 to HUSTLER on Sunday, April 28, 2019 19:20:00
    I'm good at spelling. I suck at typing so just pointing out my typos would
    make me very happy. ;-)

    I'm smart and sober...my keyboard is illiterate and drunk. <G>

    Daryl

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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Hustler on Monday, April 29, 2019 12:30:00
    On 04-28-19 08:59, Hustler wrote to Nightfox <=-

    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to Hustler on Sat Apr 27 2019 03:21 pm

    yourself or ignore it. The same way the editor in "Alpine" works.

    What is Alpine? Is that a BBS message editor?


    Alpine is a popular email client/editor with spell check used on most unix/linux systems. The newer version is called Nano. They are good examples of how a command line editor should work that also has a spell checker.

    More specifically, nano is the editor that Alpine uses. I actually use it with Multimail on my Linux offline setup too.


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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to MRO on Monday, April 29, 2019 12:31:00
    On 04-28-19 13:04, MRO wrote to Hustler <=-

    i'm a joe man.

    Borland/Wordstar veteran eh? :D


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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to poindexter FORTRAN on Monday, April 29, 2019 12:34:00
    On 04-28-19 10:28, poindexter FORTRAN wrote to Hustler <=-

    Sorry to nitpick, but Pine and Pico came first, from the University of Washington. Pine (Pine is not Elm) is the email client, Pico (Pine Composer) was the editor, which worked as a standalone editor, too.

    Alpine and Nano are clones of Pine/Pico - don't know if they forked
    from the Pine/Pico code, but they're released under GPL versus the more restrictive license Pine/Pico were released under, if memory serves.

    Pine/Pico were a fundamental part of my internet experience growing
    up.

    Correct. I used to like Pine when I started out on Unix (ISP shell account under BSDi, IIRC), and was a bit disappointed when Pine fell out of favour, due to its licence. Alpine was released to address this, but like you, I don't know how closely the code in Alpine/nano is related to that in Pine/Pico, but for me, the user experience is the same between those two packages.


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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@1:103/705 to Tony Langdon on Monday, April 29, 2019 07:23:00
    Tony Langdon wrote to MRO <=-

    i'm a joe man.

    Borland/Wordstar veteran eh? :D

    I still use Qedit in my offline reader environment for the Ctrl-K key
    bindings.



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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to poindexter FORTRAN on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 06:27:00
    On 04-29-19 07:23, poindexter FORTRAN wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    Tony Langdon wrote to MRO <=-

    i'm a joe man.

    Borland/Wordstar veteran eh? :D

    I still use Qedit in my offline reader environment for the Ctrl-K key bindings.

    Cool. :)


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  • From Hustler@1:103/705 to Tony Langdon on Monday, April 29, 2019 15:53:51
    From Newsgroup: alt.bbs.synchronet

    To: Tony Langdon
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Tony Langdon to poindexter FORTRAN on Mon Apr 29 2019 12:34 pm

    From Newsgroup: alt.bbs.synchronet

    Alpine and Nano are clones of Pine/Pico - don't know if they forked
    from the Pine/Pico code, but they're released under GPL versus the
    more restrictive license Pine/Pico were released under, if memory
    serves.

    Pine/Pico were a fundamental part of my internet experience growing
    up.

    Correct. I used to like Pine when I started out on Unix (ISP shell account under BSDi, IIRC), and was a bit disappointed when Pine fell out of favour, due to its licence. Alpine was released to address this, but like you, I don't know how closely the code in Alpine/nano is related to that in Pine/Pico, but for me, the user experience is the same between those two packages.

    Ok ... Now that it's been established what the CLI editors are. Can anyone explain the spellcheck feature they use? Even better how does it work? Can they spellcheck feature be used on any CLI editor?

    Hustler
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  • From mark lewis@1:3634/12.73 to Hustler on Monday, April 29, 2019 20:20:40

    On 2019 Apr 29 15:53:50, you wrote to Tony Langdon:

    Ok ... Now that it's been established what the CLI editors are. Can
    anyone explain the spellcheck feature they use? Even better how does
    it work? Can they spellcheck feature be used on any CLI editor?

    the ones that i know of that do spell checking do it after the message is written... they do this by passing the message through an external spell checker... i think aspell was one that was used quite a bit in the 16bit world...

    i don't know how they interfaced but they would return with the misspelled word
    and an offer of a correction that you could choose or not... it has been a while since i used one of those, though... i've gotten to where i simply open my firefox and start typing the word into the search box to see what pops up ;)

    )\/(ark

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  • From Dan Clough@1:103/705 to Tony Langdon on Monday, April 29, 2019 21:05:00
    Tony Langdon wrote to Hustler <=-

    Alpine is a popular email client/editor with spell check used on most unix/linux systems. The newer version is called Nano. They are good examples of how a command line editor should work that also has a spell checker.

    More specifically, nano is the editor that Alpine uses. I
    actually use it with Multimail on my Linux offline setup too.

    Me too! (nano with Multimail). Love nano's syntax hilighting,
    very excellent for bash scripts and the like.



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  • From Dumas Walker@1:103/705 to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Monday, April 29, 2019 20:09:00
    Pine/Pico were a fundamental part of my internet experience growing
    up.

    Mine also. My first isp account (well, after my bbs uucp account) was a
    shell account that use pine as the email client. I am trying to remember
    the name of their news client but it escapes me it has been so long.

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  • From Mortifis@1:103/705 to Dumas Walker on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 08:58:18
    Pine/Pico were a fundamental part of my internet experience growing
    up.

    Mine also. My first isp account (well, after my bbs uucp account) was a shell account that use pine as the email client. I am trying to remember the name of their news client but it escapes me it has been so long.

    I used to use tin as an nntp reader on my old slackware distributions



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  • From DaiTengu@1:103/705 to Tony Langdon on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 08:08:54
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Tony Langdon to Hustler on Mon Apr 29 2019 12:30 pm


    More specifically, nano is the editor that Alpine uses. I actually use it with Multimail on my Linux offline setup too.

    I'm a Linux SysAdmin in my day-job. Most people use vi(m) or emacs as their command-line editor, and they'll fight over them like they're religions. I love popping up in the middle of an argument, mentioning that I use, and have used nano/pico for over 25 years, and then walkng away as they stare at me like I'm some sort of insane chaos element.

    Over the past few years I've slowly been transitioning over to Vim, but old habits die hard, and I constantly find myself typing "nano" to open/edit a file.

    DaiTengu

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  • From Heliarc@1:103/705 to Dumas Walker on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 09:54:35
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Dumas Walker to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Mon Apr 29 2019 08:09 pm

    Mine also. My first isp account (well, after my bbs uucp account) was a shell account that use pine as the email client. I am trying to remember the name of their news client but it escapes me it has been so long.

    Most likely it was "Tin" or "Rn"

    Heliarc

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  • From Heliarc@1:103/705 to DaiTengu on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 10:35:10
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: DaiTengu to Tony Langdon on Tue Apr 30 2019 08:08 am

    More specifically, nano is the editor that Alpine uses. I actually
    use it with Multimail on my Linux offline setup too.

    I'm a Linux SysAdmin in my day-job. Most people use vi(m) or emacs as their command-line editor, and they'll fight over them like they're religions. I love popping up in the middle of an argument, mentioning that I use, and have used nano/pico for over 25 years, and then walkng away as they stare at me like I'm some sort of insane chaos element.

    I could never get the hang of VIM. I started using pine in the early 90's and have been using it along with Alpine and Nano as editors evolved. I'm not a programer so I didn't need all the wonderful features in VIM. I know what you mean though. You're not a "real" Unix/Linux user if you don't use Vim.

    "Opinions are like assholes. Everyone has one and everyone thinks the other one stinks"

    Heliarc

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  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Heliarc on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 11:52:49
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Heliarc to DaiTengu on Tue Apr 30 2019 10:35 am

    I could never get the hang of VIM. I started using pine in the early 90's and have been using it along with Alpine and Nano as editors evolved. I'm not a programer so I didn't need all the wonderful features in VIM. I know what you mean though. You're not a "real" Unix/Linux user if you don't use Vim.

    I got used to using vim at an old job, so I got to like it in Linux. Even if you're not a programmer, sometimes vim still alows fairly quick editing. The way you can copy & paste lines in vim, for instance, can be faster than other editors where you'd highlight, press Ctrl-C, and then Ctrl-V somewhere else. With vim, you can type yy to copy a line and p to paste it. You can copy multiple lines by typing a number before the yy (such as 5yy to copy the current 5 lines, which includes the line where the cursor is and the next 4 lines).

    Even though there's a Vim for Windows, I tend to use other editors in Windows though.. Maybe I'm just used to things being a certain way in Windows.

    Nightfox

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  • From Digital Man@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 14:23:14
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to Heliarc on Tue Apr 30 2019 11:52 am

    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Heliarc to DaiTengu on Tue Apr 30 2019 10:35 am

    I could never get the hang of VIM. I started using pine in the early 90's and have been using it along with Alpine and Nano as editors evolved. I'm not a programer so I didn't need all the wonderful features in VIM. I know what you mean though. You're not a "real" Unix/Linux user if you don't use Vim.

    I got used to using vim at an old job, so I got to like it in Linux. Even if you're not a programmer, sometimes vim still alows fairly quick editing. The way you can copy & paste lines in vim, for instance, can be faster than other editors where you'd highlight, press Ctrl-C, and then Ctrl-V somewhere else. With vim, you can type yy to copy a line and p to paste it. You can copy multiple lines by typing a number before the yy (such as 5yy to copy the current 5 lines, which includes the line where the cursor is and the next 4 lines).

    I just hate finding myself counting the number of lines to copy (was that 14 or
    15?). I recall there was a way to mark the beginning and end of blocks in vi/vim and then (maybe?) copy the block - but I don't remember how.

    Even though there's a Vim for Windows, I tend to use other editors in Windows though.. Maybe I'm just used to things being a certain way in Windows.

    Yup, me too. It's Visual Studio and Notepad++ on Windows for me. Vim and Geany on Linux.

    digital man

    Synchronet "Real Fact" #50:
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  • From Jason@1:103/705 to Dumas Walker on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 15:58:08
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Dumas Walker to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Mon Apr 29 2019 08:09 pm

    Pine/Pico were a fundamental part of my internet experience growing
    up.

    Mine also. My first isp account (well, after my bbs uucp account) was a shell account that use pine as the email client. I am trying to remember the name of their news client but it escapes me it has been so long.

    Same here... In fact, I loved using Pine over my POP3 account because I could rlogin/telnet into my shell account with my ISP from anywhere that I could dialup or already had internet access and read my mail...

    Ahh... Those were the days! :)

    Jason

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  • From Jason@1:103/705 to DaiTengu on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 16:01:18
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: DaiTengu to Tony Langdon on Tue Apr 30 2019 08:08 am

    love popping up in the middle of an argument, mentioning that I use, and have used nano/pico for over 25 years, and then walkng away as they stare at

    Over the past few years I've slowly been transitioning over to Vim, but old habits die hard, and I constantly find myself typing "nano" to open/edit a file.

    It's funny you say that.. I started with "pico" but i forced myself to learn Vim.. which is a good thing too.. Last night, as it so happens, I was helping out a client who was having trouble getting their apache to boot after a migration from one VM host to another, and he couldn't edit any of the files on the machine because he only knew "nano"... I was able to come in, use Vim, and fix the issue quickly..

    I think Vim is a good editor for linux admins to at least know the basics of, because you never know when you might find yourself in a linux terminal that doesn't have any of the other editors... :)

    Jason

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  • From Ed Vance@1:103/705 to mark lewis on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 18:51:00
    04-29-19 20:20 mark lewis wrote to Hustler about Spell checker?
    Howdy! Mark,

    @VIA: VERT
    @MSGID: <5CC796DC.3659.sync@vert.synchro.net>
    @REPLY: <5CC7564F.532.usenet_altbbssy@havens.synchronetbbs.org>
    On 2019 Apr 29 15:53:50, you wrote to Tony Langdon:

    Ok ... Now that it's been established what the CLI editors are. Can
    anyone explain the spellcheck feature they use? Even better how does
    it work? Can they spellcheck feature be used on any CLI editor?

    the ones that i know of that do spell checking do it after the message
    is written... they do this by passing the message through an external spell checker... i think aspell was one that was used quite a bit in
    the 16bit world...

    i don't know how they interfaced but they would return with the
    misspelled word and an offer of a correction that you could choose or not... it has been a while since i used one of those, though... i've gotten to where i simply open my firefox and start typing the word into the search box to see what pops up ;)

    WordWeb (WW) at www.wordweb.info is a software Dictionary that I use on XP.

    I can use the FREE Version, since I don't Travel by airplane often.

    Very little Airplane Travel allows the Free Version to be installed after
    it Ask how much Air Travel in a Questonaire. <<<<---OOPS! Questonnaire.

    I checked the spelling of ^^^^^^^^^^^ and got the correct spelling
    using WW.

    To check the spelling of a word while I am writing a Reply or a New Message
    in Multimail DOS I press ALT-Enter to put MM in a window.

    The default Hotkey for WW is CTRL - RightClick on Mouse with Cursor on the
    Word of interest.

    WW shows synonyms - I know I spelled the word correctly because I had first typed Synomyns and did the ALT-Enter / CTRL RightClick and saw I hadn't spelled the word correctly and saw the correct word in the suggestons.

    I use WW when I'm reading Wikipedia pages, or things written on two websites
    I read often to learn Technical stuff - Ask Woody and Ask Leo.
    All three sites have words I don't know
    (some of those words are written in Comments)
    WW Educates Ed quite a lot.

    WW has a Paid Version too for users who Fly a lot.

    The last time I flew by Airlines was when I was discharged from the U.S.Navy
    to come back home.

    73 de Ed W9ODR . .


    ... "It Shouldn't Be This Hard" - Leo Notenboom
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  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Digital Man on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 17:06:36
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Digital Man to Nightfox on Tue Apr 30 2019 02:23 pm

    I got used to using vim at an old job, so I got to like it in Linux.
    Even if you're not a programmer, sometimes vim still alows fairly
    quick editing. The way you can copy & paste lines in vim, for
    instance, can be faster than other editors where you'd highlight,
    press Ctrl-C, and then Ctrl-V somewhere else. With vim, you can type
    yy to copy a line and p to paste it. You can copy multiple lines by
    typing a number before the yy (such as 5yy to copy the current 5
    lines, which includes the line where the cursor is and the next 4
    lines).

    I just hate finding myself counting the number of lines to copy (was that 14 or 15?). I recall there was a way to mark the beginning and end of blocks in vi/vim and then (maybe?) copy the block - but I don't remember how.

    Yep, I had the same issue. I didn't really like having to count the number of lines, but I got used to the habit of adding 1 to my counts so I'd have the correct number of lines copied.

    Even though there's a Vim for Windows, I tend to use other editors in
    Windows though.. Maybe I'm just used to things being a certain way in
    Windows.

    Yup, me too. It's Visual Studio and Notepad++ on Windows for me. Vim and Geany on Linux.

    I also like Notepad++ on Windows, and Visual Studio for things like C++ and C#.

    A while ago, I found that Microsoft has their Visual Studio editor available for Linux - It's called Visual Studio Code and is just the editor rather than the full IDE. I've used it a bit and IMO it's not bad. It knows syntax of various programming languages and even offers a bit of auto-complete for Python (which I've edited with it). It also recognizes when you're editing code in a Git repository and includes some Git functionality (either built-in or as a plugin, I don't remember offhand).

    Nightfox

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  • From Dan Clough@1:123/115 to Heliarc on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 19:41:00
    Heliarc wrote to Dumas Walker <=-

    Mine also. My first isp account (well, after my bbs uucp account) was a shell account that use pine as the email client. I am trying to remember the name of their news client but it escapes me it has been so long.

    Most likely it was "Tin" or "Rn"

    Yes, very likely. Or possibly 'slrn'.



    ... Nothing is so smiple that it can't get screwed up.
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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Hustler on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 15:09:00
    On 04-29-19 15:53, Hustler wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    Ok ... Now that it's been established what the CLI editors are. Can anyone explain the spellcheck feature they use? Even better how does it work? Can they spellcheck feature be used on any CLI editor?

    Only spell checker I've had any experience is the one in Mystic's internal editor, which workd very well.


    ... Gossip is when you hear something you like about someone you don't.
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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Dan Clough on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 15:10:00
    On 04-29-19 21:05, Dan Clough wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    Me too! (nano with Multimail). Love nano's syntax hilighting,
    very excellent for bash scripts and the like.

    Yes, nano is really good for scripting.


    ... You now have 10 minutes to reach minimum safe distance...
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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to DaiTengu on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 15:14:00
    On 04-30-19 08:08, DaiTengu wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    I'm a Linux SysAdmin in my day-job. Most people use vi(m) or emacs as their command-line editor, and they'll fight over them like they're religions. I love popping up in the middle of an argument, mentioning that I use, and have used nano/pico for over 25 years, and then walkng away as they stare at me like I'm some sort of insane chaos element.

    I'm a bit like you, been using nano for decades. :) While vim is powerful, it requires a type of rote memory that is inefficient for me in the learning phase. Maybe if it was the first editor I'd ever touched it would now be stuck in memory, but instead, I have those famous Wordstar/Borland key bindings there, and some of nano's as well. :)

    I never got into Word Perfect for DOS for the same reason, too many commands to rote learn without being able to use my own way of organising them in my head.

    Over the past few years I've slowly been transitioning over to Vim, but old habits die hard, and I constantly find myself typing "nano" to open/edit a file.

    :)


    DaiTengu

    ... A child of 5 could understand this! Fetch me a child of 5.

    :D


    ... I don't trust trees, they just seem a bit shady.
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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Dumas Walker on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 15:23:00
    On 04-29-19 20:09, Dumas Walker wrote to POINDEXTER FORTRAN <=-

    Pine/Pico were a fundamental part of my internet experience growing
    up.

    Mine also. My first isp account (well, after my bbs uucp account) was
    a shell account that use pine as the email client. I am trying to remember the name of their news client but it escapes me it has been so long.

    Yeah my first account was a shall account, and I got my UUCP account with the same ISP shortly afterwards. As for newsreaders, I liked tin. :)


    ... Try this chicken. It tastes just like rattlesnake.
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  • From Dan Clough@1:103/705 to Jason on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 07:28:00
    Jason wrote to DaiTengu <=-

    I think Vim is a good editor for linux admins to at least know
    the basics of, because you never know when you might find
    yourself in a linux terminal that doesn't have any of the other
    editors... :)

    I would go so far as to say that you can't call yourself a Linux
    admin *UNLESS* you have at *LEAST* a basic understanding of how to
    use vim/vi.



    ... Gone crazy, be back later, please leave message.
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  • From mark lewis@1:3634/12.73 to Dan Clough on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 10:50:04

    On 2019 May 01 07:28:00, you wrote to Jason:

    Jason wrote to DaiTengu <=-

    I think Vim is a good editor for linux admins to at least know
    the basics of, because you never know when you might find
    yourself in a linux terminal that doesn't have any of the other
    editors... :)

    I would go so far as to say that you can't call yourself a Linux
    admin *UNLESS* you have at *LEAST* a basic understanding of how to
    use vim/vi.

    is ":wq" or ":q!" enough to qualify? ;)

    )\/(ark

    Always Mount a Scratch Monkey
    Do you manage your own servers? If you are not running an IDS/IPS yer doin' it wrong...
    ... He who laughs last probably made a backup.
    ---
    * Origin: (1:3634/12.73)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@1:103/705 to Dan Clough on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 07:21:00
    Dan Clough wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    Me too! (nano with Multimail). Love nano's syntax hilighting,
    very excellent for bash scripts and the like.

    Is there a way to get a 25x80 screen in a full screen window with
    Nano? I'm looking for a full screen experience similar to DOS.





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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@1:103/705 to Dan Clough on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 14:43:57
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Dan Clough to Jason on Wed May 01 2019 07:28 am

    I would go so far as to say that you can't call yourself a Linux
    admin *UNLESS* you have at *LEAST* a basic understanding of how to
    use vim/vi.

    Back in the day, vi knowledge was equivalent to using edlin - you needed it to get a system up and running. I remember loading Solaris from CD, then needing to load packages off the net, and the only visual editor I had at first was vi.

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  • From Daryl Stout@1:19/33 to ED VANCE on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 17:08:00
    Ed,

    Very little Airplane Travel allows the Free Version to be installed after EV>it Ask how much Air Travel in a Questonaire. <<<<---OOPS! Questonnaire.

    Make that Questionnaire. :P

    The last time I flew by Airlines was when I was discharged from the U.S.Navy EV>to come back home.

    Even though I went through a TSA deal to get me through the security checkpoint quicker, I do NOT want to fly. But, I can barely afford a
    trip across town, much less across the country. All the medical,
    utility, and other bills, leave little for food and drink. So, a bland
    diet of bread, butter, and water, is on the docket for the foreseeable
    future. I've lost 60 pounds since last August...with this, I'll lose
    another 90.

    Daryl

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  • From Dan Clough@1:123/115 to mark lewis on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 19:46:00
    mark lewis wrote to Dan Clough <=-

    I think Vim is a good editor for linux admins to at least know
    the basics of, because you never know when you might find
    yourself in a linux terminal that doesn't have any of the other
    editors... :)

    I would go so far as to say that you can't call yourself a Linux
    admin *UNLESS* you have at *LEAST* a basic understanding of how to
    use vim/vi.

    is ":wq" or ":q!" enough to qualify? ;)

    Haha! Yes, I guess that would allow a simple edit/save to be
    done. Right on the raw edge of qualification, I guess. :)



    ... Error - Operator out of memory!
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  • From Dan Clough@1:123/115 to poindexter FORTRAN on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 19:50:00
    poindexter FORTRAN wrote to Dan Clough <=-

    Me too! (nano with Multimail). Love nano's syntax hilighting,
    very excellent for bash scripts and the like.

    Is there a way to get a 25x80 screen in a full screen window with
    Nano? I'm looking for a full screen experience similar to DOS.

    Hmmmm, not that I know of. I use it as a full-size terminal
    window (in X) on Linux when composing a message in Multimail and
    it's quite a bit more than 80x25. Perhaps by playing with the
    terminal window size, and the font size, one could get it to those
    dimensions, or pretty close, but it might look a little ugly.



    ... Toto, I don't think we're in DOS any more...
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  • From Dan Clough@1:123/115 to poindexter FORTRAN on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 19:59:00
    poindexter FORTRAN wrote to Dan Clough <=-

    I would go so far as to say that you can't call yourself a Linux
    admin *UNLESS* you have at *LEAST* a basic understanding of how to
    use vim/vi.

    Back in the day, vi knowledge was equivalent to using edlin - you
    needed it to get a system up and running. I remember loading
    Solaris from CD, then needing to load packages off the net, and
    the only visual editor I had at first was vi.

    Yep, I remember things the same way. The *nix world has gotten
    easier over the years, which can only be seen as a Good Thing.

    "When I was a boy we had to walk to school in the snow, and it was
    uphill both ways!"

    :)



    ... If it weren't for Edison we'd be using computers by candlelight
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  • From dmxrob@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 21:14:14
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to Heliarc on Tue Apr 30 2019 11:52 am

    Even though there's a Vim for Windows, I tend to use other editors in Windows though.. Maybe I'm just used to things being a certain way in Windows.

    Visual Studio Code - free, and seems to be quickly taking over the world in terms of code editors on both Windows and Mac.

    Ultraedit - My editor of choice for viewing large datasets.

    ---
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  • From dmxrob@1:103/705 to DaiTengu on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 21:17:22
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: DaiTengu to Tony Langdon on Tue Apr 30 2019 08:08 am

    I'm a Linux SysAdmin in my day-job. Most people use vi(m) or emacs as their command-line editor, and they'll fight over them like they're religions. I love popping up in the middle of an argument, mentioning that I use, and have used nano/pico for over 25 years, and then walkng away as they stare at me like I'm some sort of insane chaos element.

    I always tell people "If I wanted an editor from 1976, I'd go back to using IBM PROFS". I have used nano (and variants of) back from 1990 to this day. Has never let me down.

    ---
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  • From Va7aqd@1:103/705 to poindexter FORTRAN on Wednesday, May 01, 2019 22:56:28
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to Dan Clough on Tue Apr 30 2019 07:21 am

    Is there a way to get a 25x80 screen in a full screen window with
    Nano? I'm looking for a full screen experience similar to DOS.

    stty rows <rows> cols <cols>
    nano

    Is this what you meant?

    ---
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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@1:103/705 to Dan Clough on Thursday, May 02, 2019 07:14:00
    Dan Clough wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    "When I was a boy we had to walk to school in the snow, and it was
    uphill both ways!"

    Well, we had to get the base Solaris OS up and running, and hand-hack
    the network configuration enough to get to the online package
    repositories to install gcc...



    ... Don't be frightened to display your talents
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  • From Dan Clough@1:123/115 to poindexter FORTRAN on Thursday, May 02, 2019 20:37:00
    poindexter FORTRAN wrote to Dan Clough <=-

    "When I was a boy we had to walk to school in the snow, and it was
    uphill both ways!"

    Well, we had to get the base Solaris OS up and running, and
    hand-hack the network configuration enough to get to the online
    package repositories to install gcc...

    :) No simple task, that.



    ... Windows 3.1 - From the people who brought you EDLIN.
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  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Dan Clough on Thursday, May 02, 2019 20:00:15
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Dan Clough to poindexter FORTRAN on Wed May 01 2019 07:59 pm

    Yep, I remember things the same way. The *nix world has gotten
    easier over the years, which can only be seen as a Good Thing.

    "When I was a boy we had to walk to school in the snow, and it was
    uphill both ways!"

    :) That's true. I think Linux distros have gotten generally easier to install and set up. I've often tried Linux at home, and years ago I used to have frustrations getting XWindows/XOrg set up and running. And sometimes there would be a distro that would detect and set up my hardware very easily during setup/install, and then the next version of the distro would seem broken (failing to detect & set up my hardware like the previous version did). These days, I really like Linux Mint. In the past, I always liked SuSE (now OpenSuSE), and Fedora always seemed decent too.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Dumas Walker@1:103/705 to JASON on Thursday, May 02, 2019 19:16:00
    Same here... In fact, I loved using Pine over my POP3 account because I could >rlogin/telnet into my shell account with my ISP from anywhere that I could >dialup or already had internet access and read my mail...

    I've not tried it in a long time, but I might ought to just to see if it
    still works. :)

    ---
    þ SLMR 2.1a þ # of Vulcans needed to replace a bulb? Precisely 1.000
    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Friday, May 03, 2019 06:26:00
    Nightfox wrote to Dan Clough <=-

    :) That's true. I think Linux distros have gotten generally easier to install and set up. I've often tried Linux at home, and years ago I
    used to have frustrations getting XWindows/XOrg set up and running.

    Oh, no - flashbacks of trying to hand-hack X's configuration files...





    ... Do you know what this dream means?
    --- MultiMail/XT v0.51
    þ Synchronet þ realitycheckBBS -- http://realitycheckBBS.org
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@1:103/705 to Dumas Walker on Friday, May 03, 2019 06:27:00
    Dumas Walker wrote to JASON <=-

    I've not tried it in a long time, but I might ought to just to see if
    it still works. :)

    There's a HOWTO out there showing how to configure PINE to read mail
    from on-premise Exchange servers, using LDAP for directory search,
    IMAP for mail folders, and so on.



    ... Are you hearing voices?
    --- MultiMail/XT v0.51
    þ Synchronet þ realitycheckBBS -- http://realitycheckBBS.org
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Dan Clough@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Friday, May 03, 2019 07:44:00
    Nightfox wrote to Dan Clough <=-

    Yep, I remember things the same way. The *nix world has gotten
    easier over the years, which can only be seen as a Good Thing.

    "When I was a boy we had to walk to school in the snow, and it was
    uphill both ways!"

    :) That's true. I think Linux distros have gotten generally
    easier to install and set up. I've often tried Linux at home,
    and years ago I used to have frustrations getting XWindows/XOrg
    set up and running. And sometimes there would be a distro that
    would detect and set up my hardware very easily during
    setup/install, and then the next version of the distro would seem
    broken (failing to detect & set up my hardware like the previous
    version did). These days, I really like Linux Mint. In the
    past, I always liked SuSE (now OpenSuSE), and Fedora always
    seemed decent too.

    There certainly is a lot of variability (is that a word?) between
    all the distros. Mint is certainly one of the popular ones these
    days, along with Ubuntu of course. I think Manjaro is the latest up-and-coming kid on the block.

    I have tried them all over the years, mostly just to see how they
    were. I've been a Slackware user for 20 years, and that's what I
    use on a daily basis (and what the BBS runs on). Don't see that
    changing anytime soon, and probably never. I also dabble with
    Raspberry Pi's and the various ARM distros available for them.



    ... A day without sunshine is like night.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Heliarc@1:103/705 to Dumas Walker on Friday, May 03, 2019 09:13:31
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Dumas Walker to JASON on Thu May 02 2019 07:16 pm

    Same here... In fact, I loved using Pine over my POP3 account because I
    could rlogin/telnet into my shell account with my ISP from anywhere
    that I could dialup or already had internet access and read my mail...

    I've not tried it in a long time, but I might ought to just to see if it still works. :)

    If you're interested in a Free "Shell" account you can head over to http://www.grex.org and apply for onr.

    Heliarc

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Sent from Haven BBS. havens.synchro.net
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Dan Clough on Friday, May 03, 2019 09:52:25
    Re: Re: Spell checker?
    By: Dan Clough to Nightfox on Fri May 03 2019 07:44 am

    I have tried them all over the years, mostly just to see how they
    were. I've been a Slackware user for 20 years, and that's what I
    use on a daily basis (and what the BBS runs on). Don't see that
    changing anytime soon, and probably never. I also dabble with
    Raspberry Pi's and the various ARM distros available for them.

    I remember trying Slackware in the early-mid 90s. I initially learned a lot about computers from my dad, who's a computer guy, and he was messing with Slackware in those days when it was still fairly new. I had used Slackware a bit but moved away from it.. I think Slackware was one of the late adopters of a package management system for software, though after doing a quick search online, it looks like it uses a package manager now.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Al@1:153/757 to Nightfox on Friday, May 03, 2019 12:17:30
    I remember trying Slackware in the early-mid 90s. I initially learned a lot about computers from my dad, who's a computer guy, and he was messing with Slackware in those days when it was still fairly new. I had used Slackware a
    bit but moved away from it.. I think Slackware was one of the late adopters o
    a package management system for software, though after doing a quick search online, it looks like it uses a package manager now.

    Slackware has always had package management as far as I can remember. It's very
    basic but does what you would expect it to do. It's never had dependency handling in any way, and that is still true today. If you install Slackware all
    the dependencies are in place and you are good to go.

    Slackware is a very basic OS. It comes with a basic desktop (KDE or XFCE) with an email client and web browser but if you want other software you need to get your own somehow. I use the slackbuilds.org website to get source and SlackBuild scripts for most of what I need here. Each SlackBuild script has a webpage that lists the dependencies and you can also get the source and SlackBuilds for those there.

    I also use debian and really like the fact that everything your likely to need is pre made for easy instalation (along with dependencies) but I still use slackware myself most of the time. I find slackware to be a very simple and stable distribution.

    --- BBBS/Li6 v4.10 Toy-4
    * Origin: The Rusty MailBox - Penticton, BC Canada (1:153/757)
  • From Dan Clough@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Friday, May 03, 2019 20:57:00
    Nightfox wrote to Dan Clough <=-

    I have tried them all over the years, mostly just to see how they
    were. I've been a Slackware user for 20 years, and that's what I
    use on a daily basis (and what the BBS runs on). Don't see that
    changing anytime soon, and probably never. I also dabble with
    Raspberry Pi's and the various ARM distros available for them.

    I remember trying Slackware in the early-mid 90s. I initially
    learned a lot about computers from my dad, who's a computer guy,
    and he was messing with Slackware in those days when it was still
    fairly new. I had used Slackware a bit but moved away from it..
    I think Slackware was one of the late adopters of a package
    management system for software, though after doing a quick search
    online, it looks like it uses a package manager now.

    Yes, there is a package manager available now. I don't think it
    is in the same league as the Debian world's 'apt-get' though.
    Most Slack users that I know don't use it. There is a
    semi-automated way of installing packages called SlackBuilds
    (slackbuilds.org) that makes it easy (one master script) to
    compile a desired program's source code into an installable
    package. I use that extensively and it's ideal for my needs.

    Slackware is not for everybody, but it's the oldest remaining
    distro and is the closest to "real Unix" that I know of. Rock
    solid stable and reliable - I wouldn't use anything else.



    ... Bug free, cheap, on time, works. Pick two.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Dumas Walker@1:103/705 to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Friday, May 03, 2019 19:57:00
    I've not tried it in a long time, but I might ought to just to see if
    it still works. :)

    There's a HOWTO out there showing how to configure PINE to read mail
    from on-premise Exchange servers, using LDAP for directory search,
    IMAP for mail folders, and so on.

    I was actually thinking I should try out my shell account and see if it
    still works. I actually do use alpine to read my system messages on my systems, like the ones that cron puts out for my cron jobs.

    ---
    þ SLMR 2.1a þ How do they get the deer to cross at the signs?
    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Nightfox on Saturday, May 04, 2019 20:02:00
    On 05-02-19 20:00, Nightfox wrote to Dan Clough <=-

    :) That's true. I think Linux distros have gotten generally easier to install and set up. I've often tried Linux at home, and years ago I
    used to have frustrations getting XWindows/XOrg set up and running.
    And sometimes there would be a distro that would detect and set up my hardware very easily during setup/install, and then the next version of the distro would seem broken (failing to detect & set up my hardware
    like the previous version did). These days, I really like Linux Mint.
    In the past, I always liked SuSE (now OpenSuSE), and Fedora always
    seemed decent too.

    Well, I have a monitor that both Windows and Linux doesn't handle well, except that in Linux, I can create an xorg.conf file with the correct Modeline, and the monitor then works perfectly.


    ... Excessive mouse activity detected. Running CAT.EXE to fix
    === MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    --- SBBSecho 3.03-Linux
    * Origin: Freeway BBS Bendigo,Australia freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Hustler on Saturday, May 25, 2019 13:50:33
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to All on Fri Apr 26 2019 10:08 am

    Do any of the online editors compatable with Synchronet BBS have spellcheck?

    I just recently added a spell check feature to SlyEdit. If you want to give it a try, you can get the latest SlyEdit .js scripts from the Synchronet CVS in the exec directory (SlyEdit.js, SlyEdit_DCTStuff.js, SlyEdit_IceStuff.js, and SlyEdit_Misc.js). Also, get the dictionary files from sbbs/ctrl (dictionary_en-AU.txt, dictionary_en-CA.txt, dictionary_en-GB.txt, and dictionary_en-US.txt). And in ctrl/SlyEdit.cfg, there's a new configuration option, dictionaryFilenames, which lets you specify a comma-separated list of dictionary files that you want to have SlyEdit use as default dictionaries for spell checking. The filenames specified there can be in the format dictionary_<languageName>, where languageName is one of the ones from the filenames above (en-US, etc.). You can also just specify the language name in that list. For instance, you could specify this to just use the en-US dictionary:

    dictionaryFilenames=en-US

    There's also a user setting in the user preferences (Ctrl-U) that lets users toggle which dictionaries they want to enable for themselves for spell check.

    You'll also need to be sure you have the latest dd_lightbar_menu.js from exec/load.

    You can invoke the spell checker with the Ctrl-R hotkey, or from the ESC menu. There's also a user setting to toggle whether you want SlyEdit to prompt for spell check when you save the message.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Hustler@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Sunday, May 26, 2019 07:38:38
    I installed the spellchecker. When I'm in the editor and hit "esc" the editor options come up. But if I hit enter on "Spell-check dictionary/dictionaries" I get │!JavaScript /sbbs/exec/SlyEdit.js line 6333: TypeError: dictMenu.AddAdditionalQuitKeys is not a function.| and the editor bails out. Also does the spell checker just look for misspelled words without giving suggestions?? It finds the misspelled word but leaves it up to the user to correct it. It's a huge advancement but I'm curious if corrections will be available in future versions of Syledit. I will try different terminal software to see if I get the same results.

    HusTler
    Havens BBS havens.synchro.net
    --- SBBSecho 3.07-Linux
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to Hustler on Monday, May 27, 2019 21:42:11
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Hustler to Nightfox on Sun May 26 2019 07:38 am

    I installed the spellchecker. When I'm in the editor and hit "esc" the editor options come up. But if I hit enter on "Spell-check dictionary/dictionaries" I get │!JavaScript /sbbs/exec/SlyEdit.js line 6333: TypeError: dictMenu.AddAdditionalQuitKeys is not a function.

    Did you get the latest dd_lightbar_menu.js from sbbs/exec? If not, then you probably need to update that.

    the editor bails out. Also does the spell checker just look for misspelled words without giving suggestions?? It finds the misspelled word but leaves it up to the user to correct it. It's a huge advancement but I'm curious if corrections will be available in future versions of Syledit. I will try different terminal software to see if I get the same results.

    Yes, right now it just prompts the user for a correction. I thought about offering suggestions - Possibly in a later release.

    Different terminal software isn't going to change the behavior.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From HusTler@1:103/705 to Nightfox on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 10:57:48
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: Nightfox to Hustler on Mon May 27 2019 09:42 pm

    I installed the spellchecker. When I'm in the editor and hit "esc"
    the editor options come up. But if I hit enter on "Spell-check
    dictionary/dictionaries" I get │!JavaScript /sbbs/exec/SlyEdit.js
    line 6333: TypeError: dictMenu.AddAdditionalQuitKeys is not a
    function.

    Did you get the latest dd_lightbar_menu.js from sbbs/exec? If not, then you probably need to update that.

    I have it now. dd_lightbar_menu.js is in sbbs/exec/load so I had to do some searching. Works like a charm now.


    misspelled words without giving suggestions?? It finds the
    Yes, right now it just prompts the user for a correction. I thought about offering suggestions - Possibly in a later release.

    It's a great improvement. Most of my misspelled words are typos so just having it scanned before posting is a big help for me. Thanks!



    HusTler
    *Havens BBS havens.synchro.net:23 (1:267/160)*

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Sent from Havens BBS havens.synchro.net:23 (1:267/160)
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)
  • From Nightfox@1:103/705 to HusTler on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 12:39:47
    Re: Spell checker?
    By: HusTler to Nightfox on Tue May 28 2019 10:57 am

    It's a great improvement. Most of my misspelled words are typos so just having it scanned before posting is a big help for me. Thanks!

    No problem.

    While making this update, I did think it would be good to have word suggestions and let the user choose one or type their own fix. I may add word suggestions at some point in the future.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
    * Origin: Vertrauen - [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net (1:103/705)