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10 .TH SPELL 1 "Sep 15, 2011"
12 spell, hashmake, spellin, hashcheck \- report spelling errors
16 \fBspell\fR [\fB-bilvx\fR] [+ \fIlocal_file\fR] [\fIfile\fR] ...
21 \fB/usr/lib/spell/hashmake\fR
26 \fB/usr/lib/spell/spellin\fR \fIn\fR
31 \fB/usr/lib/spell/hashcheck\fR \fIspelling_list\fR
37 The \fBspell\fR command collects words from the named \fBfile\fRs and looks
38 them up in a spelling list. Words that neither occur among nor are derivable
39 (by applying certain inflections, prefixes, or suffixes) from words in the
40 spelling list are written to the standard output.
43 If there are no \fBfile\fR arguments, words to check are collected from the
44 standard input. \fBspell\fR ignores most \fBtroff\fR(1), \fBtbl\fR(1), and
45 \fBeqn\fR(1) constructs. Copies of all output words are accumulated in the
46 history file (\fBspellhist\fR), and a \fBstop\fR list filters out misspellings
47 (for example, \fBtheir=thy\(miy+ier\fR) that would otherwise pass.
50 By default, \fBspell\fR (like \fBderoff\fR(1)) follows chains of included files
51 (\fB\&.so\fR and \fB\&.nx\fR \fBtroff\fR(1) requests), unless the names of such
52 included files begin with \fB/usr/lib\fR.
55 The standard spelling list is based on many sources, and while more haphazard
56 than an ordinary dictionary, is also more effective in respect to proper names
57 and popular technical words. Coverage of the specialized vocabularies of
58 biology, medicine and chemistry is light.
61 Three programs help maintain and check the hash lists used by \fBspell\fR:
68 Reads a list of words from the standard input and writes the corresponding
69 nine-digit hash code on the standard output.
78 Reads \fIn\fR hash codes from the standard input and writes a compressed
79 spelling list on the standard output.
88 Reads a compressed \fIspelling_list\fR and recreates the nine-digit hash codes
89 for all the words in it. It writes these codes on the standard output.
95 The following options are supported:
102 Check British spelling. Besides preferring \fBcentre\fR, \fBcolour\fR,
103 \fBprogramme\fR, \fBspeciality\fR, \fBtravelled\fR, and so forth, this option
104 insists upon \fI\(miise\fR in words like \fBstandardise\fR.
113 Cause \fBderoff\fR(1) to ignore \fB\&.so\fR and \fB\&.nx\fR commands. If
114 \fBderoff\fR(1) is not present on the system, then this option is ignored.
123 Follow the chains of \fIall\fR included files.
132 Print all words not literally in the spelling list, as well as plausible
133 derivations from the words in the spelling list.
142 Print every plausible stem, one per line, with \fB=\fR preceding each word.
148 \fB\fB+\fR\fIlocal_file\fR\fR
151 Specify a set of words that are correct spellings (in addition to \fBspell\fR's
152 own spelling list) for each job. \fIlocal_file\fR is the name of a
153 user-provided file that contains a sorted list of words, one per line. Words
154 found in \fIlocal_file\fR are removed from \fBspell\fR's output. Use
155 \fBsort\fR(1) to order \fIlocal_file\fR in ASCII collating sequence. If this
156 ordering is not followed, some entries in \fIlocal_file\fR might be ignored.
162 The following operands are supported:
169 A path name of a text file to check for spelling errors. If no files are named,
170 words are collected from the standard input.
173 .SH ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
176 See \fBenviron\fR(5) for descriptions of the following environment variables
177 that affect the execution of \fBspell\fR: \fBLC_CTYPE\fR, \fBLC_MESSAGES\fR,
182 The following exit values are returned:
189 Successful completion.
205 \fB\fBD_SPELL=/usr/lib/spell/hlist[ab]\fR\fR
209 hashed spelling lists, American & British
215 \fB\fBS_SPELL=/usr/lib/spell/hstop\fR\fR
225 \fB\fBH_SPELL=/var/adm/spellhist\fR\fR
235 \fB\fB/usr/share/lib/dict/words\fR\fR
245 \fBderoff\fR(1), \fBeqn\fR(1), \fBsort\fR(1), \fBtbl\fR(1), \fBtroff\fR(1),
246 \fBattributes\fR(5), \fBenviron\fR(5)
250 \fBspell\fR works only on English words defined in the U.S. \fBASCII\fR
254 Because copies of all output are accumulated in the \fBspellhist\fR file,
255 \fBspellhist\fR might grow quite large and require purging.
259 The spelling list's coverage is uneven. New installations might wish to monitor
260 the output for several months to gather local additions.
263 British spelling was done by an American.