On 2020-09-06 16:08, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 9/6/20 2:53 PM, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> I removed "yo" from
>
> /usr/lib64/thunderbird/dictionaries/en_US.dic, line 48294
/usr/lib64/thunderbird/dictionaries is a link to /usr/share/myspell so
you've modified the system en_US dictionary. Your change will be
reverted with the next update to that file.
> but no happy camping with that either
Removing that line affected the command line spell checking for me.
However, after extensive investigation and testing, I have no idea where
Thunderbird gets the en_US dictionary from. It must be builtin
somewhere, but I can't find that either. If you change the spell
checking to a different "language", it loads the dictionary files for
that language. But it never loads the en_US one under any conditions
that I've tried.
I wonder if this has anything to do with it. This is my
dictionary entries from prefs.js:
user_pref("dictionarysearch.accesskey2", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.accesskey3", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.accesskey4", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.menutext1", "Dictionary Search for
\"$\"");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.menutext2", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.menutext3", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.menutext4", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.url1",
"http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=$"); <------- Huh?
user_pref("dictionarysearch.url2", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.url3", "");
user_pref("dictionarysearch.url4", "");
Look like Thunderbird is look at the web!
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=yo