Could you expand on what isn't working for you with the spellchecker?
- Proposed as answer by Stefan BlomMVP 12 hours 59 minutes ago
- Unproposed as answer by Stefan BlomMVP 12 hours 59 minutes ago
Those are apostrophes, not hyphens.
This is a function of the grammar checker which is related to the spelling checker but is not the same tool. Check which rules you are using for your grammar checker in Word.
Word picks up youre as a spelling problem, as does this forum. It does not presume to know whether you mean you're or your, though. If you use your when you should have you're, though, my grammar check will pick that up.
Could you give an example where the computer should know from context that you want "we'll" rather than "well?" I especially would be interested in one that your Blackberry picks up.
I've seen what contextual auto-correction does on my smart phone, and it is scary, not in a good way. I consider it dangerous. AutoCorrect errors have been the subject of many a humorous post on Facebook.
Word has an AC option to insert suggestions from the spelling dictionary. I keep that turned off! I make enough mistakes on my own without
- Proposed as answer by Stefan BlomMVP Tuesday, March 31, 2015 6:27 PM
- Unproposed as answer by Stefan BlomMVP Tuesday, March 31, 2015 6:27 PM
(Contextual) Auto-correct is limited compared to what the phones seem to have. If I spent a lot of time correcting words, I would build up a good library of words that would be auto-corrected. Seems someone should have done this by now.
Word's AutoCorrect isn't supposed to be the same as the word suggestions you see in a cell phone. In Word, AutoCorrect means that each AutoCorrect entry inserts specific content.
My mistake. Apostrophes.
I'm sorry to hear that the technology scares you. I haven't had any issues with it, and yes, we've all seen the amusing problems some people have had.
Hi Stefan
I'm not sure what it's called and what it's supposed to do then but when I'm messaging or texting on my BlackBerry, the auto-correct function that is used seems quite intuitive - a lot more so than Word. Since I'm not that adept at hovering over the word that is misspelled and doesn't get auto corrected, I'm not all that familiar with the options list that shows up (that one would just naturally uses in most other programs) and I usually just go back and correct it.
Regards
Dave
Hi Stefan
I'm not sure what it's called and what it's supposed to do then but when I'm messaging or texting on my BlackBerry, the auto-correct function that is used seems quite intuitive - a lot more so than Word. Since I'm not that adept at hovering over the word that is misspelled and doesn't get auto corrected, I'm not all that familiar with the options list that shows up (that one would just naturally uses in most other programs) and I usually just go back and correct it.
In Word 2013, you can right-click the misspelled word and choose a replacement (the list of suggested replacements come from the spellchecker). As I wrote previously, making suggestions isn't as flexible in Word as it is in a cell phone (which also means, of course, that there is no risk that you accept a bad suggestion by mistake).
What you can do is manually create an AutoCorrect entry for a specific incorrectly spelled word.