Op Di, 2009-03-17 om 16:48 +0100 skryf Olivier R.: > Hi Thomas, > > Thomas Lange - Sun Germany - ham02 - Hamburg a écrit : > > > .e2a2r > > .u4n5k2 > > a4c2a2r > > am2i4no > > 4and > > an5e2st. > > > > What is the meaning of those? > > First I thought each entry to be a word part (sub string) where the > > numbers denote possible hyphenation points and the value the quality of > > that hyphenation point. > > But that seems not to be true. At least I do not know a word with a sub > > string of 'ear' that can be hyphenated after each of those characters. > > Similar for 'acar'. And what is the meaning of the '.' characters? > > - odd numbers: can hyphenate > - even numbers: cannot hyphenate > - dots: beginning or end of a word. > > The highest number wins. > > You should read that: > http://hunspell.sourceforge.net/tb87nemeth.pdf
I haven't seen this before. It looks like the best resource at the moment. At the time I worked on these things there were less documentaiton available, and we started a page on our wiki collecting some information. I guess it will now only serve as a little bit extra, but perhaps the gotcha I explain on the page is useful for you. http://translate.sourceforge.net/wiki/guide/hyphenation I also added the new link to that page. I never actually saw any news related to that. It means I can finally fix several hyphenation bugs in Afrikaans. We have requirements very similar to Dutch in terms of the handling of the dïäerësës. Keep well Friedel -- Recently on my blog: http://translate.org.za/blogs/friedel/en/content/video-virtaals-functionality --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lingucomponent.openoffice.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lingucomponent.openoffice.org