Yes!? It's also valuable to set your TOC formats to language "none" so they 
don't get caught every time in the spell checker (especially since you don't 
edit them directly)
?
Trish

--- On Tue, 6/7/11, Combs, Richard <richard.combs at Polycom.com> wrote:


From: Combs, Richard <richard.co...@polycom.com>
Subject: RE: FM10 performance with real-time spell checking
To: "keith at soltys.ca" <keith at soltys.ca>, "framers at 
lists.frameusers.com" <framers at lists.frameusers.com>
Date: Tuesday, June 7, 2011, 10:28 AM


Keith Soltys wrote: 

> It never even occurred to me that Frame had a "none" option for
> languages.

This isn't new to FM10 or relevant only to real-time spell checking. The option 
has been there forever. I've worked mainly on software over the years and have 
often used a Code pgf format (and char format) with Language set to None. 
Believe me, when you're writing API docs with lots of chunks of code, it's 
invaluable. :-) 

Richard G. Combs
Senior Technical Writer
Polycom, Inc.
richardDOTcombs AT polycomDOTcom
303-223-5111
------
rgcombs AT gmailDOTcom
303-903-6372
------






_______________________________________________


You are currently subscribed to framers as theboggette at yahoo.com.

Send list messages to framers at lists.frameusers.com.

To unsubscribe send a blank email to
framers-unsubscribe at lists.frameusers.com
or visit 
http://lists.frameusers.com/mailman/options/framers/theboggette%40yahoo.com

Send administrative questions to listadmin at frameusers.com. Visit
http://www.frameusers.com/ for more resources and info.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
<http://lists.frameusers.com/pipermail/framers/attachments/20110607/252c2f6b/attachment.html>

Reply via email to