Il 24/11/2011 17.39, Ariel Constenla-Haile ha scritto:
Dictionaries are developed by individuals/entities outside OOo,
they were never developed inside the OOo source tree. I'm not sure
what was the procedure (sure Gianluca can comment), but it seems like
these dictionaries were updated on request, not developed by OOo.
Surely, the community developed the dictionaries and there were specific
*external* projects that worked on several dictionaries.
I.e. the Italian thesaurus was created thanks to a large and long
collaboration with an Italian school, as a students' project.
And on the other side:
* some dictionaries are incomplete (like the Spanish case)
* there may be cases where there are more dictionaries out there for the
same language. Why should AOO favor one? The user should be the one
who chooses which dictionary to install
My main worry is to provide to the users, at *download time*, *all*
tools they may need for a functional Office Suite, without forcing them
to browse one or more external websites for important add-ons like the
linguistic tools.
For the official binary release AOO can ship category B libraries in
binary form, so for a release AOO can (and should) be compiled with
--enable-hunspell and --enable-hyphen until someone finds a replacement.
An official binary release without the three linguistic components is
a NO-GO (IMO).
a big +1 from me.
A binary official release without dictionaries may be annoying for the
end users, but there are alternatives (like (miss-)using the first start
wizard to invite the user to download dictionary-extensions for his/her
language, etc.).
I suppose Andre Fischer started this thread just to find a consensus
about a single alternative among those we were previously discussing. ;-)
So far, there are 3 proposal:
a) Download the extension (assuming that the right locale can be
detected) automatically from the extension repository during installation;
b) As last step of the installation, pop up a web page that, among other
things, tells the user that there is a dictionary extension that can be
installed and what its license is;
c) let the user know that there is one (or multiple) linguistic tools
pack extension for his/her native language when the main AOO binary is
downloaded.
Dennis Hamilton raised some security concerns about a) and b) solution,
I suppose.
Regards,
Gianluca
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