On Sat, Mar 20 2021, Dr. Arne Babenhauserheide wrote:
> Kyle Meyer writes:
>
>> Sharon Kimble writes:
>>
>>> When I'm writing in org-mode I very often make spelling mistakes which I
>>> can go back to later to correct. So how can I jump from one mistake to
>>> the next please?
>>
>> If you have
Kyle Meyer writes:
> Sharon Kimble writes:
>
>> When I'm writing in org-mode I very often make spelling mistakes which I
>> can go back to later to correct. So how can I jump from one mistake to
>> the next please?
>
> If you have Flyspell mode enabled in the buffer,
> flyspell-goto-next-error
Samuel Wales writes:
> i wonder why the generic next-error is not used.
Hmm, good question. Ignoring any historical reasons for why flyspell
does what it does, a quick search on the Emacs lists makes me think at
least one open issue is how to prioritize/combine different next-error
sources:
*
i wonder why the generic next-error is not used.
On 3/19/21, Kyle Meyer wrote:
> Sharon Kimble writes:
>
>> When I'm writing in org-mode I very often make spelling mistakes which I
>> can go back to later to correct. So how can I jump from one mistake to
>> the next please?
>
> If you have
Sharon Kimble writes:
> When I'm writing in org-mode I very often make spelling mistakes which I
> can go back to later to correct. So how can I jump from one mistake to
> the next please?
If you have Flyspell mode enabled in the buffer,
flyspell-goto-next-error (bound to `C-,' by default) will
Sharon Kimble writes:
> So in that example how do I jump, using the keyboard only, from the
> misspelled apples to the misspelled oranges so that I can correct them?
With a package like spell-fu or flyspell you'll be able to find a
command like `spell-fu-goto-previous-error'. Bind that to
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
When I'm writing in org-mode I very often make spelling mistakes which I
can go back to later to correct. So how can I jump from one mistake to
the next please?
For example -
- --8<---cut here---start->8---