At 08:12 21/11/2012 -0500, Virgil Aonly wrote:
These questions raise an interesting design decision made by LibO.
When it comes to Autocorrect, I've noticed that, by default, LibO
enables all of the Autocorrect options. LibO naturally assumes that,
if I type a "(c)", what I REALLY want is a copyright symbol. It
seems to me that is the same faulty assumption that has made people
so frustrated with MS Word; the software publisher decide what
people want and sets the defaults accordingly.
Every time I load a fresh install of LibO, the first thing I have to
do is go into Autocorrect and disable nearly all of the options. I
think it would make more sense for the default install to have
Autocorrect disabled and allow the user to enable it as desired.
But think of the consequences. Remember that most users of any
software use only a small subset of its capabilities. If automatic
correction was hidden by default, many (most?) users would never know
it existed. The fact that you can describe having to disable the
parts you don't like shows that you have learned at least of the
existence of the facility. I hope that's true of most users. The
frustration may be evidence of didactic success!
Brian Barker
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