Comment by Theodores

1 year ago

I can remember using UNIX spell with the '-b' option, because I am British. There were only two language options, and now I want to know what the decision making was behind that, how the code catered for that and where the respective dictionaries came from. Did Australians and New Zealanders use British spelling or American?

UNIX spell was the 'ZX81 1K chess' of spelling, and, on home computers, we did not have a lot of spell checking going on until MS Word for Windows 3.1. Before then, in offices, secretaries did the typing with WordPerfect. They were human spell checkers for their respective managers and teams.

Meanwhile, at home, with our dot matrix printers and flickery screens, we were winging it with paper dictionaries for all of those early years of computing. I can't remember spell checking as being that important back then as everyone could spell. I was in a school of a thousand and there was only one kid that claimed to be dyslexic, a plausible excuse for not being able to spell. Maybe the 1980s was literacy's golden age with there being a clear start date for the decline in our spelling ability, that being the day UNIX spell was written.

I like to play Scrabble. Although a very different problem to spell checking, the process shares some steps with UNIX spell. Common word prefixes and suffixes are identified and bolted together in the rack or on the board with other components. Then a Scrabble dictionary is a bit like UNIX spell as it is just a big dictionary of words with no meanings provided. All that matters is whether a given word is in the book or not. It also has a few special look up tables such as the 102 two letter words.

I remember spell checking my essays for high school on the commodore 64, using Paperclip 64, in 1984, Before there was ANY Microsoft windows. Spell check took a few minutes, because it read the dictionary from disk as it checked, and after that you could go thru all the words that it couldn't match.