SPELL(1) | General Commands Manual | SPELL(1) |
spell | [-biltvx] [-d list] [-h spellhist] [-m a | e | l | m | s] [-s stop] [+extra_list] [file ...] |
If no files are named, words are collected from the standard input. spell ignores most troff(1), tbl(1), eqn(1), and pic(1) constructions. Copies of all output may be accumulated in the history file, if one is specified.
By default, spell (like deroff(1)) follows chains of included files (“.so” and “.nx” commands)).
The default spelling list is based on Webster's Second International dictionary and should be fairly complete. Words that appear in the “stop list” are immediately flagged as misspellings, regardless of whether or not they exist in one of the word lists. This helps filter out misspellings (e.g. thier=thy-y+ier) that would otherwise pass. Additionally, the british file is also used as a stop list unless the -b option is specified.
Site administrators may add words to the local word list, /usr/local/share/dict/words or the local stop list, /usr/local/share/dict/stop.
All word (and stop) lists must be sorted in lexicographical order with case folded. The simplest way to achieve this is to use “sort -df”. If the word files are incorrectly sorted, spell will not be able to operate correctly.
The options are as follows:
who -m
is appended to the history file after the list of misspelled words.Unlike historic versions, the NetBSD spell command does not use hashed word files. Instead, it uses lexicographically sorted files and the same technique as look(1).
British spelling was done by an American.
In -x mode it would be nicer if the stems were grouped with the appropriate word.
April 18, 1994 | NetBSD 6.1 |