Note: A simple "spellchecking" program is included in this distribution. It is a perl program named "spellcheck". It simply prints the analysis of the input text; it provides no way to modify the text. It is simply given as a demonstration of the module. Type spellcheck -h for a usage summary. If no input files are specified, it will read from stdin. After each line of input, it will print the analysis of the terms. By default, it only gives output for terms which are "incorrect". Give it the -v option to have it report on the "correct" terms as well. Tests: 'make test' currently does nothing. To test the installation, try out the "spellcheck" program provided. __POD__ NAME Text::Ispell.pm - a module encapsulating access to the Ispell program. SYNOPSIS # Brief: use Text::Ispell; Text::Ispell::spellcheck( $string ); # or use Text::Ispell qw( spellcheck ); # import the function spellcheck( $string ); # Useful: use Text::Ispell qw( :all ); # import all symbols for my $r ( spellcheck( "hello hacking perl shrdlu 42" ) ) { print "$r->{'type'}: $r->{'term'}\n"; } DESCRIPTION Text::Ispell::spellcheck() takes one argument. It must be a string, and it should contain only printable characters. One allowable exception is a terminal newline, which will be chomped off anyway. The line is fed to a coprocess running ispell for analysis. The line is parsed on non-wordchars into a sequence of terms. By default, the set of wordchars is defined in ispell as letters, digits, and the apostrophe. In other words, the line is subjected the equivalent of split /[^a-zA-Z0-9']+/ (ispell has a means to add characters to the default set, but currently Text::Ispell does not provide access to that feature.) The result of ispell's analysis of each term is a categorization of the term into one of six types: ok, root, miss, none, compound, and guess. Some of these carry additional information. Text::Ispell::spellcheck returns a list of objects, each corresponding to a term in the spellchecked string. Each object is a hash (hash-ref) with at least two entries: 'term' and 'type'. The former contains the term ispell is reporting on, and the latter is ispell's determination of that term's type (see above). For types 'ok' and 'none', that is all the information there is. For the type 'root', an additional hash entry is present: 'root'. Its value is the word which ispell identified in the dictionary as being the likely root of the current term. For the type 'miss', an additional hash entry is present: 'misses'. Its value is a string of words, comma-separated, which ispell identified as being "near-misses" of the current term, when scanning the dictionary. A quickie example: use Text::Ispell qw( spellcheck ); Text::Ispell::allow_compounds(1); for my $r ( spellcheck( "hello hacking perl salmoning fruithammer shrdlu 42" ) ) { if ( $r->{'type'} eq 'ok' ) { # as in the case of 'hello' print "'$r->{'term'}' was found in the dictionary.\n"; } elsif ( $r->{'type'} eq 'root' ) { # as in the case of 'hacking' print "'$r->{'term'}' can be formed from root '$r->{'root'}'\n"; } elsif ( $r->{'type'} eq 'miss' ) { # as in the case of 'perl' print "'$r->{'term'}' was not found in the dictionary;\n"; print "Near misses: $r->{'misses'}\n"; } elsif ( $r->{'type'} eq 'guess' ) { # as in the case of 'salmoning' print "'$r->{'term'}' was not found in the dictionary;\n"; print "Root/affix Guesses: $r->{'guesses'}\n"; } elsif ( $r->{'type'} eq 'compound' ) { # as in the case of 'fruithammer' print "'$r->{'term'}' is a valid compound word.\n"; } elsif ( $r->{'type'} eq 'none' ) { # as in the case of 'shrdlu' print "No match for term '$r->{'term'}'\n"; } # and numbers are skipped entirely, as in the case of 42. } ERRORS 'Text::Ispell::spellcheck()' starts the ispell coprocess if the coprocess seems not to exist. Ordinarily this is simply the first time it's called. ispell is spawned via the 'Open2::open2()' function, which throws an exception (i.e. dies) if the spawn fails. The caller should be prepared to catch this exception -- unless, of course, the default behavior of die is acceptable. Nota Bene The full location of the ispell executable is stored in the variable '$Text::Ispell::path'. The default value is /usr/local/bin/ispell. If your ispell executable has some name other than this, then you must set '$Text::Ispell::path' accordingly before you call 'Text::Ispell::spellcheck()' (or any other function in the module) for the first time! AUX FUNCTIONS add_word(word) Adds a word to the personal dictionary. Be careful of capitalization. If you want the word to be added "case- insensitively", you should call 'add_word_lc()' add_word_lc(word) Adds a word to the personal dictionary, in lower-case form. This allows ispell to match it in a case-insensitive manner. accept_word(word) Similar to adding a word to the dictionary, in that it causes ispell to accept the word as valid, but it does not actually add it to the dictionary. Presumably the effects of this only last for the current ispell session, which will mysteriously end if any of the coprocess-restarting functions are called... parse_according_to(formatter) Causes ispell to parse subsequent input lines according to the specified formatter. As of ispell v. 3.1.20, only 'tex' and 'nroff' are supported. set_params_by_language(language) Causes ispell to set its internal operational parameters according to the given language. Legal arguments to this function, and its effects, are currently unknown by the author of Text::Ispell. save_dictionary() Causes ispell to save the current state of the dictionary to its disk file. Presumably ispell would ordinarily only do this upon exit. terse_mode(bool:terse) In terse mode, ispell will not produce reports for "correct" words. This means that the calling program will not receive results of the types 'ok', 'root', and 'compound'. ispell starts up in NON-terse mode, i.e. reports are produced for all terms, not just "incorrect" ones. FUNCTIONS THAT RESTART ISPELL The following functions cause the current ispell coprocess, if any, to terminate. This means that all the changes to the state of ispell made by the above functions will be lost, and their respective values reset to their defaults. The only function above whose effect is persistent is 'save_dictionary()'. Perhaps in the future we will figure out a good way to make this state information carry over from one instantiation of the coprocess to the next. allow_compounds(bool) When this value is set to True, compound words are accepted as legal -- as long as both words are found in the dictionary; more than two words are always illegal. When this value is set to False, run-together words are considered spelling errors. The default value of this setting is dictionary-dependent, so the caller should set it explicitly if it really matters. make_wild_guesses(bool) This setting controls when ispell makes "wild" guesses. If False, ispell only makes "sane" guesses, i.e. possible root/affix combinations that match the current dictionary; only if it can find none will it make "wild" guesses, which don't match the dictionary, and might in fact be illegal words. If True, wild guesses are always made, along with any "sane" guesses. This feature can be useful if the dictionary has a limited word list, or a word list with few suffixes. The default value of this setting is dictionary-dependent, so the caller should set it explicitly if it really matters. use_dictionary([dictionary]) Specifies what dictionary to use instead of the default. Dictionary names are actually file names, and are searched for according to the following rule: if the name does not contain a slash, it is looked for in the directory containing the default dictionary, typically /usr/local/lib. Otherwise, it is used as is: if it does not begin with a slash, it is construed from the current directory. If no argument is given, the default dictionary will be used. use_personal_dictionary([dictionary]) Specifies what personal dictionary to use instead of the default. Dictionary names are actually file names, and are searched for according to the following rule: if the name begins with a slash, it is used as is (i.e. it is an absolute path name). Otherwise, it is construed as relative to the user's home directory ($HOME). If no argument is given, the default personal dictionary will be used. FUTURE ENHANCEMENTS ispell options: -w chars Specify additional characters that can be part of a word. DEPENDENCIES Text::Ispell uses the external program ispell, which is the "International Ispell", available at http://fmg-www.cs.ucla.edu/geoff/ispell.html as well as various archives and mirrors, such as ftp://ftp.math.orst.edu/pub/ispell-3.1/ This is a very popular program, and may already be installed on your system. Text::Ispell also uses the standard perl modules FileHandle, IPC::Open2, and Carp. AUTHOR jdporter@min.net (John Porter) This module is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.