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Text to get smarter in Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard
AppleInsider ^ | 03/06/2009 | By Prince McLean

Posted on 03/06/2009 2:14:42 PM PST by Swordmaker

Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, expected this summer, will deliver a variety of advanced text related features across all applications that use Core Text, according to people familiar with Apple's plans.

While Mac OS X already delivers integrated, system wide spelling and grammar checking, as well as "smart copy/paste," "smart quotes," and "smart links," each of which offers to enhance text as it is being typed, it's reported that Snow Leopard will significantly expand upon text entry with a series of expanded features along similar lines.

Automatic spell check

Among the new features are automatic spell correction, which, according to people familiar with the software, will optionally allow the system to fix obvious spelling errors while the user types, rather than only underlining misspelled words in red squiggles for the user to correct themselves. Auto correction is already a feature of the iPhone, where words that appear to be misspelled are popped up in a suggestion bubble that can be touched to dismiss if the correction isn't desired.

In Snow Leopard, automatic spell correction will simply replace words such as "teh" or "spelll" once the user hits the spacebar. Like the existing spell correction using red squiggle underlines, the feature comes directly from Microsoft Word, which similarly offers to automatically correct words while the user types. The new system wide improvement will simply extend the feature to all applications. Like the existing spell check and similar features, the automatic spell check can also be switched off by the user.

Substitutions

Another feature new in the Snow Leopard Core Text engine is Substitutions, something that will be familiar to users of the Palm OS as well as Word users. Microsoft refers to the feature in Word (below) as part of AutoCorrect called "replace text as you type."

In Snow Leopard, users will similarly be able to define a list of phrases or long words that will be automatically substituted when the user types a given character sequence. For example, "MOSX" could be designated to expand to "Apple's Mac OS X operating system," or whatever the user desires.

Those familiar with recent betas say a variety of substitutions are already defined in Snow Leopard, including items common to Word, such as typing "(c)" to obtain the copyright symbol. Each of these substitutions can be manually turned on and off individually, and the user can add as many new items as they wish.

Smart pasteboard: Services

Snow Leopard will also expand upon novel copy and paste features that originated at NeXT and from the Classic Mac OS. The first is Services, which was coined at NeXT. Services is an architecture that allows the operating system to copy text or other information, send it to another app for processing, and then optionally return it in a modified form.

Mac OS X already supports Services, but they're all hidden away in a big messy submenu under the Application menu. To use them, a user currently needs to make a selection, then navigate the cluttered menu looking for the desired action. While many applications install Services they can perform, few of them are very useful.

In Snow Leopard, it's reported that a smart selection of relevant Services will appear right in the contextual menu of a selection, making their utility far more obvious. The items will also be tagged with the applications' icon, such as a Mail icon representing the ability to "Send [the selected text] to Mail."

In addition, a new submenu in the contextual menu will reportedly offer to perform "Transformations," such as changing the selected text to all caps, or all small letters, or capitalized. This would appear to be a new type of Services offered by the system itself, essentially copying the selection to the pasteboard, performing an algorithm on it, and then returning it to the working document.

Smart selection: Data Detectors

A somewhat related feature, this time derived from work done at Apple's Advanced Technology Group in the 1990s, is Data Detectors. They enable the system to recognize bits of text as actionable items, such as addresses, phone numbers, or dates. Leopard reintroduced the technology in Mac OS X by enabling detected data in Mail to be used to create iCal events or Address Book contacts.

In Snow Leopard, sources say, Data Detectors can be turned on anywhere text appears within an application that uses the Core Text framework. That means a bit of text that appears to be a phone number would be highlighted with a subtle menu control that offers to, for example, add the number to either an existing or new contact in Address Book.


TOPICS: Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: ilovebillgates; iwanthim; iwanthimbad; microsoftfanboys
Drool.... I have some of these service available by using a third party add-on. Word Service 2.7 "provides 34 functions to convert, format, or speak the currently selected text, as well as insert data or show statistics of the selection within all Cocoa applications (such as TextEdit, Mail, iChat, Safari, XCode, or our commercial applications) and Carbon applications supporting services."

Very useful.

This addition to OS X.6 Snow Leopard will be even more useful.

1 posted on 03/06/2009 2:14:42 PM PST by Swordmaker
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To: 1234; 50mm; 6SJ7; Abundy; Action-America; acoulterfan; aristotleman; af_vet_rr; Aggie Mama; ...
This article from Apple Insider shows some of the new text handling additions to Snow Leopard... looks real good. PING!


Mac OS X.6 Snow Leopard Ping!

If you want on or off the Mac Ping List, Freepmail me.

2 posted on 03/06/2009 2:18:18 PM PST by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE is "AAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: Swordmaker

Some pissant country is going to eventually back a Linux variant and make billions, if not trillions. Hype ye Apple sir.


3 posted on 03/06/2009 2:21:18 PM PST by allmost
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To: Swordmaker
something that will be familiar to users of the Palm OS as well as Word users
I really don't need the machine to be interfering with what I'm typing. Maybe this auto-substitution could be customizable? Maybe we could use F-keys? Or go back to Wordstar commands...
4 posted on 03/06/2009 2:30:01 PM PST by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/____________________ Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: allmost

And given that many users of Linux don’t pay a thing for their s/w, just how is that going to happen, exactly?


5 posted on 03/06/2009 2:38:04 PM PST by NVDave
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To: NVDave
And given that many users of Linux don’t pay a thing for their s/w, just how is that going to happen, exactly?

Volume!

6 posted on 03/06/2009 3:21:06 PM PST by ReignOfError
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To: NVDave
And given that many users of Linux don’t pay a thing for their s/w, just how is that going to happen, exactly?

Volume!

7 posted on 03/06/2009 3:39:33 PM PST by ReignOfError
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To: Swordmaker

The automatic spell correction is a blessing and a curse, sometimes I misspell a word and expect it to be caught then I end up spelling another word, or I spell a word it doesn’t recognize correctly and it corrects my correct spelling. More often than not it works as advertised though.


8 posted on 03/06/2009 3:43:15 PM PST by Mr. Blonde (You ever thought about being weird for a living?)
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To: Swordmaker; glock rocks
Auto fill in the address bar has already gotten me in trouble with Little Old Ladies for some of my racier eMails and auto correct will destroy my King Bender's Ingrish contemporary Langwich otherwise known as Tork’s Tango by some FReepers. Ooops there goes that double caps thing again...
9 posted on 03/06/2009 3:46:54 PM PST by tubebender (99% of Lawyers give the rest a bad name...)
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To: ReignOfError

OK, maybe I missed how this works, given four years of esoteric mathematics in a EE program.

But last I knew:

‘n’ * 0 = 0

for all values of ‘n’, both real and imaginary.


10 posted on 03/06/2009 3:59:53 PM PST by NVDave
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To: Swordmaker
Thanks for the Image Hosted by ImageShack.us!
11 posted on 03/06/2009 4:01:19 PM PST by vox_freedom ("If God be for us, who is against us?" -- Romans 8:31)
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To: Mr. Blonde

“The automatic spell correction is a blessing and a curse,”

Yep, my wife got a comment on a Twitter post she made. Apparently the guy tried to write “Nice twits” and she received the message with the “w” deleted by his Iphone spell corrector.


12 posted on 03/06/2009 4:06:45 PM PST by yazoo
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To: Mr. Blonde

I notice the OS X spell-check does not recognize “Obama”. It does recognize Eisenhower, Truman, Kennedy, Reagan, Bush, hell it even recognizes Clinton. That spell-check software just might be on to something.


13 posted on 03/06/2009 5:05:56 PM PST by 6SJ7 (Atlas Shrugged Mode: ON)
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To: NVDave

Engineers. Sheesh. :P

It was a joke. An old advertising cliché. “How do we do it? Volume!” A noteworthy use was the First CityWide Change Bank skit on SNL — a bank that only makes change. How do they make money at it? “Volume.”


14 posted on 03/06/2009 5:51:41 PM PST by ReignOfError
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To: ReignOfError

Ah. Sorry for not getting it.


15 posted on 03/06/2009 10:54:27 PM PST by NVDave
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To: SunkenCiv
I really don't need the machine to be interfering with what I'm typing. Maybe this auto-substitution could be customizable?

It's actually surprisingly fun and useful. I have a program called TypeIt4Me that does this. I type a short abbreviation of something, hit the spacebar, and it expands the abbreviation to whatever I have set. You can turn on and off expansion keys. Mine knows all the words I commonly misspell, all the common things I have to type all the time, and it even knows a fair amount of HTML.
16 posted on 03/07/2009 5:23:47 AM PST by publiusF27
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To: publiusF27

It can be fun... for example, a former boss (he was my boss for eight years or so) was a really awfully obnoxious fan of U of Mich teams (he didn’t go there, said he couldn’t have gotten in with his grades) so I changed his dictionary (this was in some version of Windows) to auto-replace various combinations of U of M with “Michigan State”. :’)


17 posted on 03/07/2009 7:29:51 PM PST by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/____________________ Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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