This results in the computation being done in native code
and the correct proximity being used.
Bug: 6181080
Change-Id: I08fa05c781d607e4feca2caeda353ec19c133a3d
Seems I didn't get how to iterate on a String correctly >.>
Talk about a big bug. Anyway, I think it's working now.
Bug: 5955228
Change-Id: I988c900cf2a16c44b9505cfd4f77c7cda7e592f0
This also tries to make the code as easy to extend as possible
for future developments.
Bug: 5701241
Change-Id: I1ed48e6a5cc7aab94c5d6e309930cc004247d7e7
Note that this is not enough: we still need to create a
reasonable proximity table for Cyrillic characters, or we
won't be able to show up suggestions.
Bug: 5701241
Change-Id: Idb141f7a230a6e1a46094308c26f43c01ab3b97a
The spell checker cannot afford to return static objects,
seeing as the framework will then use the same objects to
pair the cookie and sequence ids to the request.
Bug: 5503243
Change-Id: Ia9c3a933bfb30cf5525418b240ef60632d72c9d0
In effect, this stops the spell checker from suggesting overly
long words.
More precisely, it takes advantage of the new facility that
takes into account the whole length of the dictionary word when
computing scores, so words much longer than the input word will
see their score demoted accordingly.
Bug: 5384578
Change-Id: I326cd7c87c3080e7fa8729f78517f8ba13672a9b
It now follows the following logic:
- If the word should be filtered out => false
- Else => !IN_THE_DICTIONARY
This defines the behavior for ICS MR0, and prepares for addition
of a new HAS_LIKELY_SUGGESTIONS flag in MR1.
Bug: 5383800
Change-Id: I530b1404ae8cf3337ff68ef5ab0f4d95f2dad0e8
This should not be used lightly, as it violates the general
contract of locale, and does kill some legitimate (albeit
alledgedly rare) use patterns.
Currently, the spell checker uses this because it uses a
negative logic: it should match broadly, and when in doubt,
match even more broadly, which is almost never the case of
something that uses the locale.
In other words: don't use this option unless you are
very, VERY sure that's what you want. Hint: it isn't
Bug: 5280929
Change-Id: Ib3cae319c692161d653630038c5bcde1f4340c05
If the spellchecker encounters a bug and happens to crash,
it may be sensible to avoid killing the keyboard in response.
This is a possible way to do it, which comes with the big
drawback of making bugs in the spell checker harder to find.
Change-Id: Idb26fb592b9718e1dbdadeda8fbd1a8a1d805c28
Note that this affects only the results of the spell checker if
actually passed such a word. For example, the spell checker will
not flag "http://oju" as a typo, because it looks like a URL.
But in the current implementation, TextView passes "http" and
"oju" separately, so "oju" is still flagged as a typo.
Bug: 5281875
Change-Id: I9d721fd3af34edc51b11908cf2e8fe994b164242
This fixes a race condition that would end up with the spell
checker not finding some words in the user dictionary when it
just booted.
Bug: 5194627
Change-Id: I1ba911cc53e6ae3b111d54a6f91d1d5feef3f5de
The new behavior is as follows:
- If the word in the dictionary is not fully lower case, then the
exact case is required to match.
- If the word in the dictionary is fully lower case, then any of
the following patterns match:
- fully lower case
- only the first char capitalized
- all caps
Any other capitalization is rejected.
This is probably what people want. If you type a name in all lower
case, it should be marked as a typo, but if you type a word with a
capital for emphasis or just because it's the start of the sentence,
it should match a lower case word in the dictionary. If you have
a spurious capital letter in the middle of a word because of a typo,
it should be marked as such.
Accents are not affected, and should not be. An accented letter
is a different letter and a missing accent should be reported.
We should maybe consider again for some common transpositions
like the "ue" digraph for German, which is now considered a typo,
but will suggest the correct diacritics as the first suggestion.
Bug: 5145751
Change-Id: I651e24f13c90fb94700a1674ad380e95336e7dca
The dictionaries and proximities are not thread-safe. In order to
be able to check spelling in parallel, make a dictionary pool to
call upon when a spelling check is necessary.
Bug: 5156851
Change-Id: Ie3796164187dd7b7abf5ccd5d014073d43d74408