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monotonehell wrote:Only because Wayno asked several times.
My grammar and spelling are bad. But I use a lot of tricks to try to weed out my mistakes before they go public.
One of the best tricks is to re-read everything before you press "Submit". If you're using a recent web browser, those red wiggly lines under all your text aren't decoration; they need your attention.
That's all well and good* if you're using a computer, but what about on an iPad? There doesn't seem to be any spellchecking available unless you use the (worse than useless) autocorrect feature, and the touchscreen keyboard is far easier to make mistakes on than the hardware variety. 'Twas not until I got an iPad that I really appreciated the tagline "I'm an excellent speller but a hopless tpyist"!
* Aside from one problem: the spelling dictionary the computer uses. English comes in more flavours than Microsoft and Apple seem to realise.
Just build it wrote:Bye Union Hall. I'll see you in another life, when we are both cats.
Aidan wrote:That's all well and good* if you're using a computer, but what about on an iPad? There doesn't seem to be any spellchecking available unless you use the (worse than useless) autocorrect feature, and the touchscreen keyboard is far easier to make mistakes on than the hardware variety. 'Twas not until I got an iPad that I really appreciated the tagline "I'm an excellent speller but a hopless tpyist"!
* Aside from one problem: the spelling dictionary the computer uses. English comes in more flavours than Microsoft and Apple seem to realise.
I thought iPad had spell check built in. Ever see a word with a red dashed line under it?
Here you go...
Of course you're probably stuck with the US English? Should be a way to change the dictionary. Not that you should be using an iPad anyway.
Aidan wrote:That's all well and good* if you're using a computer, but what about on an iPad? There doesn't seem to be any spellchecking available unless you use the (worse than useless) autocorrect feature, and the touchscreen keyboard is far easier to make mistakes on than the hardware variety. 'Twas not until I got an iPad that I really appreciated the tagline "I'm an excellent speller but a hopless tpyist"!
* Aside from one problem: the spelling dictionary the computer uses. English comes in more flavours than Microsoft and Apple seem to realise.
I thought iPad had spell check built in.
It does, but it can't be turned on unless Autocorrect is also on.
Most Microsoft Word users wouldn't use the spellcheck feature if it only worked when Clippy was on. As amazing as it may seem, this is actually worse because while Clippy made using Word annoying, it didn't actually prevent it from beipng used effectively. The iPad's autocorrect feature does prevent it from beipng used effectively. I gave up on it shortly after accidentally after googling Frau is urn bypass bridges.
Samsung could probably increase their market share by 10% if their Galaxy Tab ads highlighted this deficiency.
Just build it wrote:Bye Union Hall. I'll see you in another life, when we are both cats.
What rubbish. The iOS autocorrect works perfectly fine. I've logged many hours typing on both my iPad and iPhone (even, *gasp*, working), and rarely run into any issues. The key (as with the auto-correction on any brand of software keyboard) is to fix any false corrections early, as the autocorrect learns.
(And if for whatever reason you're stuck in US English, you can change language in Settings > General > International)
I'm relatively young (23) and I've never heard anyone ever say 'could care less' before that post. I did think it was strange when I saw it. It could just be a regional thing, maybe the OP lives in northern suburbs, for example, and its commonplace to say that up there, and it just hasn't extended down south yet.
The problem is that it doesn't make sense! What's trying to be said is that something is of such insignificance that it's not possible for you to care less about it. "Could care less" is totally non-sensical in that case.
Then again, I suppose most expressions become bastardised over the years. It's common-place now for people to say "the proof is in the pudding". No, the proof isn't actually located in the pudding -- the proof of the pudding (i.e. its quality) is in the eating. Is what the expression actually is.
It's = it is; its = everything else. You're = you are; your = belongs to. Than = comparative ("bigger than"); then = next.
I think that particular mistake was due to the common typo where your brain works faster that your fingers and you leave out the "n't" on the end of words. Completely changes the meaning of the sentence.
But there have been people saying "could care less" in common speech. I remember someone doing a comedy/rant on the topic.