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 Readme for:  Utility » Text » Misc » thaicheck.lha

ThaiCheck

Description: Tool to check Thai text for validity
Download: thaicheck.lha       (TIPS: Use the right click menu if your browser takes you back here all the time)
Size: 36kb
Version: 1.2
Date: 26 Jan 16
Author: emptystate@yahoo.co.uk
Submitter: uploader
Homepage: http://www.lyndonhill.com/Projects/thaicheck.html
Category: utility/text/misc
Replaces: utility/text/misc/thaicheck.lha
License: Other
Distribute: yes
Min OS Version: 4.0
FileID: 9716
 
Comments: 0
Snapshots: 0
Videos: 0
Downloads:  (Current version)
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thaicheck Documentation
(c) Lyndon Hill, 2008.

Introduction

This is a program to validate Thai text.

More up to date information regarding this program can be found at
http://www.lyndonhill.com/Projects/thaicheck.html

More Thai software for Amiga can be found at
http://www.lyndonhill.com/Projects/thaionamiga.html

Binaries included for AmigaOS classic, AmigaOS4 and MorphOS.
Distribution is totally free.

* What is thaicheck ?

It's a small program to check Thai letter sequence order in plain text files,
i.e. TIS-620. You run it over your files and it tells you if it finds any
mistakes.

* What is TIS-620 and how can I make sure I am using the right type of
text files ?

See my project "thaiconv".

* Why do I need thaicheck ?

You need thaicheck if you write Thai text in a text editor or word processor
that does not check you are typing legal letter combinations.

Your software (editor, word processor etc) may let you type bad sequences
and you will not know until you view the file on another
computer/font/editor/web browser etc. At that time, when the text rendering 
part of the software meets your illegal combination it usually chooses one of 
the following:

1. Render it as is.
2. Render an unreadable mess.
3. Render nothing.
4. Crash.
5. Not load your document properly in the first instant.

* How do I use thaicheck ?

Use it at the command line or in  a script. The basic usage is
$ thaicheck filename level
filename: the file you want to check
level: level of strictness, as defined by WTT 2.0 standard.

* What level of strictness should I use ?

0 = pass through (next to useless for your purposes)
1 = basic check
2 = strict

In all probabilities, if you are using thaicheck then you are the type of
vigilant person with an eye to detail. Don't bother using level 1 and go
straight to level 2.

If there are no mistakes then thaicheck will finish and there is no output.

12.12.2006 




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