diff runtime/doc/spell.txt @ 32670:695b50472e85

Fix line endings issue
author Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
date Mon, 26 Jun 2023 13:13:12 +0200
parents 448aef880252
children 4635e43f2c6f
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/runtime/doc/spell.txt
+++ b/runtime/doc/spell.txt
@@ -1,1681 +1,1681 @@
-*spell.txt*	For Vim version 9.0.  Last change: 2023 May 25
-
-
-		  VIM REFERENCE MANUAL	  by Bram Moolenaar
-
-
-Spell checking						*spell*
-
-1. Quick start			|spell-quickstart|
-2. Remarks on spell checking	|spell-remarks|
-3. Generating a spell file	|spell-mkspell|
-4. Spell file format		|spell-file-format|
-
-{not available when the |+syntax| feature has been disabled at compile time}
-
-Note: There also is a vimspell plugin.  If you have it you can do ":help
-vimspell" to find about it.  But you will probably want to get rid of the
-plugin and use the 'spell' option instead, it works better.
-
-==============================================================================
-1. Quick start					*spell-quickstart* *E756*
-
-This command switches on spell checking: >
-
-	:setlocal spell spelllang=en_us
-
-This switches on the 'spell' option and specifies to check for US English.
-
-The words that are not recognized are highlighted with one of these:
-	SpellBad	word not recognized			|hl-SpellBad|
-	SpellCap	word not capitalised			|hl-SpellCap|
-	SpellRare	rare word				|hl-SpellRare|
-	SpellLocal	wrong spelling for selected region	|hl-SpellLocal|
-
-Vim only checks words for spelling, there is no grammar check.
-
-If the 'mousemodel' option is set to "popup" and the cursor is on a badly
-spelled word or it is "popup_setpos" and the mouse pointer is on a badly
-spelled word, then the popup menu will contain a submenu to replace the bad
-word.  Note: this slows down the appearance of the popup menu.  Note for GTK:
-don't release the right mouse button until the menu appears, otherwise it
-won't work.
-
-To search for the next misspelled word:
-
-							*]s*
-]s			Move to next misspelled word after the cursor.
-			A count before the command can be used to repeat.
-			'wrapscan' applies.
-
-							*[s*
-[s			Like "]s" but search backwards, find the misspelled
-			word before the cursor.  Doesn't recognize words
-			split over two lines, thus may stop at words that are
-			not highlighted as bad.  Does not stop at word with
-			missing capital at the start of a line.
-
-							*]S*
-]S			Like "]s" but only stop at bad words, not at rare
-			words or words for another region.
-
-							*[S*
-[S			Like "]S" but search backwards.
-
-
-To add words to your own word list:
-
-							*zg*
-zg			Add word under the cursor as a good word to the first
-			name in 'spellfile'.  A count may precede the command
-			to indicate the entry in 'spellfile' to be used.  A
-			count of two uses the second entry.
-
-			In Visual mode the selected characters are added as a
-			word (including white space!).
-			When the cursor is on text that is marked as badly
-			spelled then the marked text is used.
-			Otherwise the word under the cursor, separated by
-			non-word characters, is used.
-
-			If the word is explicitly marked as bad word in
-			another spell file the result is unpredictable.
-
-							*zG*
-zG			Like "zg" but add the word to the internal word list
-			|internal-wordlist|.
-
-							*zw*
-zw			Like "zg" but mark the word as a wrong (bad) word.
-			If the word already appears in 'spellfile' it is
-			turned into a comment line.  See |spellfile-cleanup|
-			for getting rid of those.
-
-							*zW*
-zW			Like "zw" but add the word to the internal word list
-			|internal-wordlist|.
-
-zuw							*zug* *zuw*
-zug			Undo |zw| and |zg|, remove the word from the entry in
-			'spellfile'.  Count used as with |zg|.
-
-zuW							*zuG* *zuW*
-zuG			Undo |zW| and |zG|, remove the word from the internal
-			word list.  Count used as with |zg|.
-
-						*:spe* *:spellgood* *E1280*
-:[count]spe[llgood] {word}
-			Add {word} as a good word to 'spellfile', like with
-			|zg|.  Without count the first name is used, with a
-			count of two the second entry, etc.
-
-:spe[llgood]! {word}	Add {word} as a good word to the internal word list,
-			like with |zG|.
-
-							*:spellw* *:spellwrong*
-:[count]spellw[rong] {word}
-			Add {word} as a wrong (bad) word to 'spellfile', as
-			with |zw|.  Without count the first name is used, with
-			a count of two the second entry, etc.
-
-:spellw[rong]! {word}	Add {word} as a wrong (bad) word to the internal word
-			list, like with |zW|.
-
-							*:spellra* *:spellrare*
-:[count]spellra[re] {word}
-			Add {word} as a rare word to 'spellfile', similar to
-			|zw|.  Without count the first name is used, with
-			a count of two the second entry, etc.
-
-			There are no normal mode commands to mark words as
-			rare as this is a fairly uncommon command and all
-			intuitive commands for this are already taken. If you
-			want you can add mappings with e.g.: >
-		nnoremap z?  :exe ':spellrare  ' .. expand('<cWORD>')<CR>
-		nnoremap z/  :exe ':spellrare! ' .. expand('<cWORD>')<CR>
-<			|:spellundo|, |zuw|, or |zuW| can be used to undo this.
-
-:spellra[re]! {word}	Add {word} as a rare word to the internal word
-			list, similar to |zW|.
-
-:[count]spellu[ndo] {word}				*:spellu* *:spellundo*
-			Like |zuw|.  [count] used as with |:spellgood|.
-
-:spellu[ndo]! {word}	Like |zuW|.  [count] used as with |:spellgood|.
-
-
-After adding a word to 'spellfile' with the above commands its associated
-".spl" file will automatically be updated and reloaded.  If you change
-'spellfile' manually you need to use the |:mkspell| command.  This sequence of
-commands mostly works well: >
-	:edit <file in 'spellfile'>
-<	(make changes to the spell file) >
-	:mkspell! %
-
-More details about the 'spellfile' format below |spell-wordlist-format|.
-
-							*internal-wordlist*
-The internal word list is used for all buffers where 'spell' is set.  It is
-not stored, it is lost when you exit Vim.  It is also cleared when 'encoding'
-is set.
-
-
-Finding suggestions for bad words:
-							*z=*
-z=			For the word under/after the cursor suggest correctly
-			spelled words.  This also works to find alternatives
-			for a word that is not highlighted as a bad word,
-			e.g., when the word after it is bad.
-			In Visual mode the highlighted text is taken as the
-			word to be replaced.
-			The results are sorted on similarity to the word being
-			replaced.
-			This may take a long time.  Hit CTRL-C when you get
-			bored.
-
-			If the command is used without a count the
-			alternatives are listed and you can enter the number
-			of your choice or press <Enter> if you don't want to
-			replace.  You can also use the mouse to click on your
-			choice (only works if the mouse can be used in Normal
-			mode and when there are no line wraps).  Click on the
-			first line (the header) to cancel.
-
-			The suggestions listed normally replace a highlighted
-			bad word.  Sometimes they include other text, in that
-			case the replaced text is also listed after a "<".
-
-			If a count is used that suggestion is used, without
-			prompting.  For example, "1z=" always takes the first
-			suggestion.
-
-			If 'verbose' is non-zero a score will be displayed
-			with the suggestions to indicate the likeliness to the
-			badly spelled word (the higher the score the more
-			different).
-			When a word was replaced the redo command "." will
-			repeat the word replacement.  This works like "ciw",
-			the good word and <Esc>.  This does NOT work for Thai
-			and other languages without spaces between words.
-
-					*:spellr* *:spellrepall* *E752* *E753*
-:spellr[epall]		Repeat the replacement done by |z=| for all matches
-			with the replaced word in the current window.
-
-In Insert mode, when the cursor is after a badly spelled word, you can use
-CTRL-X s to find suggestions.  This works like Insert mode completion.  Use
-CTRL-N to use the next suggestion, CTRL-P to go back. |i_CTRL-X_s|
-
-The 'spellsuggest' option influences how the list of suggestions is generated
-and sorted.  See |'spellsuggest'|.
-
-The 'spellcapcheck' option is used to check the first word of a sentence
-starts with a capital.  This doesn't work for the first word in the file.
-When there is a line break right after a sentence the highlighting of the next
-line may be postponed.  Use |CTRL-L| when needed.  Also see |set-spc-auto| for
-how it can be set automatically when 'spelllang' is set.
-
-The 'spelloptions' option has a few more flags that influence the way spell
-checking works.  For example, "camel" splits CamelCased words so that each
-part of the word is spell-checked separately.
-
-Vim counts the number of times a good word is encountered.  This is used to
-sort the suggestions: words that have been seen before get a small bonus,
-words that have been seen often get a bigger bonus.  The COMMON item in the
-affix file can be used to define common words, so that this mechanism also
-works in a new or short file |spell-COMMON|.
-
-==============================================================================
-2. Remarks on spell checking				*spell-remarks*
-
-PERFORMANCE
-
-Vim does on-the-fly spell checking.  To make this work fast the word list is
-loaded in memory.  Thus this uses a lot of memory (1 Mbyte or more).  There
-might also be a noticeable delay when the word list is loaded, which happens
-when 'spell' is set and when 'spelllang' is set while 'spell' was already set.
-To minimize the delay each word list is only loaded once, it is not deleted
-when 'spelllang' is made empty or 'spell' is reset.  When 'encoding' is set
-all the word lists are reloaded, thus you may notice a delay then too.
-
-
-REGIONS
-
-A word may be spelled differently in various regions.  For example, English
-comes in (at least) these variants:
-
-	en		all regions
-	en_au		Australia
-	en_ca		Canada
-	en_gb		Great Britain
-	en_nz		New Zealand
-	en_us		USA
-
-Words that are not used in one region but are used in another region are
-highlighted with SpellLocal |hl-SpellLocal|.
-
-Always use lowercase letters for the language and region names.
-
-When adding a word with |zg| or another command it's always added for all
-regions.  You can change that by manually editing the 'spellfile'.  See
-|spell-wordlist-format|.  Note that the regions as specified in the files in
-'spellfile' are only used when all entries in 'spelllang' specify the same
-region (not counting files specified by their .spl name).
-
-							*spell-german*
-Specific exception: For German these special regions are used:
-	de		all German words accepted
-	de_de		old and new spelling
-	de_19		old spelling
-	de_20		new spelling
-	de_at		Austria
-	de_ch		Switzerland
-
-							*spell-russian*
-Specific exception: For Russian these special regions are used:
-	ru		all Russian words accepted
-	ru_ru		"IE" letter spelling
-	ru_yo		"YO" letter spelling
-
-							*spell-yiddish*
-Yiddish requires using "utf-8" encoding, because of the special characters
-used.  If you are using latin1 Vim will use transliterated (romanized) Yiddish
-instead.  If you want to use transliterated Yiddish with utf-8 use "yi-tr".
-In a table:
-	'encoding'	'spelllang'
-	utf-8		yi		Yiddish
-	latin1		yi		transliterated Yiddish
-	utf-8		yi-tr		transliterated Yiddish
-
-							*spell-cjk*
-Chinese, Japanese and other East Asian characters are normally marked as
-errors, because spell checking of these characters is not supported. If
-'spelllang' includes "cjk", these characters are not marked as errors.  This
-is useful when editing text with spell checking while some Asian words are
-present.
-
-
-SPELL FILES						*spell-load*
-
-Vim searches for spell files in the "spell" subdirectory of the directories in
-'runtimepath'.  The name is: LL.EEE.spl, where:
-	LL	the language name
-	EEE	the value of 'encoding'
-
-The value for "LL" comes from 'spelllang', but excludes the region name.
-Examples:
-	'spelllang'	LL ~
-	en_us		en
-	en-rare		en-rare
-	medical_ca	medical
-
-Only the first file is loaded, the one that is first in 'runtimepath'.  If
-this succeeds then additionally files with the name LL.EEE.add.spl are loaded.
-All the ones that are found are used.
-
-If no spell file is found the |SpellFileMissing| autocommand event is
-triggered.  This may trigger the |spellfile.vim| plugin to offer you
-downloading the spell file.
-
-Additionally, the files related to the names in 'spellfile' are loaded.  These
-are the files that |zg| and |zw| add good and wrong words to.
-
-Exceptions:
-- Vim uses "latin1" when 'encoding' is "iso-8859-15".  The euro sign doesn't
-  matter for spelling.
-- When no spell file for 'encoding' is found "ascii" is tried.  This only
-  works for languages where nearly all words are ASCII, such as English.  It
-  helps when 'encoding' is not "latin1", such as iso-8859-2, and English text
-  is being edited.  For the ".add" files the same name as the found main
-  spell file is used.
-
-For example, with these values:
-	'runtimepath' is "~/.vim,/usr/share/vim82,~/.vim/after"
-	'encoding'    is "iso-8859-2"
-	'spelllang'   is "pl"
-
-Vim will look for:
-1. ~/.vim/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.spl
-2. /usr/share/vim82/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.spl
-3. ~/.vim/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.add.spl
-4. /usr/share/vim82/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.add.spl
-5. ~/.vim/after/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.add.spl
-
-This assumes 1. is not found and 2. is found.
-
-If 'encoding' is "latin1" Vim will look for:
-1. ~/.vim/spell/pl.latin1.spl
-2. /usr/share/vim82/spell/pl.latin1.spl
-3. ~/.vim/after/spell/pl.latin1.spl
-4. ~/.vim/spell/pl.ascii.spl
-5. /usr/share/vim82/spell/pl.ascii.spl
-6. ~/.vim/after/spell/pl.ascii.spl
-
-This assumes none of them are found (Polish doesn't make sense when leaving
-out the non-ASCII characters).
-
-Spelling for EBCDIC is currently not supported.
-
-A spell file might not be available in the current 'encoding'.  See
-|spell-mkspell| about how to create a spell file.  Converting a spell file
-with "iconv" will NOT work!
-
-Note: on VMS ".{enc}.spl" is changed to "_{enc}.spl" to avoid trouble with
-filenames.
-
-						    *spell-sug-file* *E781*
-If there is a file with exactly the same name as the ".spl" file but ending in
-".sug", that file will be used for giving better suggestions.  It isn't loaded
-before suggestions are made to reduce memory use.
-
-				    *E758* *E759* *E778* *E779* *E780* *E782*
-When loading a spell file Vim checks that it is properly formatted.  If you
-get an error the file may be truncated, modified or intended for another Vim
-version.
-
-
-SPELLFILE CLEANUP					*spellfile-cleanup*
-
-The |zw| command turns existing entries in 'spellfile' into comment lines.
-This avoids having to write a new file every time, but results in the file
-only getting longer, never shorter.  To clean up the comment lines in all
-".add" spell files do this: >
-	:runtime spell/cleanadd.vim
-
-This deletes all comment lines, except the ones that start with "##".  Use
-"##" lines to add comments that you want to keep.
-
-You can invoke this script as often as you like.  A variable is provided to
-skip updating files that have been changed recently.  Set it to the number of
-seconds that has passed since a file was changed before it will be cleaned.
-For example, to clean only files that were not changed in the last hour: >
-      let g:spell_clean_limit = 60 * 60
-The default is one second.
-
-
-WORDS
-
-Vim uses a fixed method to recognize a word.  This is independent of
-'iskeyword', so that it also works in help files and for languages that
-include characters like '-' in 'iskeyword'.  The word characters do depend on
-'encoding'.
-
-The table with word characters is stored in the main .spl file.  Therefore it
-matters what the current locale is when generating it!  A .add.spl file does
-not contain a word table though.
-
-For a word that starts with a digit the digit is ignored, unless the word as a
-whole is recognized.  Thus if "3D" is a word and "D" is not then "3D" is
-recognized as a word, but if "3D" is not a word then only the "D" is marked as
-bad.  Hex numbers in the form 0x12ab and 0X12AB are recognized.
-
-
-WORD COMBINATIONS
-
-It is possible to spell-check words that include a space.  This is used to
-recognize words that are invalid when used by themselves, e.g. for "et al.".
-It can also be used to recognize "the the" and highlight it.
-
-The number of spaces is irrelevant.  In most cases a line break may also
-appear.  However, this makes it difficult to find out where to start checking
-for spelling mistakes.  When you make a change to one line and only that line
-is redrawn Vim won't look in the previous line, thus when "et" is at the end
-of the previous line "al." will be flagged as an error.  And when you type
-"the<CR>the" the highlighting doesn't appear until the first line is redrawn.
-Use |CTRL-L| to redraw right away.  "[s" will also stop at a word combination
-with a line break.
-
-When encountering a line break Vim skips characters such as '*', '>' and '"',
-so that comments in C, shell and Vim code can be spell checked.
-
-
-SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING					*spell-syntax*
-
-Files that use syntax highlighting can specify where spell checking should be
-done:
-
-1.  everywhere			   default
-2.  in specific items		   use "contains=@Spell"
-3.  everywhere but specific items  use "contains=@NoSpell"
-
-For the second method adding the @NoSpell cluster will disable spell checking
-again.  This can be used, for example, to add @Spell to the comments of a
-program, and add @NoSpell for items that shouldn't be checked.
-Also see |:syn-spell| for text that is not in a syntax item.
-
-
-VIM SCRIPTS
-
-If you want to write a Vim script that does something with spelling, you may
-find these functions useful:
-
-    spellbadword()	find badly spelled word at the cursor
-    spellsuggest()	get list of spelling suggestions
-    soundfold()		get the sound-a-like version of a word
-
-
-SETTING 'spellcapcheck' AUTOMATICALLY			*set-spc-auto*
-
-After the 'spelllang' option has been set successfully, Vim will source the
-files "spell/LANG.vim" in 'runtimepath'.  "LANG" is the value of 'spelllang'
-up to the first comma, dot or underscore.  This can be used to set options
-specifically for the language, especially 'spellcapcheck'.
-
-The distribution includes a few of these files.  Use this command to see what
-they do: >
-	:next $VIMRUNTIME/spell/*.vim
-
-Note that the default scripts don't set 'spellcapcheck' if it was changed from
-the default value.  This assumes the user prefers another value then.
-
-
-DOUBLE SCORING						*spell-double-scoring*
-
-The 'spellsuggest' option can be used to select "double" scoring.  This
-mechanism is based on the principle that there are two kinds of spelling
-mistakes:
-
-1. You know how to spell the word, but mistype something.  This results in a
-   small editing distance (character swapped/omitted/inserted) and possibly a
-   word that sounds completely different.
-
-2. You don't know how to spell the word and type something that sounds right.
-   The edit distance can be big but the word is similar after sound-folding.
-
-Since scores for these two mistakes will be very different we use a list
-for each and mix them.
-
-The sound-folding is slow and people that know the language won't make the
-second kind of mistakes.  Therefore 'spellsuggest' can be set to select the
-preferred method for scoring the suggestions.
-
-==============================================================================
-3. Generating a spell file				*spell-mkspell*
-
-Vim uses a binary file format for spelling.  This greatly speeds up loading
-the word list and keeps it small.
-						    *.aff* *.dic* *Myspell*
-You can create a Vim spell file from the .aff and .dic files that Myspell
-uses.  Myspell is used by OpenOffice.org and Mozilla. The OpenOffice .oxt
-files are zip files which contain the .aff and .dic files. You should be able
-to find them here:
-	http://extensions.services.openoffice.org/dictionary
-The older, OpenOffice 2 files may be used if this doesn't work:
-	http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Dictionaries
-You can also use a plain word list.  The results are the same, the choice
-depends on what word lists you can find.
-
-If you install Aap (from www.a-a-p.org) you can use the recipes in the
-runtime/spell/??/ directories.  Aap will take care of downloading the files,
-apply patches needed for Vim and build the .spl file.
-
-Make sure your current locale is set properly, otherwise Vim doesn't know what
-characters are upper/lower case letters.  If the locale isn't available (e.g.,
-when using an MS-Windows codepage on Unix) add tables to the .aff file
-|spell-affix-chars|.  If the .aff file doesn't define a table then the word
-table of the currently active spelling is used.  If spelling is not active
-then Vim will try to guess.
-
-							*:mksp* *:mkspell*
-:mksp[ell][!] [-ascii] {outname} {inname} ...
-			Generate a Vim spell file from word lists.  Example: >
-		:mkspell /tmp/nl nl_NL.words
-<								*E751*
-			When {outname} ends in ".spl" it is used as the output
-			file name.  Otherwise it should be a language name,
-			such as "en", without the region name.  The file
-			written will be "{outname}.{encoding}.spl", where
-			{encoding} is the value of the 'encoding' option.
-
-			When the output file already exists [!] must be used
-			to overwrite it.
-
-			When the [-ascii] argument is present, words with
-			non-ascii characters are skipped.  The resulting file
-			ends in "ascii.spl".
-
-			The input can be the Myspell format files {inname}.aff
-			and {inname}.dic.  If {inname}.aff does not exist then
-			{inname} is used as the file name of a plain word
-			list.
-
-			Multiple {inname} arguments can be given to combine
-			regions into one Vim spell file.  Example: >
-		:mkspell ~/.vim/spell/en /tmp/en_US /tmp/en_CA /tmp/en_AU
-<			This combines the English word lists for US, CA and AU
-			into one en.spl file.
-			Up to eight regions can be combined. *E754* *E755*
-			The REP and SAL items of the first .aff file where
-			they appear are used. |spell-REP| |spell-SAL|
-								*E845*
-			This command uses a lot of memory, required to find
-			the optimal word tree (Polish, Italian and Hungarian
-			require several hundred Mbyte).  The final result will
-			be much smaller, because compression is used.  To
-			avoid running out of memory compression will be done
-			now and then.  This can be tuned with the 'mkspellmem'
-			option.
-
-			After the spell file was written and it was being used
-			in a buffer it will be reloaded automatically.
-
-:mksp[ell] [-ascii] {name}.{enc}.add
-			Like ":mkspell" above, using {name}.{enc}.add as the
-			input file and producing an output file in the same
-			directory that has ".spl" appended.
-
-:mksp[ell] [-ascii] {name}
-			Like ":mkspell" above, using {name} as the input file
-			and producing an output file in the same directory
-			that has ".{enc}.spl" appended.
-
-Vim will report the number of duplicate words.  This might be a mistake in the
-list of words.  But sometimes it is used to have different prefixes and
-suffixes for the same basic word to avoid them combining (e.g. Czech uses
-this).  If you want Vim to report all duplicate words set the 'verbose'
-option.
-
-Since you might want to change a Myspell word list for use with Vim the
-following procedure is recommended:
-
-1. Obtain the xx_YY.aff and xx_YY.dic files from Myspell.
-2. Make a copy of these files to xx_YY.orig.aff and xx_YY.orig.dic.
-3. Change the xx_YY.aff and xx_YY.dic files to remove bad words, add missing
-   words, define word characters with FOL/LOW/UPP, etc.  The distributed
-   "*.diff" files can be used.
-4. Start Vim with the right locale and use |:mkspell| to generate the Vim
-   spell file.
-5. Try out the spell file with ":set spell spelllang=xx" if you wrote it in
-   a spell directory in 'runtimepath', or ":set spelllang=xx.enc.spl" if you
-   wrote it somewhere else.
-
-When the Myspell files are updated you can merge the differences:
-1. Obtain the new Myspell files as xx_YY.new.aff and xx_UU.new.dic.
-2. Use Vimdiff to see what changed: >
-	vimdiff xx_YY.orig.dic xx_YY.new.dic
-3. Take over the changes you like in xx_YY.dic.
-   You may also need to change xx_YY.aff.
-4. Rename xx_YY.new.dic to xx_YY.orig.dic and xx_YY.new.aff to xx_YY.orig.aff.
-
-
-SPELL FILE VERSIONS					*E770* *E771* *E772*
-
-Spell checking is a relatively new feature in Vim, thus it's possible that the
-.spl file format will be changed to support more languages.  Vim will check
-the validity of the spell file and report anything wrong.
-
-	E771: Old spell file, needs to be updated ~
-This spell file is older than your Vim.  You need to update the .spl file.
-
-	E772: Spell file is for newer version of Vim ~
-This means the spell file was made for a later version of Vim.  You need to
-update Vim.
-
-	E770: Unsupported section in spell file ~
-This means the spell file was made for a later version of Vim and contains a
-section that is required for the spell file to work.  In this case it's
-probably a good idea to upgrade your Vim.
-
-
-SPELL FILE DUMP
-
-If for some reason you want to check what words are supported by the currently
-used spelling files, use this command:
-
-							*:spelldump* *:spelld*
-:spelld[ump]		Open a new window and fill it with all currently valid
-			words.  Compound words are not included.
-			Note: For some languages the result may be enormous,
-			causing Vim to run out of memory.
-
-:spelld[ump]!		Like ":spelldump" and include the word count.  This is
-			the number of times the word was found while
-			updating the screen.  Words that are in COMMON items
-			get a starting count of 10.
-
-The format of the word list is used |spell-wordlist-format|.  You should be
-able to read it with ":mkspell" to generate one .spl file that includes all
-the words.
-
-When all entries to 'spelllang' use the same regions or no regions at all then
-the region information is included in the dumped words.  Otherwise only words
-for the current region are included and no "/regions" line is generated.
-
-Comment lines with the name of the .spl file are used as a header above the
-words that were generated from that .spl file.
-
-
-SPELL FILE MISSING		*spell-SpellFileMissing* *spellfile.vim*
-
-If the spell file for the language you are using is not available, you will
-get an error message.  But if the "spellfile.vim" plugin is active it will
-offer you to download the spell file.  Just follow the instructions, it will
-ask you where to write the file (there must be a writable directory in
-'runtimepath' for this).
-
-The plugin has a default place where to look for spell files, on the Vim ftp
-server.  The protocol used is SSL (https://) for security.  If you want to use
-another location or another protocol, set the g:spellfile_URL variable to the
-directory that holds the spell files.  You can use http:// or ftp://, but you
-are taking a security risk then.  The |netrw| plugin is used for getting the
-file, look there for the specific syntax of the URL.  Example: >
-	let g:spellfile_URL = 'https://ftp.nluug.nl/vim/runtime/spell'
-You may need to escape special characters.
-
-The plugin will only ask about downloading a language once.  If you want to
-try again anyway restart Vim, or set g:spellfile_URL to another value (e.g.,
-prepend a space).
-
-To avoid using the "spellfile.vim" plugin do this in your vimrc file: >
-
-	let loaded_spellfile_plugin = 1
-
-Instead of using the plugin you can define a |SpellFileMissing| autocommand to
-handle the missing file yourself.  You can use it like this: >
-
-	:au SpellFileMissing * call Download_spell_file(expand('<amatch>'))
-
-Thus the <amatch> item contains the name of the language.  Another important
-value is 'encoding', since every encoding has its own spell file.  With two
-exceptions:
-- For ISO-8859-15 (latin9) the name "latin1" is used (the encodings only
-  differ in characters not used in dictionary words).
-- The name "ascii" may also be used for some languages where the words use
-  only ASCII letters for most of the words.
-
-The default "spellfile.vim" plugin uses this autocommand, if you define your
-autocommand afterwards you may want to use ":au! SpellFileMissing" to overrule
-it.  If you define your autocommand before the plugin is loaded it will notice
-this and not do anything.
-							*E797*
-Note that the SpellFileMissing autocommand must not change or destroy the
-buffer the user was editing.
-
-==============================================================================
-4. Spell file format					*spell-file-format*
-
-This is the format of the files that are used by the person who creates and
-maintains a word list.
-
-Note that we avoid the word "dictionary" here.  That is because the goal of
-spell checking differs from writing a dictionary (as in the book).  For
-spelling we need a list of words that are OK, thus should not be highlighted.
-Person and company names will not appear in a dictionary, but do appear in a
-word list.  And some old words are rarely used while they are common
-misspellings.  These do appear in a dictionary but not in a word list.
-
-There are two formats: A straight list of words and a list using affix
-compression.  The files with affix compression are used by Myspell (Mozilla
-and OpenOffice.org).  This requires two files, one with .aff and one with .dic
-extension.
-
-
-FORMAT OF STRAIGHT WORD LIST				*spell-wordlist-format*
-
-The words must appear one per line.  That is all that is required.
-
-Additionally the following items are recognized:
-
-- Empty and blank lines are ignored.
-
-	# comment ~
-- Lines starting with a # are ignored (comment lines).
-
-	/encoding=utf-8 ~
-- A line starting with "/encoding=", before any word, specifies the encoding
-  of the file.  After the second '=' comes an encoding name.  This tells Vim
-  to setup conversion from the specified encoding to 'encoding'.  Thus you can
-  use one word list for several target encodings.
-
-	/regions=usca ~
-- A line starting with "/regions=" specifies the region names that are
-  supported.  Each region name must be two ASCII letters.  The first one is
-  region 1.  Thus "/regions=usca" has region 1 "us" and region 2 "ca".
-  In an addition word list the region names should be equal to the main word
-  list!
-
-- Other lines starting with '/' are reserved for future use.  The ones that
-  are not recognized are ignored.  You do get a warning message, so that you
-  know something won't work.
-
-- A "/" may follow the word with the following items:
-    =		Case must match exactly.
-    ?		Rare word.
-    !		Bad (wrong) word.
-    1 to 9	A region in which the word is valid.  If no regions are
-		specified the word is valid in all regions.
-
-Example:
-
-	# This is an example word list		comment
-	/encoding=latin1			encoding of the file
-	/regions=uscagb				regions "us", "ca" and "gb"
-	example					word for all regions
-	blah/12					word for regions "us" and "ca"
-	vim/!					bad word
-	Campbell/?3				rare word in region 3 "gb"
-	's mornings/=				keep-case word
-
-Note that when "/=" is used the same word with all upper-case letters is not
-accepted.  This is different from a word with mixed case that is automatically
-marked as keep-case, those words may appear in all upper-case letters.
-
-
-FORMAT WITH .AFF AND .DIC FILES				*aff-dic-format*
-
-There are two files: the basic word list and an affix file.  The affix file
-specifies settings for the language and can contain affixes.  The affixes are
-used to modify the basic words to get the full word list.  This significantly
-reduces the number of words, especially for a language like Polish.  This is
-called affix compression.
-
-The basic word list and the affix file are combined with the ":mkspell"
-command and results in a binary spell file.  All the preprocessing has been
-done, thus this file loads fast.  The binary spell file format is described in
-the source code (src/spell.c).  But only developers need to know about it.
-
-The preprocessing also allows us to take the Myspell language files and modify
-them before the Vim word list is made.  The tools for this can be found in the
-"src/spell" directory.
-
-The format for the affix and word list files is based on what Myspell uses
-(the spell checker of Mozilla and OpenOffice.org).  A description can be found
-here:
-	http://lingucomponent.openoffice.org/affix.readme ~
-Note that affixes are case sensitive, this isn't obvious from the description.
-
-Vim supports quite a few extras.  They are described below |spell-affix-vim|.
-Attempts have been made to keep this compatible with other spell checkers, so
-that the same files can often be used.  One other project that offers more
-than Myspell is Hunspell ( http://hunspell.sf.net ).
-
-
-WORD LIST FORMAT				*spell-dic-format*
-
-A short example, with line numbers:
-
-	1	1234 ~
-	2	aan ~
-	3	Als ~
-	4	Etten-Leur ~
-	5	et al. ~
-	6	's-Gravenhage ~
-	7	's-Gravenhaags ~
-	8	# word that differs between regions ~
-	9	kado/1 ~
-	10	cadeau/2 ~
-	11	TCP,IP ~
-	12	/the S affix may add a 's' ~
-	13	bedel/S ~
-
-The first line contains the number of words.  Vim ignores it, but you do get
-an error message if it's not there.  *E760*
-
-What follows is one word per line.  White space at the end of the line is
-ignored, all other white space matters.  The encoding is specified in the
-affix file |spell-SET|.
-
-Comment lines start with '#' or '/'.  See the example lines 8 and 12.  Note
-that putting a comment after a word is NOT allowed:
-
-		someword   # comment that causes an error! ~
-
-After the word there is an optional slash and flags.  Most of these flags are
-letters that indicate the affixes that can be used with this word.  These are
-specified with SFX and PFX lines in the .aff file, see |spell-SFX| and
-|spell-PFX|.  Vim allows using other flag types with the FLAG item in the
-affix file |spell-FLAG|.
-
-When the word only has lower-case letters it will also match with the word
-starting with an upper-case letter.
-
-When the word includes an upper-case letter, this means the upper-case letter
-is required at this position.  The same word with a lower-case letter at this
-position will not match. When some of the other letters are upper-case it will
-not match either.
-
-The word with all upper-case characters will always be OK,
-
-	word list	matches			does not match ~
-	als		als Als ALS		ALs AlS aLs aLS
-	Als		Als  ALS		als ALs AlS aLs aLS
-	ALS		ALS			als Als ALs AlS aLs aLS
-	AlS		AlS ALS			als Als ALs aLs aLS
-
-The KEEPCASE affix ID can be used to specifically match a word with identical
-case only, see below |spell-KEEPCASE|.
-
-Note: in line 5 to 7 non-word characters are used.  You can include any
-character in a word.  When checking the text a word still only matches when it
-appears with a non-word character before and after it.  For Myspell a word
-starting with a non-word character probably won't work.
-
-In line 12 the word "TCP/IP" is defined.  Since the slash has a special
-meaning the comma is used instead.  This is defined with the SLASH item in the
-affix file, see |spell-SLASH|.  Note that without this SLASH item the word
-will be "TCP,IP".
-
-
-AFFIX FILE FORMAT			*spell-aff-format* *spell-affix-vim*
-
-							*spell-affix-comment*
-Comment lines in the .aff file start with a '#':
-
-	# comment line ~
-
-Items with a fixed number of arguments can be followed by a comment.  But only
-if none of the arguments can contain white space.  The comment must start with
-a "#" character.  Example:
-
-	KEEPCASE =  # fix case for words with this flag ~
-
-
-ENCODING							*spell-SET*
-
-The affix file can be in any encoding that is supported by "iconv".  However,
-in some cases the current locale should also be set properly at the time
-|:mkspell| is invoked.  Adding FOL/LOW/UPP lines removes this requirement
-|spell-FOL|.
-
-The encoding should be specified before anything where the encoding matters.
-The encoding applies both to the affix file and the dictionary file.  It is
-done with a SET line:
-
-	SET utf-8 ~
-
-The encoding can be different from the value of the 'encoding' option at the
-time ":mkspell" is used.  Vim will then convert everything to 'encoding' and
-generate a spell file for 'encoding'.  If some of the used characters to not
-fit in 'encoding' you will get an error message.
-							*spell-affix-mbyte*
-When using a multibyte encoding it's possible to use more different affix
-flags.  But Myspell doesn't support that, thus you may not want to use it
-anyway.  For compatibility use an 8-bit encoding.
-
-
-INFORMATION
-
-These entries in the affix file can be used to add information to the spell
-file.  There are no restrictions on the format, but they should be in the
-right encoding.
-
-				*spell-NAME* *spell-VERSION* *spell-HOME*
-				*spell-AUTHOR* *spell-EMAIL* *spell-COPYRIGHT*
-	NAME		Name of the language
-	VERSION		1.0.1  with fixes
-	HOME		http://www.myhome.eu
-	AUTHOR		John Doe
-	EMAIL		john AT Doe DOT net
-	COPYRIGHT	LGPL
-
-These fields are put in the .spl file as-is.  The |:spellinfo| command can be
-used to view the info.
-
-							*:spellinfo* *:spelli*
-:spelli[nfo]		Display the information for the spell file(s) used for
-			the current buffer.
-
-
-CHARACTER TABLES
-							*spell-affix-chars*
-When using an 8-bit encoding the affix file should define what characters are
-word characters.  This is because the system where ":mkspell" is used may not
-support a locale with this encoding and isalpha() won't work.  For example
-when using "cp1250" on Unix.
-						*E761* *E762* *spell-FOL*
-						*spell-LOW* *spell-UPP*
-Three lines in the affix file are needed.  Simplistic example:
-
-	FOL  áëñ ~
-	LOW  áëñ ~
-	UPP  ÁËÑ ~
-
-All three lines must have exactly the same number of characters.
-
-The "FOL" line specifies the case-folded characters.  These are used to
-compare words while ignoring case.  For most encodings this is identical to
-the lower case line.
-
-The "LOW" line specifies the characters in lower-case.  Mostly it's equal to
-the "FOL" line.
-
-The "UPP" line specifies the characters with upper-case.  That is, a character
-is upper-case where it's different from the character at the same position in
-"FOL".
-
-An exception is made for the German sharp s ß.  The upper-case version is
-"SS".  In the FOL/LOW/UPP lines it should be included, so that it's recognized
-as a word character, but use the ß character in all three.
-
-ASCII characters should be omitted, Vim always handles these in the same way.
-When the encoding is UTF-8 no word characters need to be specified.
-
-							*E763*
-Vim allows you to use spell checking for several languages in the same file.
-You can list them in the 'spelllang' option.  As a consequence all spell files
-for the same encoding must use the same word characters, otherwise they can't
-be combined without errors.
-
-If you get an E763 warning that the word tables differ you need to update your
-".spl" spell files.  If you downloaded the files, get the latest version of
-all spell files you use.  If you are only using one, e.g., German, then also
-download the recent English spell files.  Otherwise generate the .spl file
-again with |:mkspell|.  If you still get errors check the FOL, LOW and UPP
-lines in the used .aff files.
-
-The XX.ascii.spl spell file generated with the "-ascii" argument will not
-contain the table with characters, so that it can be combine with spell files
-for any encoding.  The .add.spl files also do not contain the table.
-
-
-MID-WORD CHARACTERS
-							*spell-midword*
-Some characters are only to be considered word characters if they are used in
-between two ordinary word characters.  An example is the single quote: It is
-often used to put text in quotes, thus it can't be recognized as a word
-character, but when it appears in between word characters it must be part of
-the word.  This is needed to detect a spelling error such as they'are.  That
-should be they're, but since "they" and "are" are words themselves that would
-go unnoticed.
-
-These characters are defined with MIDWORD in the .aff file.  Example:
-
-	MIDWORD	'- ~
-
-
-FLAG TYPES						*spell-FLAG*
-
-Flags are used to specify the affixes that can be used with a word and for
-other properties of the word.  Normally single-character flags are used.  This
-limits the number of possible flags, especially for 8-bit encodings.  The FLAG
-item can be used if more affixes are to be used.  Possible values:
-
-	FLAG long	use two-character flags
-	FLAG num	use numbers, from 1 up to 65000
-	FLAG caplong	use one-character flags without A-Z and two-character
-			flags that start with A-Z
-
-With "FLAG num" the numbers in a list of affixes need to be separated with a
-comma: "234,2143,1435".  This method is inefficient, but useful if the file is
-generated with a program.
-
-When using "caplong" the two-character flags all start with a capital: "Aa",
-"B1", "BB", etc.  This is useful to use one-character flags for the most
-common items and two-character flags for uncommon items.
-
-Note: When using utf-8 only characters up to 65000 may be used for flags.
-
-Note: even when using "num" or "long" the number of flags available to
-compounding and prefixes is limited to about 250.
-
-
-AFFIXES						*spell-PFX* *spell-SFX*
-
-The usual PFX (prefix) and SFX (suffix) lines are supported (see the Myspell
-documentation or the Aspell manual:
-http://aspell.net/man-html/Affix-Compression.html).
-
-Summary:
-	SFX L Y 2 ~
-	SFX L 0 re [^x] ~
-	SFX L 0 ro x ~
-
-The first line is a header and has four fields:
-	SFX {flag} {combine} {count}
-
-{flag}		The name used for the suffix.  Mostly it's a single letter,
-		but other characters can be used, see |spell-FLAG|.
-
-{combine}	Can be 'Y' or 'N'.  When 'Y' then the word plus suffix can
-		also have a prefix.  When 'N' then a prefix is not allowed.
-
-{count}		The number of lines following.  If this is wrong you will get
-		an error message.
-
-For PFX the fields are exactly the same.
-
-The basic format for the following lines is:
-	SFX {flag} {strip} {add} {condition} {extra}
-
-{flag}		Must be the same as the {flag} used in the first line.
-
-{strip}		Characters removed from the basic word.  There is no check if
-		the characters are actually there, only the length is used (in
-		bytes).  This better match the {condition}, otherwise strange
-		things may happen.  If the {strip} length is equal to or
-		longer than the basic word the suffix won't be used.
-		When {strip} is 0 (zero) then nothing is stripped.
-
-{add}		Characters added to the basic word, after removing {strip}.
-		Optionally there is a '/' followed by flags.  The flags apply
-		to the word plus affix.  See |spell-affix-flags|
-
-{condition}	A simplistic pattern.  Only when this matches with a basic
-		word will the suffix be used for that word.  This is normally
-		for using one suffix letter with different {add} and {strip}
-		fields for words with different endings.
-		When {condition} is a . (dot) there is no condition.
-		The pattern may contain:
-		- Literal characters.
-		- A set of characters in []. [abc] matches a, b and c.
-		  A dash is allowed for a range [a-c], but this is
-		  Vim-specific.
-		- A set of characters that starts with a ^, meaning the
-		  complement of the specified characters. [^abc] matches any
-		  character but a, b and c.
-
-{extra}		Optional extra text:
-		    # comment		Comment is ignored
-		    -			Hunspell uses this, ignored
-
-For PFX the fields are the same, but the {strip}, {add} and {condition} apply
-to the start of the word.
-
-Note: Myspell ignores any extra text after the relevant info.  Vim requires
-this text to start with a "#" so that mistakes don't go unnoticed.  Example:
-
-	SFX F 0 in   [^i]n      # Spion > Spionin  ~
-	SFX F 0 nen  in		# Bauerin > Bauerinnen ~
-
-However, to avoid lots of errors in affix files written for Myspell, you can
-add the IGNOREEXTRA flag.
-
-Apparently Myspell allows an affix name to appear more than once.  Since this
-might also be a mistake, Vim checks for an extra "S".  The affix files for
-Myspell that use this feature apparently have this flag.  Example:
-
-	SFX a Y 1 S ~
-	SFX a 0 an . ~
-
-	SFX a Y 2 S ~
-	SFX a 0 en . ~
-	SFX a 0 on . ~
-
-
-AFFIX FLAGS						*spell-affix-flags*
-
-This is a feature that comes from Hunspell: The affix may specify flags.  This
-works similar to flags specified on a basic word.  The flags apply to the
-basic word plus the affix (but there are restrictions).  Example:
-
-	SFX S Y 1 ~
-	SFX S 0 s . ~
-
-	SFX A Y 1 ~
-	SFX A 0 able/S . ~
-
-When the dictionary file contains "drink/AS" then these words are possible:
-
-	drink
-	drinks		uses S suffix
-	drinkable	uses A suffix
-	drinkables	uses A suffix and then S suffix
-
-Generally the flags of the suffix are added to the flags of the basic word,
-both are used for the word plus suffix.  But the flags of the basic word are
-only used once for affixes, except that both one prefix and one suffix can be
-used when both support combining.
-
-Specifically, the affix flags can be used for:
-- Suffixes on suffixes, as in the example above.  This works once, thus you
-  can have two suffixes on a word (plus one prefix).
-- Making the word with the affix rare, by using the |spell-RARE| flag.
-- Exclude the word with the affix from compounding, by using the
-  |spell-COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG| flag.
-- Allow the word with the affix to be part of a compound word on the side of
-  the affix with the |spell-COMPOUNDPERMITFLAG|.
-- Use the NEEDCOMPOUND flag: word plus affix can only be used as part of a
-  compound word. |spell-NEEDCOMPOUND|
-- Compound flags: word plus affix can be part of a compound word at the end,
-  middle, start, etc.  The flags are combined with the flags of the basic
-  word.  |spell-compound|
-- NEEDAFFIX: another affix is needed to make a valid word.
-- CIRCUMFIX, as explained just below.
-
-
-IGNOREEXTRA						*spell-IGNOREEXTRA*
-
-Normally Vim gives an error for an extra field that does not start with '#'.
-This avoids errors going unnoticed.  However, some files created for Myspell
-or Hunspell may contain many entries with an extra field.  Use the IGNOREEXTRA
-flag to avoid lots of errors.
-
-
-CIRCUMFIX						*spell-CIRCUMFIX*
-
-The CIRCUMFIX flag means a prefix and suffix must be added at the same time.
-If a prefix has the CIRCUMFIX flag then only suffixes with the CIRCUMFIX flag
-can be added, and the other way around.
-An alternative is to only specify the suffix, and give that suffix two flags:
-the required prefix and the NEEDAFFIX flag.  |spell-NEEDAFFIX|
-
-
-PFXPOSTPONE						*spell-PFXPOSTPONE*
-
-When an affix file has very many prefixes that apply to many words it's not
-possible to build the whole word list in memory.  This applies to Hebrew (a
-list with all words is over a Gbyte).  In that case applying prefixes must be
-postponed.  This makes spell checking slower.  It is indicated by this keyword
-in the .aff file:
-
-	PFXPOSTPONE ~
-
-Only prefixes without a chop string and without flags can be postponed.
-Prefixes with a chop string or with flags will still be included in the word
-list.  An exception if the chop string is one character and equal to the last
-character of the added string, but in lower case.  Thus when the chop string
-is used to allow the following word to start with an upper case letter.
-
-
-WORDS WITH A SLASH					*spell-SLASH*
-
-The slash is used in the .dic file to separate the basic word from the affix
-letters and other flags.  Unfortunately, this means you cannot use a slash in
-a word.  Thus "TCP/IP" is not a word but "TCP" with the flags "IP".  To include
-a slash in the word put a backslash before it: "TCP\/IP".  In the rare case
-you want to use a backslash inside a word you need to use two backslashes.
-Any other use of the backslash is reserved for future expansion.
-
-
-KEEP-CASE WORDS						*spell-KEEPCASE*
-
-In the affix file a KEEPCASE line can be used to define the affix name used
-for keep-case words.  Example:
-
-	KEEPCASE = ~
-
-This flag is not supported by Myspell.  It has the meaning that case matters.
-This can be used if the word does not have the first letter in upper case at
-the start of a sentence.  Example:
-
-    word list	    matches		    does not match ~
-    's morgens/=    's morgens		    'S morgens 's Morgens 'S MORGENS
-    's Morgens	    's Morgens 'S MORGENS   'S morgens 's morgens
-
-The flag can also be used to avoid that the word matches when it is in all
-upper-case letters.
-
-
-RARE WORDS						*spell-RARE*
-
-In the affix file a RARE line can be used to define the affix name used for
-rare words.  Example:
-
-	RARE ? ~
-
-Rare words are highlighted differently from bad words.  This is to be used for
-words that are correct for the language, but are hardly ever used and could be
-a typing mistake anyway.  When the same word is found as good it won't be
-highlighted as rare.
-
-This flag can also be used on an affix, so that a basic word is not rare but
-the basic word plus affix is rare |spell-affix-flags|.  However, if the word
-also appears as a good word in another way (e.g., in another region) it won't
-be marked as rare.
-
-
-BAD WORDS						*spell-BAD*
-
-In the affix file a BAD line can be used to define the affix name used for
-bad words.  Example:
-
-	BAD ! ~
-
-This can be used to exclude words that would otherwise be good.  For example
-"the the" in the .dic file:
-
-	the the/! ~
-
-Once a word has been marked as bad it won't be undone by encountering the same
-word as good.
-
-The flag also applies to the word with affixes, thus this can be used to mark
-a whole bunch of related words as bad.
-
-							*spell-FORBIDDENWORD*
-FORBIDDENWORD can be used just like BAD.  For compatibility with Hunspell.
-
-							*spell-NEEDAFFIX*
-The NEEDAFFIX flag is used to require that a word is used with an affix.  The
-word itself is not a good word (unless there is an empty affix).  Example:
-
-	NEEDAFFIX + ~
-
-
-COMPOUND WORDS						*spell-compound*
-
-A compound word is a longer word made by concatenating words that appear in
-the .dic file.  To specify which words may be concatenated a character is
-used.  This character is put in the list of affixes after the word.  We will
-call this character a flag here.  Obviously these flags must be different from
-any affix IDs used.
-
-							*spell-COMPOUNDFLAG*
-The Myspell compatible method uses one flag, specified with COMPOUNDFLAG.  All
-words with this flag combine in any order.  This means there is no control
-over which word comes first.  Example:
-	COMPOUNDFLAG c ~
-
-							*spell-COMPOUNDRULE*
-A more advanced method to specify how compound words can be formed uses
-multiple items with multiple flags.  This is not compatible with Myspell 3.0.
-Let's start with an example:
-	COMPOUNDRULE c+ ~
-	COMPOUNDRULE se ~
-
-The first line defines that words with the "c" flag can be concatenated in any
-order.  The second line defines compound words that are made of one word with
-the "s" flag and one word with the "e" flag.  With this dictionary:
-	bork/c ~
-	onion/s ~
-	soup/e ~
-
-You can make these words:
-	bork
-	borkbork
-	borkborkbork
-	(etc.)
-	onion
-	soup
-	onionsoup
-
-The COMPOUNDRULE item may appear multiple times.  The argument is made out of
-one or more groups, where each group can be:
-	one flag			e.g., c
-	alternate flags inside []	e.g., [abc]
-Optionally this may be followed by:
-	*	the group appears zero or more times, e.g., sm*e
-	+	the group appears one or more times, e.g., c+
-	?	the group appears zero times or once, e.g., x?
-
-This is similar to the regexp pattern syntax (but not the same!).  A few
-examples with the sequence of word flags they require:
-    COMPOUNDRULE x+	    x xx xxx etc.
-    COMPOUNDRULE yz	    yz
-    COMPOUNDRULE x+z	    xz xxz xxxz etc.
-    COMPOUNDRULE yx+	    yx yxx yxxx etc.
-    COMPOUNDRULE xy?z	    xz xyz
-
-    COMPOUNDRULE [abc]z    az bz cz
-    COMPOUNDRULE [abc]+z   az aaz abaz bz baz bcbz cz caz cbaz etc.
-    COMPOUNDRULE a[xyz]+   ax axx axyz ay ayx ayzz az azy azxy etc.
-    COMPOUNDRULE sm*e	    se sme smme smmme etc.
-    COMPOUNDRULE s[xyz]*e  se sxe sxye sxyxe sye syze sze szye szyxe  etc.
-
-A specific example: Allow a compound to be made of two words and a dash:
-	In the .aff file:
-	    COMPOUNDRULE sde ~
-	    NEEDAFFIX x ~
-	    COMPOUNDWORDMAX 3 ~
-	    COMPOUNDMIN 1 ~
-	In the .dic file:
-	    start/s ~
-	    end/e ~
-	    -/xd ~
-
-This allows for the word "start-end", but not "startend".
-
-An additional implied rule is that, without further flags, a word with a
-prefix cannot be compounded after another word, and a word with a suffix
-cannot be compounded with a following word.  Thus the affix cannot appear
-on the inside of a compound word.  This can be changed with the
-|spell-COMPOUNDPERMITFLAG|.
-
-							*spell-NEEDCOMPOUND*
-The NEEDCOMPOUND flag is used to require that a word is used as part of a
-compound word.  The word itself is not a good word.  Example:
-
-	NEEDCOMPOUND & ~
-
-							*spell-ONLYINCOMPOUND*
-The ONLYINCOMPOUND does exactly the same as NEEDCOMPOUND.  Supported for
-compatibility with Hunspell.
-
-							*spell-COMPOUNDMIN*
-The minimal character length of a word used for compounding is specified with
-COMPOUNDMIN.  Example:
-	COMPOUNDMIN 5 ~
-
-When omitted there is no minimal length.  Obviously you could just leave out
-the compound flag from short words instead, this feature is present for
-compatibility with Myspell.
-
-							*spell-COMPOUNDWORDMAX*
-The maximum number of words that can be concatenated into a compound word is
-specified with COMPOUNDWORDMAX.  Example:
-	COMPOUNDWORDMAX 3 ~
-
-When omitted there is no maximum.  It applies to all compound words.
-
-To set a limit for words with specific flags make sure the items in
-COMPOUNDRULE where they appear don't allow too many words.
-
-							*spell-COMPOUNDSYLMAX*
-The maximum number of syllables that a compound word may contain is specified
-with COMPOUNDSYLMAX.  Example:
-	COMPOUNDSYLMAX 6 ~
-
-This has no effect if there is no SYLLABLE item.  Without COMPOUNDSYLMAX there
-is no limit on the number of syllables.
-
-If both COMPOUNDWORDMAX and COMPOUNDSYLMAX are defined, a compound word is
-accepted if it fits one of the criteria, thus is either made from up to
-COMPOUNDWORDMAX words or contains up to COMPOUNDSYLMAX syllables.
-
-						    *spell-COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG*
-The COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG specifies a flag that can be used on an affix.  It
-means that the word plus affix cannot be used in a compound word.  Example:
-	affix file:
-		COMPOUNDFLAG c ~
-		COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG x ~
-		SFX a Y 2 ~
-		SFX a 0 s   . ~
-		SFX a 0 ize/x . ~
-	dictionary:
-		word/c ~
-		util/ac ~
-
-This allows for "wordutil" and "wordutils" but not "wordutilize".
-Note: this doesn't work for postponed prefixes yet.
-
-						    *spell-COMPOUNDPERMITFLAG*
-The COMPOUNDPERMITFLAG specifies a flag that can be used on an affix.  It
-means that the word plus affix can also be used in a compound word in a way
-where the affix ends up halfway the word.  Without this flag that is not
-allowed.
-Note: this doesn't work for postponed prefixes yet.
-
-						    *spell-COMPOUNDROOT*
-The COMPOUNDROOT flag is used for words in the dictionary that are already a
-compound.  This means it counts for two words when checking the compounding
-rules.  Can also be used for an affix to count the affix as a compounding
-word.
-
-						*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDPATTERN*
-CHECKCOMPOUNDPATTERN is used to define patterns that, when matching at the
-position where two words are compounded together forbids the compound.
-For example:
-	CHECKCOMPOUNDPATTERN o e ~
-
-This forbids compounding if the first word ends in "o" and the second word
-starts with "e".
-
-The arguments must be plain text, no patterns are actually supported, despite
-the item name.  Case is always ignored.
-
-The Hunspell feature to use three arguments and flags is not supported.
-
-							*spell-NOCOMPOUNDSUGS*
-This item indicates that using compounding to make suggestions is not a good
-idea.  Use this when compounding is used with very short or one-character
-words.  E.g. to make numbers out of digits.  Without this flag creating
-suggestions would spend most time trying all kind of weird compound words.
-
-	NOCOMPOUNDSUGS ~
-
-							*spell-SYLLABLE*
-The SYLLABLE item defines characters or character sequences that are used to
-count the number of syllables in a word.  Example:
-	SYLLABLE aáeéiíoóöõuúüûy/aa/au/ea/ee/ei/ie/oa/oe/oo/ou/uu/ui ~
-
-Before the first slash is the set of characters that are counted for one
-syllable, also when repeated and mixed, until the next character that is not
-in this set.  After the slash come sequences of characters that are counted
-for one syllable.  These are preferred over using characters from the set.
-With the example "ideeen" has three syllables, counted by "i", "ee" and "e".
-
-Only case-folded letters need to be included.
-
-Another way to restrict compounding was mentioned above: Adding the
-|spell-COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG| flag to an affix causes all words that are made
-with that affix to not be used for compounding.
-
-
-UNLIMITED COMPOUNDING					*spell-NOBREAK*
-
-For some languages, such as Thai, there is no space in between words.  This
-looks like all words are compounded.  To specify this use the NOBREAK item in
-the affix file, without arguments:
-	NOBREAK ~
-
-Vim will try to figure out where one word ends and a next starts.  When there
-are spelling mistakes this may not be quite right.
-
-
-							*spell-COMMON*
-Common words can be specified with the COMMON item.  This will give better
-suggestions when editing a short file.  Example:
-
-	COMMON  the of to and a in is it you that he she was for on are ~
-
-The words must be separated by white space, up to 25 per line.
-When multiple regions are specified in a ":mkspell" command the common words
-for all regions are combined and used for all regions.
-
-							*spell-NOSPLITSUGS*
-This item indicates that splitting a word to make suggestions is not a good
-idea.  Split-word suggestions will appear only when there are few similar
-words.
-
-	NOSPLITSUGS ~
-
-							*spell-NOSUGGEST*
-The flag specified with NOSUGGEST can be used for words that will not be
-suggested.  Can be used for obscene words.
-
-	NOSUGGEST % ~
-
-
-REPLACEMENTS						*spell-REP*
-
-In the affix file REP items can be used to define common mistakes.  This is
-used to make spelling suggestions.  The items define the "from" text and the
-"to" replacement.  Example:
-
-	REP 4 ~
-	REP f ph ~
-	REP ph f ~
-	REP k ch ~
-	REP ch k ~
-
-The first line specifies the number of REP lines following.  Vim ignores the
-number, but it must be there (for compatibility with Myspell).
-
-Don't include simple one-character replacements or swaps.  Vim will try these
-anyway.  You can include whole words if you want to, but you might want to use
-the "file:" item in 'spellsuggest' instead.
-
-You can include a space by using an underscore:
-
-	REP the_the the ~
-
-
-SIMILAR CHARACTERS					*spell-MAP* *E783*
-
-In the affix file MAP items can be used to define letters that are very much
-alike.  This is mostly used for a letter with different accents.  This is used
-to prefer suggestions with these letters substituted.  Example:
-
-	MAP 2 ~
-	MAP eéëêè ~
-	MAP uüùúû ~
-
-The first line specifies the number of MAP lines following.  Vim ignores the
-number, but the line must be there.
-
-Each letter must appear in only one of the MAP items.  It's a bit more
-efficient if the first letter is ASCII or at least one without accents.
-
-
-.SUG FILE						*spell-NOSUGFILE*
-
-When soundfolding is specified in the affix file then ":mkspell" will normally
-produce a .sug file next to the .spl file.  This file is used to find
-suggestions by their sound-a-like form quickly.  At the cost of a lot of
-memory (the amount depends on the number of words, |:mkspell| will display an
-estimate when it's done).
-
-To avoid producing a .sug file use this item in the affix file:
-
-	NOSUGFILE ~
-
-Users can simply omit the .sug file if they don't want to use it.
-
-
-SOUND-A-LIKE						*spell-SAL*
-
-In the affix file SAL items can be used to define the sounds-a-like mechanism
-to be used.  The main items define the "from" text and the "to" replacement.
-Simplistic example:
-
-	SAL CIA			 X ~
-	SAL CH			 X ~
-	SAL C			 K ~
-	SAL K			 K ~
-
-There are a few rules and this can become quite complicated.  An explanation
-how it works can be found in the Aspell manual:
-http://aspell.net/man-html/Phonetic-Code.html.
-
-There are a few special items:
-
-	SAL followup		true ~
-	SAL collapse_result	true ~
-	SAL remove_accents	true ~
-
-"1" has the same meaning as "true".  Any other value means "false".
-
-
-SIMPLE SOUNDFOLDING				*spell-SOFOFROM* *spell-SOFOTO*
-
-The SAL mechanism is complex and slow.  A simpler mechanism is mapping all
-characters to another character, mapping similar sounding characters to the
-same character.  At the same time this does case folding.  You can not have
-both SAL items and simple soundfolding.
-
-There are two items required: one to specify the characters that are mapped
-and one that specifies the characters they are mapped to.  They must have
-exactly the same number of characters.  Example:
-
-    SOFOFROM abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ ~
-    SOFOTO   ebctefghejklnnepkrstevvkesebctefghejklnnepkrstevvkes ~
-
-In the example all vowels are mapped to the same character 'e'.  Another
-method would be to leave out all vowels.  Some characters that sound nearly
-the same and are often mixed up, such as 'm' and 'n', are mapped to the same
-character.  Don't do this too much, all words will start looking alike.
-
-Characters that do not appear in SOFOFROM will be left out, except that all
-white space is replaced by one space.  Sequences of the same character in
-SOFOFROM are replaced by one.
-
-You can use the |soundfold()| function to try out the results.  Or set the
-'verbose' option to see the score in the output of the |z=| command.
-
-
-UNSUPPORTED ITEMS				*spell-affix-not-supported*
-
-These items appear in the affix file of other spell checkers.  In Vim they are
-ignored, not supported or defined in another way.
-
-ACCENT		(Hunspell)				*spell-ACCENT*
-		Use MAP instead. |spell-MAP|
-
-BREAK		(Hunspell)				*spell-BREAK*
-		Define break points.  Unclear how it works exactly.
-		Not supported.
-
-CHECKCOMPOUNDCASE  (Hunspell)			*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDCASE*
-		Disallow uppercase letters at compound word boundaries.
-		Not supported.
-
-CHECKCOMPOUNDDUP  (Hunspell)			*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDDUP*
-		Disallow using the same word twice in a compound.  Not
-		supported.
-
-CHECKCOMPOUNDREP  (Hunspell)			*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDREP*
-		Something about using REP items and compound words.  Not
-		supported.
-
-CHECKCOMPOUNDTRIPLE  (Hunspell)			*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDTRIPLE*
-		Forbid three identical characters when compounding.  Not
-		supported.
-
-CHECKSHARPS  (Hunspell)				*spell-CHECKSHARPS*
-		SS letter pair in uppercased (German) words may be upper case
-		sharp s (ß). Not supported.
-
-COMPLEXPREFIXES  (Hunspell)				*spell-COMPLEXPREFIXES*
-		Enables using two prefixes.  Not supported.
-
-COMPOUND	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUND*
-		This is one line with the count of COMPOUND items, followed by
-		that many COMPOUND lines with a pattern.
-		Remove the first line with the count and rename the other
-		items to COMPOUNDRULE |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
-
-COMPOUNDFIRST	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDFIRST*
-		Use COMPOUNDRULE instead. |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
-
-COMPOUNDBEGIN	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDBEGIN*
-		Words signed with COMPOUNDBEGIN may be first elements in
-		compound words.
-		Use COMPOUNDRULE instead. |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
-
-COMPOUNDLAST	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDLAST*
-		Words signed with COMPOUNDLAST may be last elements in
-		compound words.
-		Use COMPOUNDRULE instead. |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
-
-COMPOUNDEND	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDEND*
-		Probably the same as COMPOUNDLAST
-
-COMPOUNDMIDDLE	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDMIDDLE*
-		Words signed with COMPOUNDMIDDLE may be middle elements in
-		compound words.
-		Use COMPOUNDRULE instead. |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
-
-COMPOUNDRULES	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDRULES*
-		Number of COMPOUNDRULE lines following.  Ignored, but the
-		argument must be a number.
-
-COMPOUNDSYLLABLE  (Hunspell)			*spell-COMPOUNDSYLLABLE*
-		Use SYLLABLE and COMPOUNDSYLMAX instead. |spell-SYLLABLE|
-		|spell-COMPOUNDSYLMAX|
-
-KEY		(Hunspell)				*spell-KEY*
-		Define characters that are close together on the keyboard.
-		Used to give better suggestions.  Not supported.
-
-LANG		(Hunspell)				*spell-LANG*
-		This specifies language-specific behavior.  This actually
-		moves part of the language knowledge into the program,
-		therefore Vim does not support it.  Each language property
-		must be specified separately.
-
-LEMMA_PRESENT	(Hunspell)				*spell-LEMMA_PRESENT*
-		Only needed for morphological analysis.
-
-MAXNGRAMSUGS	(Hunspell)				*spell-MAXNGRAMSUGS*
-		Set number of n-gram suggestions.  Not supported.
-
-PSEUDOROOT	(Hunspell)				*spell-PSEUDOROOT*
-		Use NEEDAFFIX instead. |spell-NEEDAFFIX|
-
-SUGSWITHDOTS	(Hunspell)				*spell-SUGSWITHDOTS*
-		Adds dots to suggestions.  Vim doesn't need this.
-
-SYLLABLENUM	(Hunspell)				*spell-SYLLABLENUM*
-		Not supported.
-
-TRY		(Myspell, Hunspell, others)		*spell-TRY*
-		Vim does not use the TRY item, it is ignored.  For making
-		suggestions the actual characters in the words are used, that
-		is much more efficient.
-
-WORDCHARS	(Hunspell)				*spell-WORDCHARS*
-		Used to recognize words.  Vim doesn't need it, because there
-		is no need to separate words before checking them (using a
-		trie instead of a hashtable).
-
- vim:tw=78:sw=4:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
+*spell.txt*	For Vim version 9.0.  Last change: 2023 May 25
+
+
+		  VIM REFERENCE MANUAL	  by Bram Moolenaar
+
+
+Spell checking						*spell*
+
+1. Quick start			|spell-quickstart|
+2. Remarks on spell checking	|spell-remarks|
+3. Generating a spell file	|spell-mkspell|
+4. Spell file format		|spell-file-format|
+
+{not available when the |+syntax| feature has been disabled at compile time}
+
+Note: There also is a vimspell plugin.  If you have it you can do ":help
+vimspell" to find about it.  But you will probably want to get rid of the
+plugin and use the 'spell' option instead, it works better.
+
+==============================================================================
+1. Quick start					*spell-quickstart* *E756*
+
+This command switches on spell checking: >
+
+	:setlocal spell spelllang=en_us
+
+This switches on the 'spell' option and specifies to check for US English.
+
+The words that are not recognized are highlighted with one of these:
+	SpellBad	word not recognized			|hl-SpellBad|
+	SpellCap	word not capitalised			|hl-SpellCap|
+	SpellRare	rare word				|hl-SpellRare|
+	SpellLocal	wrong spelling for selected region	|hl-SpellLocal|
+
+Vim only checks words for spelling, there is no grammar check.
+
+If the 'mousemodel' option is set to "popup" and the cursor is on a badly
+spelled word or it is "popup_setpos" and the mouse pointer is on a badly
+spelled word, then the popup menu will contain a submenu to replace the bad
+word.  Note: this slows down the appearance of the popup menu.  Note for GTK:
+don't release the right mouse button until the menu appears, otherwise it
+won't work.
+
+To search for the next misspelled word:
+
+							*]s*
+]s			Move to next misspelled word after the cursor.
+			A count before the command can be used to repeat.
+			'wrapscan' applies.
+
+							*[s*
+[s			Like "]s" but search backwards, find the misspelled
+			word before the cursor.  Doesn't recognize words
+			split over two lines, thus may stop at words that are
+			not highlighted as bad.  Does not stop at word with
+			missing capital at the start of a line.
+
+							*]S*
+]S			Like "]s" but only stop at bad words, not at rare
+			words or words for another region.
+
+							*[S*
+[S			Like "]S" but search backwards.
+
+
+To add words to your own word list:
+
+							*zg*
+zg			Add word under the cursor as a good word to the first
+			name in 'spellfile'.  A count may precede the command
+			to indicate the entry in 'spellfile' to be used.  A
+			count of two uses the second entry.
+
+			In Visual mode the selected characters are added as a
+			word (including white space!).
+			When the cursor is on text that is marked as badly
+			spelled then the marked text is used.
+			Otherwise the word under the cursor, separated by
+			non-word characters, is used.
+
+			If the word is explicitly marked as bad word in
+			another spell file the result is unpredictable.
+
+							*zG*
+zG			Like "zg" but add the word to the internal word list
+			|internal-wordlist|.
+
+							*zw*
+zw			Like "zg" but mark the word as a wrong (bad) word.
+			If the word already appears in 'spellfile' it is
+			turned into a comment line.  See |spellfile-cleanup|
+			for getting rid of those.
+
+							*zW*
+zW			Like "zw" but add the word to the internal word list
+			|internal-wordlist|.
+
+zuw							*zug* *zuw*
+zug			Undo |zw| and |zg|, remove the word from the entry in
+			'spellfile'.  Count used as with |zg|.
+
+zuW							*zuG* *zuW*
+zuG			Undo |zW| and |zG|, remove the word from the internal
+			word list.  Count used as with |zg|.
+
+						*:spe* *:spellgood* *E1280*
+:[count]spe[llgood] {word}
+			Add {word} as a good word to 'spellfile', like with
+			|zg|.  Without count the first name is used, with a
+			count of two the second entry, etc.
+
+:spe[llgood]! {word}	Add {word} as a good word to the internal word list,
+			like with |zG|.
+
+							*:spellw* *:spellwrong*
+:[count]spellw[rong] {word}
+			Add {word} as a wrong (bad) word to 'spellfile', as
+			with |zw|.  Without count the first name is used, with
+			a count of two the second entry, etc.
+
+:spellw[rong]! {word}	Add {word} as a wrong (bad) word to the internal word
+			list, like with |zW|.
+
+							*:spellra* *:spellrare*
+:[count]spellra[re] {word}
+			Add {word} as a rare word to 'spellfile', similar to
+			|zw|.  Without count the first name is used, with
+			a count of two the second entry, etc.
+
+			There are no normal mode commands to mark words as
+			rare as this is a fairly uncommon command and all
+			intuitive commands for this are already taken. If you
+			want you can add mappings with e.g.: >
+		nnoremap z?  :exe ':spellrare  ' .. expand('<cWORD>')<CR>
+		nnoremap z/  :exe ':spellrare! ' .. expand('<cWORD>')<CR>
+<			|:spellundo|, |zuw|, or |zuW| can be used to undo this.
+
+:spellra[re]! {word}	Add {word} as a rare word to the internal word
+			list, similar to |zW|.
+
+:[count]spellu[ndo] {word}				*:spellu* *:spellundo*
+			Like |zuw|.  [count] used as with |:spellgood|.
+
+:spellu[ndo]! {word}	Like |zuW|.  [count] used as with |:spellgood|.
+
+
+After adding a word to 'spellfile' with the above commands its associated
+".spl" file will automatically be updated and reloaded.  If you change
+'spellfile' manually you need to use the |:mkspell| command.  This sequence of
+commands mostly works well: >
+	:edit <file in 'spellfile'>
+<	(make changes to the spell file) >
+	:mkspell! %
+
+More details about the 'spellfile' format below |spell-wordlist-format|.
+
+							*internal-wordlist*
+The internal word list is used for all buffers where 'spell' is set.  It is
+not stored, it is lost when you exit Vim.  It is also cleared when 'encoding'
+is set.
+
+
+Finding suggestions for bad words:
+							*z=*
+z=			For the word under/after the cursor suggest correctly
+			spelled words.  This also works to find alternatives
+			for a word that is not highlighted as a bad word,
+			e.g., when the word after it is bad.
+			In Visual mode the highlighted text is taken as the
+			word to be replaced.
+			The results are sorted on similarity to the word being
+			replaced.
+			This may take a long time.  Hit CTRL-C when you get
+			bored.
+
+			If the command is used without a count the
+			alternatives are listed and you can enter the number
+			of your choice or press <Enter> if you don't want to
+			replace.  You can also use the mouse to click on your
+			choice (only works if the mouse can be used in Normal
+			mode and when there are no line wraps).  Click on the
+			first line (the header) to cancel.
+
+			The suggestions listed normally replace a highlighted
+			bad word.  Sometimes they include other text, in that
+			case the replaced text is also listed after a "<".
+
+			If a count is used that suggestion is used, without
+			prompting.  For example, "1z=" always takes the first
+			suggestion.
+
+			If 'verbose' is non-zero a score will be displayed
+			with the suggestions to indicate the likeliness to the
+			badly spelled word (the higher the score the more
+			different).
+			When a word was replaced the redo command "." will
+			repeat the word replacement.  This works like "ciw",
+			the good word and <Esc>.  This does NOT work for Thai
+			and other languages without spaces between words.
+
+					*:spellr* *:spellrepall* *E752* *E753*
+:spellr[epall]		Repeat the replacement done by |z=| for all matches
+			with the replaced word in the current window.
+
+In Insert mode, when the cursor is after a badly spelled word, you can use
+CTRL-X s to find suggestions.  This works like Insert mode completion.  Use
+CTRL-N to use the next suggestion, CTRL-P to go back. |i_CTRL-X_s|
+
+The 'spellsuggest' option influences how the list of suggestions is generated
+and sorted.  See |'spellsuggest'|.
+
+The 'spellcapcheck' option is used to check the first word of a sentence
+starts with a capital.  This doesn't work for the first word in the file.
+When there is a line break right after a sentence the highlighting of the next
+line may be postponed.  Use |CTRL-L| when needed.  Also see |set-spc-auto| for
+how it can be set automatically when 'spelllang' is set.
+
+The 'spelloptions' option has a few more flags that influence the way spell
+checking works.  For example, "camel" splits CamelCased words so that each
+part of the word is spell-checked separately.
+
+Vim counts the number of times a good word is encountered.  This is used to
+sort the suggestions: words that have been seen before get a small bonus,
+words that have been seen often get a bigger bonus.  The COMMON item in the
+affix file can be used to define common words, so that this mechanism also
+works in a new or short file |spell-COMMON|.
+
+==============================================================================
+2. Remarks on spell checking				*spell-remarks*
+
+PERFORMANCE
+
+Vim does on-the-fly spell checking.  To make this work fast the word list is
+loaded in memory.  Thus this uses a lot of memory (1 Mbyte or more).  There
+might also be a noticeable delay when the word list is loaded, which happens
+when 'spell' is set and when 'spelllang' is set while 'spell' was already set.
+To minimize the delay each word list is only loaded once, it is not deleted
+when 'spelllang' is made empty or 'spell' is reset.  When 'encoding' is set
+all the word lists are reloaded, thus you may notice a delay then too.
+
+
+REGIONS
+
+A word may be spelled differently in various regions.  For example, English
+comes in (at least) these variants:
+
+	en		all regions
+	en_au		Australia
+	en_ca		Canada
+	en_gb		Great Britain
+	en_nz		New Zealand
+	en_us		USA
+
+Words that are not used in one region but are used in another region are
+highlighted with SpellLocal |hl-SpellLocal|.
+
+Always use lowercase letters for the language and region names.
+
+When adding a word with |zg| or another command it's always added for all
+regions.  You can change that by manually editing the 'spellfile'.  See
+|spell-wordlist-format|.  Note that the regions as specified in the files in
+'spellfile' are only used when all entries in 'spelllang' specify the same
+region (not counting files specified by their .spl name).
+
+							*spell-german*
+Specific exception: For German these special regions are used:
+	de		all German words accepted
+	de_de		old and new spelling
+	de_19		old spelling
+	de_20		new spelling
+	de_at		Austria
+	de_ch		Switzerland
+
+							*spell-russian*
+Specific exception: For Russian these special regions are used:
+	ru		all Russian words accepted
+	ru_ru		"IE" letter spelling
+	ru_yo		"YO" letter spelling
+
+							*spell-yiddish*
+Yiddish requires using "utf-8" encoding, because of the special characters
+used.  If you are using latin1 Vim will use transliterated (romanized) Yiddish
+instead.  If you want to use transliterated Yiddish with utf-8 use "yi-tr".
+In a table:
+	'encoding'	'spelllang'
+	utf-8		yi		Yiddish
+	latin1		yi		transliterated Yiddish
+	utf-8		yi-tr		transliterated Yiddish
+
+							*spell-cjk*
+Chinese, Japanese and other East Asian characters are normally marked as
+errors, because spell checking of these characters is not supported. If
+'spelllang' includes "cjk", these characters are not marked as errors.  This
+is useful when editing text with spell checking while some Asian words are
+present.
+
+
+SPELL FILES						*spell-load*
+
+Vim searches for spell files in the "spell" subdirectory of the directories in
+'runtimepath'.  The name is: LL.EEE.spl, where:
+	LL	the language name
+	EEE	the value of 'encoding'
+
+The value for "LL" comes from 'spelllang', but excludes the region name.
+Examples:
+	'spelllang'	LL ~
+	en_us		en
+	en-rare		en-rare
+	medical_ca	medical
+
+Only the first file is loaded, the one that is first in 'runtimepath'.  If
+this succeeds then additionally files with the name LL.EEE.add.spl are loaded.
+All the ones that are found are used.
+
+If no spell file is found the |SpellFileMissing| autocommand event is
+triggered.  This may trigger the |spellfile.vim| plugin to offer you
+downloading the spell file.
+
+Additionally, the files related to the names in 'spellfile' are loaded.  These
+are the files that |zg| and |zw| add good and wrong words to.
+
+Exceptions:
+- Vim uses "latin1" when 'encoding' is "iso-8859-15".  The euro sign doesn't
+  matter for spelling.
+- When no spell file for 'encoding' is found "ascii" is tried.  This only
+  works for languages where nearly all words are ASCII, such as English.  It
+  helps when 'encoding' is not "latin1", such as iso-8859-2, and English text
+  is being edited.  For the ".add" files the same name as the found main
+  spell file is used.
+
+For example, with these values:
+	'runtimepath' is "~/.vim,/usr/share/vim82,~/.vim/after"
+	'encoding'    is "iso-8859-2"
+	'spelllang'   is "pl"
+
+Vim will look for:
+1. ~/.vim/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.spl
+2. /usr/share/vim82/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.spl
+3. ~/.vim/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.add.spl
+4. /usr/share/vim82/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.add.spl
+5. ~/.vim/after/spell/pl.iso-8859-2.add.spl
+
+This assumes 1. is not found and 2. is found.
+
+If 'encoding' is "latin1" Vim will look for:
+1. ~/.vim/spell/pl.latin1.spl
+2. /usr/share/vim82/spell/pl.latin1.spl
+3. ~/.vim/after/spell/pl.latin1.spl
+4. ~/.vim/spell/pl.ascii.spl
+5. /usr/share/vim82/spell/pl.ascii.spl
+6. ~/.vim/after/spell/pl.ascii.spl
+
+This assumes none of them are found (Polish doesn't make sense when leaving
+out the non-ASCII characters).
+
+Spelling for EBCDIC is currently not supported.
+
+A spell file might not be available in the current 'encoding'.  See
+|spell-mkspell| about how to create a spell file.  Converting a spell file
+with "iconv" will NOT work!
+
+Note: on VMS ".{enc}.spl" is changed to "_{enc}.spl" to avoid trouble with
+filenames.
+
+						    *spell-sug-file* *E781*
+If there is a file with exactly the same name as the ".spl" file but ending in
+".sug", that file will be used for giving better suggestions.  It isn't loaded
+before suggestions are made to reduce memory use.
+
+				    *E758* *E759* *E778* *E779* *E780* *E782*
+When loading a spell file Vim checks that it is properly formatted.  If you
+get an error the file may be truncated, modified or intended for another Vim
+version.
+
+
+SPELLFILE CLEANUP					*spellfile-cleanup*
+
+The |zw| command turns existing entries in 'spellfile' into comment lines.
+This avoids having to write a new file every time, but results in the file
+only getting longer, never shorter.  To clean up the comment lines in all
+".add" spell files do this: >
+	:runtime spell/cleanadd.vim
+
+This deletes all comment lines, except the ones that start with "##".  Use
+"##" lines to add comments that you want to keep.
+
+You can invoke this script as often as you like.  A variable is provided to
+skip updating files that have been changed recently.  Set it to the number of
+seconds that has passed since a file was changed before it will be cleaned.
+For example, to clean only files that were not changed in the last hour: >
+      let g:spell_clean_limit = 60 * 60
+The default is one second.
+
+
+WORDS
+
+Vim uses a fixed method to recognize a word.  This is independent of
+'iskeyword', so that it also works in help files and for languages that
+include characters like '-' in 'iskeyword'.  The word characters do depend on
+'encoding'.
+
+The table with word characters is stored in the main .spl file.  Therefore it
+matters what the current locale is when generating it!  A .add.spl file does
+not contain a word table though.
+
+For a word that starts with a digit the digit is ignored, unless the word as a
+whole is recognized.  Thus if "3D" is a word and "D" is not then "3D" is
+recognized as a word, but if "3D" is not a word then only the "D" is marked as
+bad.  Hex numbers in the form 0x12ab and 0X12AB are recognized.
+
+
+WORD COMBINATIONS
+
+It is possible to spell-check words that include a space.  This is used to
+recognize words that are invalid when used by themselves, e.g. for "et al.".
+It can also be used to recognize "the the" and highlight it.
+
+The number of spaces is irrelevant.  In most cases a line break may also
+appear.  However, this makes it difficult to find out where to start checking
+for spelling mistakes.  When you make a change to one line and only that line
+is redrawn Vim won't look in the previous line, thus when "et" is at the end
+of the previous line "al." will be flagged as an error.  And when you type
+"the<CR>the" the highlighting doesn't appear until the first line is redrawn.
+Use |CTRL-L| to redraw right away.  "[s" will also stop at a word combination
+with a line break.
+
+When encountering a line break Vim skips characters such as '*', '>' and '"',
+so that comments in C, shell and Vim code can be spell checked.
+
+
+SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING					*spell-syntax*
+
+Files that use syntax highlighting can specify where spell checking should be
+done:
+
+1.  everywhere			   default
+2.  in specific items		   use "contains=@Spell"
+3.  everywhere but specific items  use "contains=@NoSpell"
+
+For the second method adding the @NoSpell cluster will disable spell checking
+again.  This can be used, for example, to add @Spell to the comments of a
+program, and add @NoSpell for items that shouldn't be checked.
+Also see |:syn-spell| for text that is not in a syntax item.
+
+
+VIM SCRIPTS
+
+If you want to write a Vim script that does something with spelling, you may
+find these functions useful:
+
+    spellbadword()	find badly spelled word at the cursor
+    spellsuggest()	get list of spelling suggestions
+    soundfold()		get the sound-a-like version of a word
+
+
+SETTING 'spellcapcheck' AUTOMATICALLY			*set-spc-auto*
+
+After the 'spelllang' option has been set successfully, Vim will source the
+files "spell/LANG.vim" in 'runtimepath'.  "LANG" is the value of 'spelllang'
+up to the first comma, dot or underscore.  This can be used to set options
+specifically for the language, especially 'spellcapcheck'.
+
+The distribution includes a few of these files.  Use this command to see what
+they do: >
+	:next $VIMRUNTIME/spell/*.vim
+
+Note that the default scripts don't set 'spellcapcheck' if it was changed from
+the default value.  This assumes the user prefers another value then.
+
+
+DOUBLE SCORING						*spell-double-scoring*
+
+The 'spellsuggest' option can be used to select "double" scoring.  This
+mechanism is based on the principle that there are two kinds of spelling
+mistakes:
+
+1. You know how to spell the word, but mistype something.  This results in a
+   small editing distance (character swapped/omitted/inserted) and possibly a
+   word that sounds completely different.
+
+2. You don't know how to spell the word and type something that sounds right.
+   The edit distance can be big but the word is similar after sound-folding.
+
+Since scores for these two mistakes will be very different we use a list
+for each and mix them.
+
+The sound-folding is slow and people that know the language won't make the
+second kind of mistakes.  Therefore 'spellsuggest' can be set to select the
+preferred method for scoring the suggestions.
+
+==============================================================================
+3. Generating a spell file				*spell-mkspell*
+
+Vim uses a binary file format for spelling.  This greatly speeds up loading
+the word list and keeps it small.
+						    *.aff* *.dic* *Myspell*
+You can create a Vim spell file from the .aff and .dic files that Myspell
+uses.  Myspell is used by OpenOffice.org and Mozilla. The OpenOffice .oxt
+files are zip files which contain the .aff and .dic files. You should be able
+to find them here:
+	http://extensions.services.openoffice.org/dictionary
+The older, OpenOffice 2 files may be used if this doesn't work:
+	http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Dictionaries
+You can also use a plain word list.  The results are the same, the choice
+depends on what word lists you can find.
+
+If you install Aap (from www.a-a-p.org) you can use the recipes in the
+runtime/spell/??/ directories.  Aap will take care of downloading the files,
+apply patches needed for Vim and build the .spl file.
+
+Make sure your current locale is set properly, otherwise Vim doesn't know what
+characters are upper/lower case letters.  If the locale isn't available (e.g.,
+when using an MS-Windows codepage on Unix) add tables to the .aff file
+|spell-affix-chars|.  If the .aff file doesn't define a table then the word
+table of the currently active spelling is used.  If spelling is not active
+then Vim will try to guess.
+
+							*:mksp* *:mkspell*
+:mksp[ell][!] [-ascii] {outname} {inname} ...
+			Generate a Vim spell file from word lists.  Example: >
+		:mkspell /tmp/nl nl_NL.words
+<								*E751*
+			When {outname} ends in ".spl" it is used as the output
+			file name.  Otherwise it should be a language name,
+			such as "en", without the region name.  The file
+			written will be "{outname}.{encoding}.spl", where
+			{encoding} is the value of the 'encoding' option.
+
+			When the output file already exists [!] must be used
+			to overwrite it.
+
+			When the [-ascii] argument is present, words with
+			non-ascii characters are skipped.  The resulting file
+			ends in "ascii.spl".
+
+			The input can be the Myspell format files {inname}.aff
+			and {inname}.dic.  If {inname}.aff does not exist then
+			{inname} is used as the file name of a plain word
+			list.
+
+			Multiple {inname} arguments can be given to combine
+			regions into one Vim spell file.  Example: >
+		:mkspell ~/.vim/spell/en /tmp/en_US /tmp/en_CA /tmp/en_AU
+<			This combines the English word lists for US, CA and AU
+			into one en.spl file.
+			Up to eight regions can be combined. *E754* *E755*
+			The REP and SAL items of the first .aff file where
+			they appear are used. |spell-REP| |spell-SAL|
+								*E845*
+			This command uses a lot of memory, required to find
+			the optimal word tree (Polish, Italian and Hungarian
+			require several hundred Mbyte).  The final result will
+			be much smaller, because compression is used.  To
+			avoid running out of memory compression will be done
+			now and then.  This can be tuned with the 'mkspellmem'
+			option.
+
+			After the spell file was written and it was being used
+			in a buffer it will be reloaded automatically.
+
+:mksp[ell] [-ascii] {name}.{enc}.add
+			Like ":mkspell" above, using {name}.{enc}.add as the
+			input file and producing an output file in the same
+			directory that has ".spl" appended.
+
+:mksp[ell] [-ascii] {name}
+			Like ":mkspell" above, using {name} as the input file
+			and producing an output file in the same directory
+			that has ".{enc}.spl" appended.
+
+Vim will report the number of duplicate words.  This might be a mistake in the
+list of words.  But sometimes it is used to have different prefixes and
+suffixes for the same basic word to avoid them combining (e.g. Czech uses
+this).  If you want Vim to report all duplicate words set the 'verbose'
+option.
+
+Since you might want to change a Myspell word list for use with Vim the
+following procedure is recommended:
+
+1. Obtain the xx_YY.aff and xx_YY.dic files from Myspell.
+2. Make a copy of these files to xx_YY.orig.aff and xx_YY.orig.dic.
+3. Change the xx_YY.aff and xx_YY.dic files to remove bad words, add missing
+   words, define word characters with FOL/LOW/UPP, etc.  The distributed
+   "*.diff" files can be used.
+4. Start Vim with the right locale and use |:mkspell| to generate the Vim
+   spell file.
+5. Try out the spell file with ":set spell spelllang=xx" if you wrote it in
+   a spell directory in 'runtimepath', or ":set spelllang=xx.enc.spl" if you
+   wrote it somewhere else.
+
+When the Myspell files are updated you can merge the differences:
+1. Obtain the new Myspell files as xx_YY.new.aff and xx_UU.new.dic.
+2. Use Vimdiff to see what changed: >
+	vimdiff xx_YY.orig.dic xx_YY.new.dic
+3. Take over the changes you like in xx_YY.dic.
+   You may also need to change xx_YY.aff.
+4. Rename xx_YY.new.dic to xx_YY.orig.dic and xx_YY.new.aff to xx_YY.orig.aff.
+
+
+SPELL FILE VERSIONS					*E770* *E771* *E772*
+
+Spell checking is a relatively new feature in Vim, thus it's possible that the
+.spl file format will be changed to support more languages.  Vim will check
+the validity of the spell file and report anything wrong.
+
+	E771: Old spell file, needs to be updated ~
+This spell file is older than your Vim.  You need to update the .spl file.
+
+	E772: Spell file is for newer version of Vim ~
+This means the spell file was made for a later version of Vim.  You need to
+update Vim.
+
+	E770: Unsupported section in spell file ~
+This means the spell file was made for a later version of Vim and contains a
+section that is required for the spell file to work.  In this case it's
+probably a good idea to upgrade your Vim.
+
+
+SPELL FILE DUMP
+
+If for some reason you want to check what words are supported by the currently
+used spelling files, use this command:
+
+							*:spelldump* *:spelld*
+:spelld[ump]		Open a new window and fill it with all currently valid
+			words.  Compound words are not included.
+			Note: For some languages the result may be enormous,
+			causing Vim to run out of memory.
+
+:spelld[ump]!		Like ":spelldump" and include the word count.  This is
+			the number of times the word was found while
+			updating the screen.  Words that are in COMMON items
+			get a starting count of 10.
+
+The format of the word list is used |spell-wordlist-format|.  You should be
+able to read it with ":mkspell" to generate one .spl file that includes all
+the words.
+
+When all entries to 'spelllang' use the same regions or no regions at all then
+the region information is included in the dumped words.  Otherwise only words
+for the current region are included and no "/regions" line is generated.
+
+Comment lines with the name of the .spl file are used as a header above the
+words that were generated from that .spl file.
+
+
+SPELL FILE MISSING		*spell-SpellFileMissing* *spellfile.vim*
+
+If the spell file for the language you are using is not available, you will
+get an error message.  But if the "spellfile.vim" plugin is active it will
+offer you to download the spell file.  Just follow the instructions, it will
+ask you where to write the file (there must be a writable directory in
+'runtimepath' for this).
+
+The plugin has a default place where to look for spell files, on the Vim ftp
+server.  The protocol used is SSL (https://) for security.  If you want to use
+another location or another protocol, set the g:spellfile_URL variable to the
+directory that holds the spell files.  You can use http:// or ftp://, but you
+are taking a security risk then.  The |netrw| plugin is used for getting the
+file, look there for the specific syntax of the URL.  Example: >
+	let g:spellfile_URL = 'https://ftp.nluug.nl/vim/runtime/spell'
+You may need to escape special characters.
+
+The plugin will only ask about downloading a language once.  If you want to
+try again anyway restart Vim, or set g:spellfile_URL to another value (e.g.,
+prepend a space).
+
+To avoid using the "spellfile.vim" plugin do this in your vimrc file: >
+
+	let loaded_spellfile_plugin = 1
+
+Instead of using the plugin you can define a |SpellFileMissing| autocommand to
+handle the missing file yourself.  You can use it like this: >
+
+	:au SpellFileMissing * call Download_spell_file(expand('<amatch>'))
+
+Thus the <amatch> item contains the name of the language.  Another important
+value is 'encoding', since every encoding has its own spell file.  With two
+exceptions:
+- For ISO-8859-15 (latin9) the name "latin1" is used (the encodings only
+  differ in characters not used in dictionary words).
+- The name "ascii" may also be used for some languages where the words use
+  only ASCII letters for most of the words.
+
+The default "spellfile.vim" plugin uses this autocommand, if you define your
+autocommand afterwards you may want to use ":au! SpellFileMissing" to overrule
+it.  If you define your autocommand before the plugin is loaded it will notice
+this and not do anything.
+							*E797*
+Note that the SpellFileMissing autocommand must not change or destroy the
+buffer the user was editing.
+
+==============================================================================
+4. Spell file format					*spell-file-format*
+
+This is the format of the files that are used by the person who creates and
+maintains a word list.
+
+Note that we avoid the word "dictionary" here.  That is because the goal of
+spell checking differs from writing a dictionary (as in the book).  For
+spelling we need a list of words that are OK, thus should not be highlighted.
+Person and company names will not appear in a dictionary, but do appear in a
+word list.  And some old words are rarely used while they are common
+misspellings.  These do appear in a dictionary but not in a word list.
+
+There are two formats: A straight list of words and a list using affix
+compression.  The files with affix compression are used by Myspell (Mozilla
+and OpenOffice.org).  This requires two files, one with .aff and one with .dic
+extension.
+
+
+FORMAT OF STRAIGHT WORD LIST				*spell-wordlist-format*
+
+The words must appear one per line.  That is all that is required.
+
+Additionally the following items are recognized:
+
+- Empty and blank lines are ignored.
+
+	# comment ~
+- Lines starting with a # are ignored (comment lines).
+
+	/encoding=utf-8 ~
+- A line starting with "/encoding=", before any word, specifies the encoding
+  of the file.  After the second '=' comes an encoding name.  This tells Vim
+  to setup conversion from the specified encoding to 'encoding'.  Thus you can
+  use one word list for several target encodings.
+
+	/regions=usca ~
+- A line starting with "/regions=" specifies the region names that are
+  supported.  Each region name must be two ASCII letters.  The first one is
+  region 1.  Thus "/regions=usca" has region 1 "us" and region 2 "ca".
+  In an addition word list the region names should be equal to the main word
+  list!
+
+- Other lines starting with '/' are reserved for future use.  The ones that
+  are not recognized are ignored.  You do get a warning message, so that you
+  know something won't work.
+
+- A "/" may follow the word with the following items:
+    =		Case must match exactly.
+    ?		Rare word.
+    !		Bad (wrong) word.
+    1 to 9	A region in which the word is valid.  If no regions are
+		specified the word is valid in all regions.
+
+Example:
+
+	# This is an example word list		comment
+	/encoding=latin1			encoding of the file
+	/regions=uscagb				regions "us", "ca" and "gb"
+	example					word for all regions
+	blah/12					word for regions "us" and "ca"
+	vim/!					bad word
+	Campbell/?3				rare word in region 3 "gb"
+	's mornings/=				keep-case word
+
+Note that when "/=" is used the same word with all upper-case letters is not
+accepted.  This is different from a word with mixed case that is automatically
+marked as keep-case, those words may appear in all upper-case letters.
+
+
+FORMAT WITH .AFF AND .DIC FILES				*aff-dic-format*
+
+There are two files: the basic word list and an affix file.  The affix file
+specifies settings for the language and can contain affixes.  The affixes are
+used to modify the basic words to get the full word list.  This significantly
+reduces the number of words, especially for a language like Polish.  This is
+called affix compression.
+
+The basic word list and the affix file are combined with the ":mkspell"
+command and results in a binary spell file.  All the preprocessing has been
+done, thus this file loads fast.  The binary spell file format is described in
+the source code (src/spell.c).  But only developers need to know about it.
+
+The preprocessing also allows us to take the Myspell language files and modify
+them before the Vim word list is made.  The tools for this can be found in the
+"src/spell" directory.
+
+The format for the affix and word list files is based on what Myspell uses
+(the spell checker of Mozilla and OpenOffice.org).  A description can be found
+here:
+	http://lingucomponent.openoffice.org/affix.readme ~
+Note that affixes are case sensitive, this isn't obvious from the description.
+
+Vim supports quite a few extras.  They are described below |spell-affix-vim|.
+Attempts have been made to keep this compatible with other spell checkers, so
+that the same files can often be used.  One other project that offers more
+than Myspell is Hunspell ( http://hunspell.sf.net ).
+
+
+WORD LIST FORMAT				*spell-dic-format*
+
+A short example, with line numbers:
+
+	1	1234 ~
+	2	aan ~
+	3	Als ~
+	4	Etten-Leur ~
+	5	et al. ~
+	6	's-Gravenhage ~
+	7	's-Gravenhaags ~
+	8	# word that differs between regions ~
+	9	kado/1 ~
+	10	cadeau/2 ~
+	11	TCP,IP ~
+	12	/the S affix may add a 's' ~
+	13	bedel/S ~
+
+The first line contains the number of words.  Vim ignores it, but you do get
+an error message if it's not there.  *E760*
+
+What follows is one word per line.  White space at the end of the line is
+ignored, all other white space matters.  The encoding is specified in the
+affix file |spell-SET|.
+
+Comment lines start with '#' or '/'.  See the example lines 8 and 12.  Note
+that putting a comment after a word is NOT allowed:
+
+		someword   # comment that causes an error! ~
+
+After the word there is an optional slash and flags.  Most of these flags are
+letters that indicate the affixes that can be used with this word.  These are
+specified with SFX and PFX lines in the .aff file, see |spell-SFX| and
+|spell-PFX|.  Vim allows using other flag types with the FLAG item in the
+affix file |spell-FLAG|.
+
+When the word only has lower-case letters it will also match with the word
+starting with an upper-case letter.
+
+When the word includes an upper-case letter, this means the upper-case letter
+is required at this position.  The same word with a lower-case letter at this
+position will not match. When some of the other letters are upper-case it will
+not match either.
+
+The word with all upper-case characters will always be OK,
+
+	word list	matches			does not match ~
+	als		als Als ALS		ALs AlS aLs aLS
+	Als		Als  ALS		als ALs AlS aLs aLS
+	ALS		ALS			als Als ALs AlS aLs aLS
+	AlS		AlS ALS			als Als ALs aLs aLS
+
+The KEEPCASE affix ID can be used to specifically match a word with identical
+case only, see below |spell-KEEPCASE|.
+
+Note: in line 5 to 7 non-word characters are used.  You can include any
+character in a word.  When checking the text a word still only matches when it
+appears with a non-word character before and after it.  For Myspell a word
+starting with a non-word character probably won't work.
+
+In line 12 the word "TCP/IP" is defined.  Since the slash has a special
+meaning the comma is used instead.  This is defined with the SLASH item in the
+affix file, see |spell-SLASH|.  Note that without this SLASH item the word
+will be "TCP,IP".
+
+
+AFFIX FILE FORMAT			*spell-aff-format* *spell-affix-vim*
+
+							*spell-affix-comment*
+Comment lines in the .aff file start with a '#':
+
+	# comment line ~
+
+Items with a fixed number of arguments can be followed by a comment.  But only
+if none of the arguments can contain white space.  The comment must start with
+a "#" character.  Example:
+
+	KEEPCASE =  # fix case for words with this flag ~
+
+
+ENCODING							*spell-SET*
+
+The affix file can be in any encoding that is supported by "iconv".  However,
+in some cases the current locale should also be set properly at the time
+|:mkspell| is invoked.  Adding FOL/LOW/UPP lines removes this requirement
+|spell-FOL|.
+
+The encoding should be specified before anything where the encoding matters.
+The encoding applies both to the affix file and the dictionary file.  It is
+done with a SET line:
+
+	SET utf-8 ~
+
+The encoding can be different from the value of the 'encoding' option at the
+time ":mkspell" is used.  Vim will then convert everything to 'encoding' and
+generate a spell file for 'encoding'.  If some of the used characters to not
+fit in 'encoding' you will get an error message.
+							*spell-affix-mbyte*
+When using a multibyte encoding it's possible to use more different affix
+flags.  But Myspell doesn't support that, thus you may not want to use it
+anyway.  For compatibility use an 8-bit encoding.
+
+
+INFORMATION
+
+These entries in the affix file can be used to add information to the spell
+file.  There are no restrictions on the format, but they should be in the
+right encoding.
+
+				*spell-NAME* *spell-VERSION* *spell-HOME*
+				*spell-AUTHOR* *spell-EMAIL* *spell-COPYRIGHT*
+	NAME		Name of the language
+	VERSION		1.0.1  with fixes
+	HOME		http://www.myhome.eu
+	AUTHOR		John Doe
+	EMAIL		john AT Doe DOT net
+	COPYRIGHT	LGPL
+
+These fields are put in the .spl file as-is.  The |:spellinfo| command can be
+used to view the info.
+
+							*:spellinfo* *:spelli*
+:spelli[nfo]		Display the information for the spell file(s) used for
+			the current buffer.
+
+
+CHARACTER TABLES
+							*spell-affix-chars*
+When using an 8-bit encoding the affix file should define what characters are
+word characters.  This is because the system where ":mkspell" is used may not
+support a locale with this encoding and isalpha() won't work.  For example
+when using "cp1250" on Unix.
+						*E761* *E762* *spell-FOL*
+						*spell-LOW* *spell-UPP*
+Three lines in the affix file are needed.  Simplistic example:
+
+	FOL  áëñ ~
+	LOW  áëñ ~
+	UPP  ÁËÑ ~
+
+All three lines must have exactly the same number of characters.
+
+The "FOL" line specifies the case-folded characters.  These are used to
+compare words while ignoring case.  For most encodings this is identical to
+the lower case line.
+
+The "LOW" line specifies the characters in lower-case.  Mostly it's equal to
+the "FOL" line.
+
+The "UPP" line specifies the characters with upper-case.  That is, a character
+is upper-case where it's different from the character at the same position in
+"FOL".
+
+An exception is made for the German sharp s ß.  The upper-case version is
+"SS".  In the FOL/LOW/UPP lines it should be included, so that it's recognized
+as a word character, but use the ß character in all three.
+
+ASCII characters should be omitted, Vim always handles these in the same way.
+When the encoding is UTF-8 no word characters need to be specified.
+
+							*E763*
+Vim allows you to use spell checking for several languages in the same file.
+You can list them in the 'spelllang' option.  As a consequence all spell files
+for the same encoding must use the same word characters, otherwise they can't
+be combined without errors.
+
+If you get an E763 warning that the word tables differ you need to update your
+".spl" spell files.  If you downloaded the files, get the latest version of
+all spell files you use.  If you are only using one, e.g., German, then also
+download the recent English spell files.  Otherwise generate the .spl file
+again with |:mkspell|.  If you still get errors check the FOL, LOW and UPP
+lines in the used .aff files.
+
+The XX.ascii.spl spell file generated with the "-ascii" argument will not
+contain the table with characters, so that it can be combine with spell files
+for any encoding.  The .add.spl files also do not contain the table.
+
+
+MID-WORD CHARACTERS
+							*spell-midword*
+Some characters are only to be considered word characters if they are used in
+between two ordinary word characters.  An example is the single quote: It is
+often used to put text in quotes, thus it can't be recognized as a word
+character, but when it appears in between word characters it must be part of
+the word.  This is needed to detect a spelling error such as they'are.  That
+should be they're, but since "they" and "are" are words themselves that would
+go unnoticed.
+
+These characters are defined with MIDWORD in the .aff file.  Example:
+
+	MIDWORD	'- ~
+
+
+FLAG TYPES						*spell-FLAG*
+
+Flags are used to specify the affixes that can be used with a word and for
+other properties of the word.  Normally single-character flags are used.  This
+limits the number of possible flags, especially for 8-bit encodings.  The FLAG
+item can be used if more affixes are to be used.  Possible values:
+
+	FLAG long	use two-character flags
+	FLAG num	use numbers, from 1 up to 65000
+	FLAG caplong	use one-character flags without A-Z and two-character
+			flags that start with A-Z
+
+With "FLAG num" the numbers in a list of affixes need to be separated with a
+comma: "234,2143,1435".  This method is inefficient, but useful if the file is
+generated with a program.
+
+When using "caplong" the two-character flags all start with a capital: "Aa",
+"B1", "BB", etc.  This is useful to use one-character flags for the most
+common items and two-character flags for uncommon items.
+
+Note: When using utf-8 only characters up to 65000 may be used for flags.
+
+Note: even when using "num" or "long" the number of flags available to
+compounding and prefixes is limited to about 250.
+
+
+AFFIXES						*spell-PFX* *spell-SFX*
+
+The usual PFX (prefix) and SFX (suffix) lines are supported (see the Myspell
+documentation or the Aspell manual:
+http://aspell.net/man-html/Affix-Compression.html).
+
+Summary:
+	SFX L Y 2 ~
+	SFX L 0 re [^x] ~
+	SFX L 0 ro x ~
+
+The first line is a header and has four fields:
+	SFX {flag} {combine} {count}
+
+{flag}		The name used for the suffix.  Mostly it's a single letter,
+		but other characters can be used, see |spell-FLAG|.
+
+{combine}	Can be 'Y' or 'N'.  When 'Y' then the word plus suffix can
+		also have a prefix.  When 'N' then a prefix is not allowed.
+
+{count}		The number of lines following.  If this is wrong you will get
+		an error message.
+
+For PFX the fields are exactly the same.
+
+The basic format for the following lines is:
+	SFX {flag} {strip} {add} {condition} {extra}
+
+{flag}		Must be the same as the {flag} used in the first line.
+
+{strip}		Characters removed from the basic word.  There is no check if
+		the characters are actually there, only the length is used (in
+		bytes).  This better match the {condition}, otherwise strange
+		things may happen.  If the {strip} length is equal to or
+		longer than the basic word the suffix won't be used.
+		When {strip} is 0 (zero) then nothing is stripped.
+
+{add}		Characters added to the basic word, after removing {strip}.
+		Optionally there is a '/' followed by flags.  The flags apply
+		to the word plus affix.  See |spell-affix-flags|
+
+{condition}	A simplistic pattern.  Only when this matches with a basic
+		word will the suffix be used for that word.  This is normally
+		for using one suffix letter with different {add} and {strip}
+		fields for words with different endings.
+		When {condition} is a . (dot) there is no condition.
+		The pattern may contain:
+		- Literal characters.
+		- A set of characters in []. [abc] matches a, b and c.
+		  A dash is allowed for a range [a-c], but this is
+		  Vim-specific.
+		- A set of characters that starts with a ^, meaning the
+		  complement of the specified characters. [^abc] matches any
+		  character but a, b and c.
+
+{extra}		Optional extra text:
+		    # comment		Comment is ignored
+		    -			Hunspell uses this, ignored
+
+For PFX the fields are the same, but the {strip}, {add} and {condition} apply
+to the start of the word.
+
+Note: Myspell ignores any extra text after the relevant info.  Vim requires
+this text to start with a "#" so that mistakes don't go unnoticed.  Example:
+
+	SFX F 0 in   [^i]n      # Spion > Spionin  ~
+	SFX F 0 nen  in		# Bauerin > Bauerinnen ~
+
+However, to avoid lots of errors in affix files written for Myspell, you can
+add the IGNOREEXTRA flag.
+
+Apparently Myspell allows an affix name to appear more than once.  Since this
+might also be a mistake, Vim checks for an extra "S".  The affix files for
+Myspell that use this feature apparently have this flag.  Example:
+
+	SFX a Y 1 S ~
+	SFX a 0 an . ~
+
+	SFX a Y 2 S ~
+	SFX a 0 en . ~
+	SFX a 0 on . ~
+
+
+AFFIX FLAGS						*spell-affix-flags*
+
+This is a feature that comes from Hunspell: The affix may specify flags.  This
+works similar to flags specified on a basic word.  The flags apply to the
+basic word plus the affix (but there are restrictions).  Example:
+
+	SFX S Y 1 ~
+	SFX S 0 s . ~
+
+	SFX A Y 1 ~
+	SFX A 0 able/S . ~
+
+When the dictionary file contains "drink/AS" then these words are possible:
+
+	drink
+	drinks		uses S suffix
+	drinkable	uses A suffix
+	drinkables	uses A suffix and then S suffix
+
+Generally the flags of the suffix are added to the flags of the basic word,
+both are used for the word plus suffix.  But the flags of the basic word are
+only used once for affixes, except that both one prefix and one suffix can be
+used when both support combining.
+
+Specifically, the affix flags can be used for:
+- Suffixes on suffixes, as in the example above.  This works once, thus you
+  can have two suffixes on a word (plus one prefix).
+- Making the word with the affix rare, by using the |spell-RARE| flag.
+- Exclude the word with the affix from compounding, by using the
+  |spell-COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG| flag.
+- Allow the word with the affix to be part of a compound word on the side of
+  the affix with the |spell-COMPOUNDPERMITFLAG|.
+- Use the NEEDCOMPOUND flag: word plus affix can only be used as part of a
+  compound word. |spell-NEEDCOMPOUND|
+- Compound flags: word plus affix can be part of a compound word at the end,
+  middle, start, etc.  The flags are combined with the flags of the basic
+  word.  |spell-compound|
+- NEEDAFFIX: another affix is needed to make a valid word.
+- CIRCUMFIX, as explained just below.
+
+
+IGNOREEXTRA						*spell-IGNOREEXTRA*
+
+Normally Vim gives an error for an extra field that does not start with '#'.
+This avoids errors going unnoticed.  However, some files created for Myspell
+or Hunspell may contain many entries with an extra field.  Use the IGNOREEXTRA
+flag to avoid lots of errors.
+
+
+CIRCUMFIX						*spell-CIRCUMFIX*
+
+The CIRCUMFIX flag means a prefix and suffix must be added at the same time.
+If a prefix has the CIRCUMFIX flag then only suffixes with the CIRCUMFIX flag
+can be added, and the other way around.
+An alternative is to only specify the suffix, and give that suffix two flags:
+the required prefix and the NEEDAFFIX flag.  |spell-NEEDAFFIX|
+
+
+PFXPOSTPONE						*spell-PFXPOSTPONE*
+
+When an affix file has very many prefixes that apply to many words it's not
+possible to build the whole word list in memory.  This applies to Hebrew (a
+list with all words is over a Gbyte).  In that case applying prefixes must be
+postponed.  This makes spell checking slower.  It is indicated by this keyword
+in the .aff file:
+
+	PFXPOSTPONE ~
+
+Only prefixes without a chop string and without flags can be postponed.
+Prefixes with a chop string or with flags will still be included in the word
+list.  An exception if the chop string is one character and equal to the last
+character of the added string, but in lower case.  Thus when the chop string
+is used to allow the following word to start with an upper case letter.
+
+
+WORDS WITH A SLASH					*spell-SLASH*
+
+The slash is used in the .dic file to separate the basic word from the affix
+letters and other flags.  Unfortunately, this means you cannot use a slash in
+a word.  Thus "TCP/IP" is not a word but "TCP" with the flags "IP".  To include
+a slash in the word put a backslash before it: "TCP\/IP".  In the rare case
+you want to use a backslash inside a word you need to use two backslashes.
+Any other use of the backslash is reserved for future expansion.
+
+
+KEEP-CASE WORDS						*spell-KEEPCASE*
+
+In the affix file a KEEPCASE line can be used to define the affix name used
+for keep-case words.  Example:
+
+	KEEPCASE = ~
+
+This flag is not supported by Myspell.  It has the meaning that case matters.
+This can be used if the word does not have the first letter in upper case at
+the start of a sentence.  Example:
+
+    word list	    matches		    does not match ~
+    's morgens/=    's morgens		    'S morgens 's Morgens 'S MORGENS
+    's Morgens	    's Morgens 'S MORGENS   'S morgens 's morgens
+
+The flag can also be used to avoid that the word matches when it is in all
+upper-case letters.
+
+
+RARE WORDS						*spell-RARE*
+
+In the affix file a RARE line can be used to define the affix name used for
+rare words.  Example:
+
+	RARE ? ~
+
+Rare words are highlighted differently from bad words.  This is to be used for
+words that are correct for the language, but are hardly ever used and could be
+a typing mistake anyway.  When the same word is found as good it won't be
+highlighted as rare.
+
+This flag can also be used on an affix, so that a basic word is not rare but
+the basic word plus affix is rare |spell-affix-flags|.  However, if the word
+also appears as a good word in another way (e.g., in another region) it won't
+be marked as rare.
+
+
+BAD WORDS						*spell-BAD*
+
+In the affix file a BAD line can be used to define the affix name used for
+bad words.  Example:
+
+	BAD ! ~
+
+This can be used to exclude words that would otherwise be good.  For example
+"the the" in the .dic file:
+
+	the the/! ~
+
+Once a word has been marked as bad it won't be undone by encountering the same
+word as good.
+
+The flag also applies to the word with affixes, thus this can be used to mark
+a whole bunch of related words as bad.
+
+							*spell-FORBIDDENWORD*
+FORBIDDENWORD can be used just like BAD.  For compatibility with Hunspell.
+
+							*spell-NEEDAFFIX*
+The NEEDAFFIX flag is used to require that a word is used with an affix.  The
+word itself is not a good word (unless there is an empty affix).  Example:
+
+	NEEDAFFIX + ~
+
+
+COMPOUND WORDS						*spell-compound*
+
+A compound word is a longer word made by concatenating words that appear in
+the .dic file.  To specify which words may be concatenated a character is
+used.  This character is put in the list of affixes after the word.  We will
+call this character a flag here.  Obviously these flags must be different from
+any affix IDs used.
+
+							*spell-COMPOUNDFLAG*
+The Myspell compatible method uses one flag, specified with COMPOUNDFLAG.  All
+words with this flag combine in any order.  This means there is no control
+over which word comes first.  Example:
+	COMPOUNDFLAG c ~
+
+							*spell-COMPOUNDRULE*
+A more advanced method to specify how compound words can be formed uses
+multiple items with multiple flags.  This is not compatible with Myspell 3.0.
+Let's start with an example:
+	COMPOUNDRULE c+ ~
+	COMPOUNDRULE se ~
+
+The first line defines that words with the "c" flag can be concatenated in any
+order.  The second line defines compound words that are made of one word with
+the "s" flag and one word with the "e" flag.  With this dictionary:
+	bork/c ~
+	onion/s ~
+	soup/e ~
+
+You can make these words:
+	bork
+	borkbork
+	borkborkbork
+	(etc.)
+	onion
+	soup
+	onionsoup
+
+The COMPOUNDRULE item may appear multiple times.  The argument is made out of
+one or more groups, where each group can be:
+	one flag			e.g., c
+	alternate flags inside []	e.g., [abc]
+Optionally this may be followed by:
+	*	the group appears zero or more times, e.g., sm*e
+	+	the group appears one or more times, e.g., c+
+	?	the group appears zero times or once, e.g., x?
+
+This is similar to the regexp pattern syntax (but not the same!).  A few
+examples with the sequence of word flags they require:
+    COMPOUNDRULE x+	    x xx xxx etc.
+    COMPOUNDRULE yz	    yz
+    COMPOUNDRULE x+z	    xz xxz xxxz etc.
+    COMPOUNDRULE yx+	    yx yxx yxxx etc.
+    COMPOUNDRULE xy?z	    xz xyz
+
+    COMPOUNDRULE [abc]z    az bz cz
+    COMPOUNDRULE [abc]+z   az aaz abaz bz baz bcbz cz caz cbaz etc.
+    COMPOUNDRULE a[xyz]+   ax axx axyz ay ayx ayzz az azy azxy etc.
+    COMPOUNDRULE sm*e	    se sme smme smmme etc.
+    COMPOUNDRULE s[xyz]*e  se sxe sxye sxyxe sye syze sze szye szyxe  etc.
+
+A specific example: Allow a compound to be made of two words and a dash:
+	In the .aff file:
+	    COMPOUNDRULE sde ~
+	    NEEDAFFIX x ~
+	    COMPOUNDWORDMAX 3 ~
+	    COMPOUNDMIN 1 ~
+	In the .dic file:
+	    start/s ~
+	    end/e ~
+	    -/xd ~
+
+This allows for the word "start-end", but not "startend".
+
+An additional implied rule is that, without further flags, a word with a
+prefix cannot be compounded after another word, and a word with a suffix
+cannot be compounded with a following word.  Thus the affix cannot appear
+on the inside of a compound word.  This can be changed with the
+|spell-COMPOUNDPERMITFLAG|.
+
+							*spell-NEEDCOMPOUND*
+The NEEDCOMPOUND flag is used to require that a word is used as part of a
+compound word.  The word itself is not a good word.  Example:
+
+	NEEDCOMPOUND & ~
+
+							*spell-ONLYINCOMPOUND*
+The ONLYINCOMPOUND does exactly the same as NEEDCOMPOUND.  Supported for
+compatibility with Hunspell.
+
+							*spell-COMPOUNDMIN*
+The minimal character length of a word used for compounding is specified with
+COMPOUNDMIN.  Example:
+	COMPOUNDMIN 5 ~
+
+When omitted there is no minimal length.  Obviously you could just leave out
+the compound flag from short words instead, this feature is present for
+compatibility with Myspell.
+
+							*spell-COMPOUNDWORDMAX*
+The maximum number of words that can be concatenated into a compound word is
+specified with COMPOUNDWORDMAX.  Example:
+	COMPOUNDWORDMAX 3 ~
+
+When omitted there is no maximum.  It applies to all compound words.
+
+To set a limit for words with specific flags make sure the items in
+COMPOUNDRULE where they appear don't allow too many words.
+
+							*spell-COMPOUNDSYLMAX*
+The maximum number of syllables that a compound word may contain is specified
+with COMPOUNDSYLMAX.  Example:
+	COMPOUNDSYLMAX 6 ~
+
+This has no effect if there is no SYLLABLE item.  Without COMPOUNDSYLMAX there
+is no limit on the number of syllables.
+
+If both COMPOUNDWORDMAX and COMPOUNDSYLMAX are defined, a compound word is
+accepted if it fits one of the criteria, thus is either made from up to
+COMPOUNDWORDMAX words or contains up to COMPOUNDSYLMAX syllables.
+
+						    *spell-COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG*
+The COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG specifies a flag that can be used on an affix.  It
+means that the word plus affix cannot be used in a compound word.  Example:
+	affix file:
+		COMPOUNDFLAG c ~
+		COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG x ~
+		SFX a Y 2 ~
+		SFX a 0 s   . ~
+		SFX a 0 ize/x . ~
+	dictionary:
+		word/c ~
+		util/ac ~
+
+This allows for "wordutil" and "wordutils" but not "wordutilize".
+Note: this doesn't work for postponed prefixes yet.
+
+						    *spell-COMPOUNDPERMITFLAG*
+The COMPOUNDPERMITFLAG specifies a flag that can be used on an affix.  It
+means that the word plus affix can also be used in a compound word in a way
+where the affix ends up halfway the word.  Without this flag that is not
+allowed.
+Note: this doesn't work for postponed prefixes yet.
+
+						    *spell-COMPOUNDROOT*
+The COMPOUNDROOT flag is used for words in the dictionary that are already a
+compound.  This means it counts for two words when checking the compounding
+rules.  Can also be used for an affix to count the affix as a compounding
+word.
+
+						*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDPATTERN*
+CHECKCOMPOUNDPATTERN is used to define patterns that, when matching at the
+position where two words are compounded together forbids the compound.
+For example:
+	CHECKCOMPOUNDPATTERN o e ~
+
+This forbids compounding if the first word ends in "o" and the second word
+starts with "e".
+
+The arguments must be plain text, no patterns are actually supported, despite
+the item name.  Case is always ignored.
+
+The Hunspell feature to use three arguments and flags is not supported.
+
+							*spell-NOCOMPOUNDSUGS*
+This item indicates that using compounding to make suggestions is not a good
+idea.  Use this when compounding is used with very short or one-character
+words.  E.g. to make numbers out of digits.  Without this flag creating
+suggestions would spend most time trying all kind of weird compound words.
+
+	NOCOMPOUNDSUGS ~
+
+							*spell-SYLLABLE*
+The SYLLABLE item defines characters or character sequences that are used to
+count the number of syllables in a word.  Example:
+	SYLLABLE aáeéiíoóöõuúüûy/aa/au/ea/ee/ei/ie/oa/oe/oo/ou/uu/ui ~
+
+Before the first slash is the set of characters that are counted for one
+syllable, also when repeated and mixed, until the next character that is not
+in this set.  After the slash come sequences of characters that are counted
+for one syllable.  These are preferred over using characters from the set.
+With the example "ideeen" has three syllables, counted by "i", "ee" and "e".
+
+Only case-folded letters need to be included.
+
+Another way to restrict compounding was mentioned above: Adding the
+|spell-COMPOUNDFORBIDFLAG| flag to an affix causes all words that are made
+with that affix to not be used for compounding.
+
+
+UNLIMITED COMPOUNDING					*spell-NOBREAK*
+
+For some languages, such as Thai, there is no space in between words.  This
+looks like all words are compounded.  To specify this use the NOBREAK item in
+the affix file, without arguments:
+	NOBREAK ~
+
+Vim will try to figure out where one word ends and a next starts.  When there
+are spelling mistakes this may not be quite right.
+
+
+							*spell-COMMON*
+Common words can be specified with the COMMON item.  This will give better
+suggestions when editing a short file.  Example:
+
+	COMMON  the of to and a in is it you that he she was for on are ~
+
+The words must be separated by white space, up to 25 per line.
+When multiple regions are specified in a ":mkspell" command the common words
+for all regions are combined and used for all regions.
+
+							*spell-NOSPLITSUGS*
+This item indicates that splitting a word to make suggestions is not a good
+idea.  Split-word suggestions will appear only when there are few similar
+words.
+
+	NOSPLITSUGS ~
+
+							*spell-NOSUGGEST*
+The flag specified with NOSUGGEST can be used for words that will not be
+suggested.  Can be used for obscene words.
+
+	NOSUGGEST % ~
+
+
+REPLACEMENTS						*spell-REP*
+
+In the affix file REP items can be used to define common mistakes.  This is
+used to make spelling suggestions.  The items define the "from" text and the
+"to" replacement.  Example:
+
+	REP 4 ~
+	REP f ph ~
+	REP ph f ~
+	REP k ch ~
+	REP ch k ~
+
+The first line specifies the number of REP lines following.  Vim ignores the
+number, but it must be there (for compatibility with Myspell).
+
+Don't include simple one-character replacements or swaps.  Vim will try these
+anyway.  You can include whole words if you want to, but you might want to use
+the "file:" item in 'spellsuggest' instead.
+
+You can include a space by using an underscore:
+
+	REP the_the the ~
+
+
+SIMILAR CHARACTERS					*spell-MAP* *E783*
+
+In the affix file MAP items can be used to define letters that are very much
+alike.  This is mostly used for a letter with different accents.  This is used
+to prefer suggestions with these letters substituted.  Example:
+
+	MAP 2 ~
+	MAP eéëêè ~
+	MAP uüùúû ~
+
+The first line specifies the number of MAP lines following.  Vim ignores the
+number, but the line must be there.
+
+Each letter must appear in only one of the MAP items.  It's a bit more
+efficient if the first letter is ASCII or at least one without accents.
+
+
+.SUG FILE						*spell-NOSUGFILE*
+
+When soundfolding is specified in the affix file then ":mkspell" will normally
+produce a .sug file next to the .spl file.  This file is used to find
+suggestions by their sound-a-like form quickly.  At the cost of a lot of
+memory (the amount depends on the number of words, |:mkspell| will display an
+estimate when it's done).
+
+To avoid producing a .sug file use this item in the affix file:
+
+	NOSUGFILE ~
+
+Users can simply omit the .sug file if they don't want to use it.
+
+
+SOUND-A-LIKE						*spell-SAL*
+
+In the affix file SAL items can be used to define the sounds-a-like mechanism
+to be used.  The main items define the "from" text and the "to" replacement.
+Simplistic example:
+
+	SAL CIA			 X ~
+	SAL CH			 X ~
+	SAL C			 K ~
+	SAL K			 K ~
+
+There are a few rules and this can become quite complicated.  An explanation
+how it works can be found in the Aspell manual:
+http://aspell.net/man-html/Phonetic-Code.html.
+
+There are a few special items:
+
+	SAL followup		true ~
+	SAL collapse_result	true ~
+	SAL remove_accents	true ~
+
+"1" has the same meaning as "true".  Any other value means "false".
+
+
+SIMPLE SOUNDFOLDING				*spell-SOFOFROM* *spell-SOFOTO*
+
+The SAL mechanism is complex and slow.  A simpler mechanism is mapping all
+characters to another character, mapping similar sounding characters to the
+same character.  At the same time this does case folding.  You can not have
+both SAL items and simple soundfolding.
+
+There are two items required: one to specify the characters that are mapped
+and one that specifies the characters they are mapped to.  They must have
+exactly the same number of characters.  Example:
+
+    SOFOFROM abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ ~
+    SOFOTO   ebctefghejklnnepkrstevvkesebctefghejklnnepkrstevvkes ~
+
+In the example all vowels are mapped to the same character 'e'.  Another
+method would be to leave out all vowels.  Some characters that sound nearly
+the same and are often mixed up, such as 'm' and 'n', are mapped to the same
+character.  Don't do this too much, all words will start looking alike.
+
+Characters that do not appear in SOFOFROM will be left out, except that all
+white space is replaced by one space.  Sequences of the same character in
+SOFOFROM are replaced by one.
+
+You can use the |soundfold()| function to try out the results.  Or set the
+'verbose' option to see the score in the output of the |z=| command.
+
+
+UNSUPPORTED ITEMS				*spell-affix-not-supported*
+
+These items appear in the affix file of other spell checkers.  In Vim they are
+ignored, not supported or defined in another way.
+
+ACCENT		(Hunspell)				*spell-ACCENT*
+		Use MAP instead. |spell-MAP|
+
+BREAK		(Hunspell)				*spell-BREAK*
+		Define break points.  Unclear how it works exactly.
+		Not supported.
+
+CHECKCOMPOUNDCASE  (Hunspell)			*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDCASE*
+		Disallow uppercase letters at compound word boundaries.
+		Not supported.
+
+CHECKCOMPOUNDDUP  (Hunspell)			*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDDUP*
+		Disallow using the same word twice in a compound.  Not
+		supported.
+
+CHECKCOMPOUNDREP  (Hunspell)			*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDREP*
+		Something about using REP items and compound words.  Not
+		supported.
+
+CHECKCOMPOUNDTRIPLE  (Hunspell)			*spell-CHECKCOMPOUNDTRIPLE*
+		Forbid three identical characters when compounding.  Not
+		supported.
+
+CHECKSHARPS  (Hunspell)				*spell-CHECKSHARPS*
+		SS letter pair in uppercased (German) words may be upper case
+		sharp s (ß). Not supported.
+
+COMPLEXPREFIXES  (Hunspell)				*spell-COMPLEXPREFIXES*
+		Enables using two prefixes.  Not supported.
+
+COMPOUND	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUND*
+		This is one line with the count of COMPOUND items, followed by
+		that many COMPOUND lines with a pattern.
+		Remove the first line with the count and rename the other
+		items to COMPOUNDRULE |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
+
+COMPOUNDFIRST	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDFIRST*
+		Use COMPOUNDRULE instead. |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
+
+COMPOUNDBEGIN	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDBEGIN*
+		Words signed with COMPOUNDBEGIN may be first elements in
+		compound words.
+		Use COMPOUNDRULE instead. |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
+
+COMPOUNDLAST	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDLAST*
+		Words signed with COMPOUNDLAST may be last elements in
+		compound words.
+		Use COMPOUNDRULE instead. |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
+
+COMPOUNDEND	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDEND*
+		Probably the same as COMPOUNDLAST
+
+COMPOUNDMIDDLE	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDMIDDLE*
+		Words signed with COMPOUNDMIDDLE may be middle elements in
+		compound words.
+		Use COMPOUNDRULE instead. |spell-COMPOUNDRULE|
+
+COMPOUNDRULES	(Hunspell)				*spell-COMPOUNDRULES*
+		Number of COMPOUNDRULE lines following.  Ignored, but the
+		argument must be a number.
+
+COMPOUNDSYLLABLE  (Hunspell)			*spell-COMPOUNDSYLLABLE*
+		Use SYLLABLE and COMPOUNDSYLMAX instead. |spell-SYLLABLE|
+		|spell-COMPOUNDSYLMAX|
+
+KEY		(Hunspell)				*spell-KEY*
+		Define characters that are close together on the keyboard.
+		Used to give better suggestions.  Not supported.
+
+LANG		(Hunspell)				*spell-LANG*
+		This specifies language-specific behavior.  This actually
+		moves part of the language knowledge into the program,
+		therefore Vim does not support it.  Each language property
+		must be specified separately.
+
+LEMMA_PRESENT	(Hunspell)				*spell-LEMMA_PRESENT*
+		Only needed for morphological analysis.
+
+MAXNGRAMSUGS	(Hunspell)				*spell-MAXNGRAMSUGS*
+		Set number of n-gram suggestions.  Not supported.
+
+PSEUDOROOT	(Hunspell)				*spell-PSEUDOROOT*
+		Use NEEDAFFIX instead. |spell-NEEDAFFIX|
+
+SUGSWITHDOTS	(Hunspell)				*spell-SUGSWITHDOTS*
+		Adds dots to suggestions.  Vim doesn't need this.
+
+SYLLABLENUM	(Hunspell)				*spell-SYLLABLENUM*
+		Not supported.
+
+TRY		(Myspell, Hunspell, others)		*spell-TRY*
+		Vim does not use the TRY item, it is ignored.  For making
+		suggestions the actual characters in the words are used, that
+		is much more efficient.
+
+WORDCHARS	(Hunspell)				*spell-WORDCHARS*
+		Used to recognize words.  Vim doesn't need it, because there
+		is no need to separate words before checking them (using a
+		trie instead of a hashtable).
+
+ vim:tw=78:sw=4:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: