Correct commonly misspelled English words... quickly.
If you just want a binary and to start using misspell
:
curl -sfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/golangci/misspell/master/install-misspell.sh | sh -s -- -b ./bin ${MISSPELL_VERSION}
Both will install as ./bin/misspell
.
You can adjust the download location using the -b
flag.
File a ticket if you want another platform supported.
If you use Go, the best way to run misspell
is by using golangci-lint.
Otherwise, install misspell
the old-fashioned way:
go install github.com/golangci/misspell/cmd/misspell@latest
Also, if you like to live dangerously, one could do
curl -sfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/golangci/misspell/master/install-misspell.sh | sh -s -- -b $(go env GOPATH)/bin ${MISSPELL_VERSION}
$ misspell all.html your.txt important.md files.go
your.txt:42:10 found "langauge" a misspelling of "language"
# ^ file, line, column
$ misspell -help
Usage of misspell:
-debug
Debug matching, very slow
-dict string
User defined corrections file path (.csv). CSV format: typo,fix
-error
Exit with 2 if misspelling found
-f string
'csv', 'sqlite3' or custom Golang template for output
-i string
ignore the following corrections, comma-separated
-j int
Number of workers, 0 = number of CPUs
-legal
Show legal information and exit
-locale string
Correct spellings using locale preferences for US or UK. Default is to use a neutral variety of English. Setting locale to US will correct the British spelling of 'colour' to 'color'
-o string
output file or [stderr|stdout|] (default "stdout")
-q Do not emit misspelling output
-source string
Source mode: text (default), go (comments only) (default "text")
-v Show version and exit
-w Overwrite file with corrections (default is just to display)
To use misspell with pre-commit, add the following to your .pre-commit-config.yaml
:
- repo: https://github.com/golangci/misspell
rev: v0.6.0
hooks:
- id: misspell
# The hook will run on all files by default.
# To limit to some files only, use pre-commit patterns/types
# files: <pattern>
# exclude: <pattern>
# types: <types>
- Automatic Corrections
- Converting UK spellings to US
- Using pipes and stdin
- Golang special support
- CSV Output
- Using SQLite3
- Changing output format
- Checking a folder recursively
- Performance
- Known Issues
- Debugging
- False Negatives and missing words
- Origin of Word Lists
- Software License
- Problem statement
- Other spelling correctors
- Other ideas
Just add the -w
flag!
$ misspell -w all.html your.txt important.md files.go
your.txt:9:21:corrected "langauge" to "language"
# ^ File is rewritten only if a misspelling is found
Add the -locale US
flag!
$ misspell -locale US important.txt
important.txt:10:20 found "colour" a misspelling of "color"
Add the -locale UK
flag!
$ echo "My favorite color is blue" | misspell -locale UK
stdin:1:3:found "favorite color" a misspelling of "favourite colour"
Help is appreciated as I'm neither British nor an expert in the English language.
Just list a directory you'd like to check
misspell .
misspell aDirectory anotherDirectory aFile
You can also run misspell recursively using the following shell tricks:
misspell directory/**/*
or
find . -type f | xargs misspell
You can select a type of file as well.
The following examples selects all .txt
files that are not in the vendor
directory:
find . -type f -name '*.txt' | grep -v vendor/ | xargs misspell -error
Yes!
Print messages to stderr
only:
$ echo "zeebra" | misspell
stdin:1:0:found "zeebra" a misspelling of "zebra"
Print messages to stderr
, and corrected text to stdout
:
$ echo "zeebra" | misspell -w
stdin:1:0:corrected "zeebra" to "zebra"
zebra
Only print the corrected text to stdout
:
$ echo "zeebra" | misspell -w -q
zebra
yes, if you want to force a file to be checked as a golang source, use -source=go
on the command line.
Conversely, you can check a golang source as if it were pure text by using -source=text
.
You might want to do this since many variable names have misspellings in them!
I'm told the using -source=go
works well for Ruby, Javascript, Java, C and C++.
It doesn't work well for Python and Bash.
Using -f csv
, the output is standard comma-seprated values with headers in the first row.
$ misspell -f csv *
file,line,column,typo,corrected
"README.md",9,22,langauge,language
"README.md",47,25,langauge,language
Using -f sqlite
, the output is a sqlite3 dump-file.
$ misspell -f sqlite * > /tmp/misspell.sql
$ cat /tmp/misspell.sql
PRAGMA foreign_keys=OFF;
BEGIN TRANSACTION;
CREATE TABLE misspell(
"file" TEXT,
"line" INTEGER,i
"column" INTEGER,i
"typo" TEXT,
"corrected" TEXT
);
INSERT INTO misspell VALUES("install.txt",202,31,"immediatly","immediately");
# etc...
COMMIT;
$ sqlite3 -init /tmp/misspell.sql :memory: 'select count(*) from misspell'
1
With some tricks you can directly pipe output to sqlite3 by using -init /dev/stdin
:
misspell -f sqlite * | sqlite3 -init /dev/stdin -column -cmd '.width 60 15' ':memory' \
'select substr(file,35),typo,count(*) as count from misspell group by file, typo order by count desc;'
Using the -i "comma,separated,rules"
flag you can specify corrections to ignore.
For example, if you were to run misspell -w -error -source=text
against document that contains the string Guy Finkelshteyn Braswell
,
misspell would change the text to Guy Finkelstheyn Bras well
.
You can then determine the rules to ignore by reverting the change and running the with the -debug
flag.
You can then see that the corrections were htey -> they
and aswell -> as well
.
To ignore these two rules, you add -i "htey,aswell"
to your command.
With debug mode on, you can see it print the corrections, but it will no longer make them.
Using the -f template
flag you can pass in a golang text template to format the output.
One can use printf "%q" VALUE
to safely quote a value.
The default template:
{{ .Filename }}:{{ .Line }}:{{ .Column }}:corrected {{ printf "%q" .Original }} to "{{ printf "%q" .Corrected }}"
To just print probable misspellings:
-f '{{ .Original }}'
This corrects commonly misspelled English words in computer source code, and other text-based formats (.txt
, .md
, etc.).
It is designed to run quickly, so it can be used as a pre-commit hook with minimal burden on the developer.
It does not work with binary formats (e.g. Word, etc.).
It is not a complete spell-checking program nor a grammar checker.
Some other misspelling correctors:
- https://github.com/vlajos/misspell_fixer
- https://github.com/lyda/misspell-check
- https://github.com/lucasdemarchi/codespell
They all work but had problems that prevented me from using them at scale:
- slow, all of the above check one misspelling at a time (i.e. linear) using regexps
- not MIT/Apache2 licensed (or equivalent)
- have dependencies that don't work for me (python3, bash, linux sed, etc.)
- don't understand American vs. British English and sometimes makes unwelcome "corrections"
That said, they might be perfect for you and many have more features than this project!
Misspell is easily 100x to 1000x faster than other spelling correctors.
You should be able to check and correct 1000 files in under 250ms.
This uses the mighty power of golang's strings.Replacer which is an implementation or variation of the Aho–Corasick algorithm. This makes multiple substring matches simultaneously.
It also uses multiple CPU cores to work on multiple files concurrently.
Unlike the other projects, this doesn't know what a "word" is.
There may be more false positives and false negatives due to this.
On the other hand, it sometimes catches things others don't.
Either way, please file bugs and we'll fix them!
Since it operates in parallel to make corrections, it can be non-obvious to determine exactly what word was corrected.
Run using -debug
flag on the file you want.
It should then print what word it is trying to correct.
Then file a bug describing the problem.
Thanks!
The matching function is case-sensitive,
so variable names that are multiple worlds either in all-uppercase or all-lowercase case sometimes can cause false positives.
For instance a variable named bodyreader
could trigger a false positive since yrea
is in the middle that could be corrected to year
.
Other problems happen if the variable name uses an English contraction that should use an apostrophe.
The best way of fixing this is to use the Effective Go naming conventions
and use camelCase for variable names.
You can check your code using golint
The main code is MIT.
Misspell also makes uses of the Golang standard library and contains a modified version of Golang's strings.Replacer
which is covered under a BSD License.
Type misspell -legal
for more details or see legal.go
It started with a word list from Wikipedia. Unfortunately, this list had to be highly edited as many of the words are obsolete or based on mistakes on mechanical typewriters (I'm guessing).
Additional words were added based on actually mistakes seen in the wild (meaning self-generated).
Variations of UK and US spellings are based on many sources including:
- http://www.tysto.com/uk-us-spelling-list.html (with heavy editing, many are incorrect)
- http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/words/american-and-british-spelling-american (excellent site but incomplete)
- Diffing US and UK scowl dictionaries
American English is more accepting of spelling variations than is British English, so "what is American or not" is subject to opinion. Corrections and help welcome.
Here are some ideas for enhancements:
Capitalization of proper nouns could be done (e.g. weekday and month names, country names, language names)
Opinionated US spellings US English has a number of words with alternate spellings.
Think adviser vs. advisor.
While "advisor" is not wrong, the opinionated US locale would correct "advisor" to "adviser".
Versioning Some type of versioning is needed so reporting mistakes and errors is easier.
Feedback Mistakes would be sent to some server for aggregation and feedback review.
Contractions and Apostrophes This would optionally correct "isnt" to "isn't", etc.