El lun., 5 nov. 2018 a las 0:53, Daniel Kian Mc Kiernan (the best Daniel of the bunch) (<daniel....@oeconomist.com>) escribió:
> On 11/4/18 5:08 AM, Ricardo Berlasso wrote: > > > > Sorry for jumping into the discussion, but I think some people here > > are missing the real point of the problem > > > >> Is that mistake a matter of 'learning'? > > > > Yes, unequivocally. > > > > Not necessarily. There are several forms of mild dyslexia in which the > > person swaps letters or even "fingers" (typing an "o" instead of an > > "a," for example). > > Dyslexia is a _learning_ disability. Further, there is a body of > research about how to _learn_ to overcome it. Please have coherent > foundation before proceeding in the discussion. > > OK, if don't like that part of the discussion, what about the second part of what I've said? Think of a chemists writing about one of those substances with kilometric names: a substitution table that changes a few, carefully chosen characters into the full name could be useful. If then someone wants to use that feature to also correct typos, it's their choice. And yes, that can be done with a search & replace, but a substitution table is something you do only once. And please, calm down, nobody is mad at you, there is no need for you to be mad at anyone else that disagree with you. Regards, Ricardo