1# This is a sample wordlist that can be converted to a binary dictionary
2# for use by the Latin IME.
3# The file is essentially a CSV file, with indent level denoting nesting.
4#
5# The file starts with a single CSV line with the header attributes. Whatever
6# the content, these are included as is in the binary file. The first attribute
7# of the file should be `dictionary'. Usual fields are `locale', `description',
8# `date', `version', `options'.
9#
10# Each word has a `word' entry and at least a `f' argument denoting its
11# probability, as an integer between 0 and 255 on a logarithmic scale, with
12# 255 meaning 1 and each decrement in 1 dividing probability by 1.15.
13# As a special case, a weight of 0 is taken to mean profanity - words that
14# should not be considered a typo, but that should never be suggested
15# explicitly. An entry may be made not a word by adding a `not_a_word'
16# field with a value of `true'. The main reason for putting such entries
17# into the dictionary is to add shortcut targets and maybe a whitelist
18# replacement.
19#
20# Each word may or may not have any number of shortcut target lines
21# starting with a `shortcut' entry and having at least a `f' frequency
22# value between 0 and 14, or the special value `whitelist' which becomes
23# 15, which is then taken to be the whitelist target of this word.
24#
25# Each word may also have any number of bigram lines starting with a
26# `bigram' entry containing the following word whose frequency should
27# override the unigram frequency when following the word this bigram is
28# for.
29#
30dictionary=main:en,locale=en,description=Sample wordlist,date=1351495318,version=1
31 word=sample,f=200
32  bigram=wordlist,f=243
33 word=wordlist,f=180
34 word=shortcut,f=176
35  shortcut=target,f=10
36 word=witelisted,f=10,not_a_word=true
37  shortcut=whitelisted,f=whitelist
38 word=profanity,f=0
39