Note:
A simple "spellchecking" program is included in this distribution.
It is a perl program named "spellcheck".  It simply prints the
analysis of the input text; it provides no way to modify the text. 
It is simply given as a demonstration of the module.  Type 
    spellcheck -h
for a usage summary.  If no input files are specified, it will
read from stdin.  After each line of input, it will print the
analysis of the terms.  By default, it only gives output for
terms which are "incorrect".  Give it the -v option to have it
report on the "correct" terms as well.

Tests:
'make test' currently does nothing.  To test the installation,
try out the "spellcheck" program provided. 


NAME
    Text::Ispell.pm - a class encapsulating access to the Ispell
    program.

SYNOPSIS
     # Brief:
     use Text::Ispell;
     Text::Ispell::spellcheck( $string );
     # or
     use Text::Ispell qw( spellcheck ); # import the function
     spellcheck( $string );

     # Useful:
     use Text::Ispell qw( spellcheck );
     for my $r ( spellcheck( "hello hacking perl shrdlu 42" ) ) {
       print "$r->{'type'}: $r->{'term'}\n";
     }

DESCRIPTION
    Text::Ispell::spellcheck() takes one argument. It must be a
    string, and it should contain only printable characters. One
    allowable exception is a terminal newline, which will be chomped
    off anyway. The line is fed to a coprocess running ispell for
    analysis. The line is parsed on non-wordchars into a sequence of
    terms. By default, the set of wordchars is defined in ispell as
    letters, digits, and the apostrophe. In other words, the line is
    subjected the equivalent of

      split /[^a-zA-Z0-9']+/

    (ispell has a means to add characters to the default set, but
    currently Text::Ispell does not provide access to that feature.)

    The result of ispell's analysis of each term is a categorization
    of the term into one of six types: ok, root, miss, none,
    compound, and guess. Some of these carry additional information.

    Text::Ispell::spellcheck returns a list of objects, each
    corresponding to a term in the spellchecked string. Each object
    is a hash (hash-ref) with at least two entries: 'term' and
    'type'. The former contains the term ispell is reporting on, and
    the latter is ispell's determination of that term's type (see
    above). For types 'ok' and 'none', that is all the information
    there is. For the type 'root', an additional hash entry is
    present: 'root'. Its value is the word which ispell identified
    in the dictionary as being the likely root of the current term.
    For the type 'miss', an additional hash entry is present:
    'misses'. Its value is a string of words, comma-separated, which
    ispell identified as being "near-misses" of the current term,
    when scanning the dictionary.

    A quickie example:

     use Text::Ispell qw( spellcheck );
     for my $r ( spellcheck( "hello hacking perl shrdlu 42" ) ) {
       if ( $r->{'type'} eq 'ok' ) {
         # as in the case of 'hello'
         print "'$r->{'term'}' was found in the dictionary.\n";
       }
       elsif ( $r->{'type'} eq 'root' ) {
         # as in the case of 'hacking'
         print "'$r->{'term'}' can be formed from root '$r->{'root'}'\n";
       }
       elsif ( $r->{'type'} eq 'miss' ) {
         # as in the case of 'perl'
         print "'$r->{'term'}' was not found in the dictionary;\n";
         print "Near misses: $r->{'misses'}\n";
       }
       elsif ( $r->{'type'} eq 'none' ) {
         # as in the case of 'shrdlu'
         print "No match for term '$r->{'term'}'\n";
       }
     }

    According to the ispell man page, there should be two more
    types: compound and guess. However, I have not figured out how
    to elicit responses of these types from ispell.

  ERRORS

    `Text::Ispell::spellcheck()' starts the ispell coprocess if the
    coprocess seems not to exist. Ordinarily this is simply the
    first time it's called.

    ispell is spawned via the `Open2::open2()' function, which
    throws an exception (i.e. dies) if the spawn fails. The caller
    should be prepared to catch this exception -- unless, of course,
    the default behavior of die is acceptable.

  Nota Bene

    The full location of the ispell executable is stored in the
    variable `$Text::Ispell::path'. The default value is
    /usr/local/bin/ispell. If your ispell executable has some name
    other than this, then you must set `$Text::Ispell::path'
    accordingly before you call `Text::Ispell::spellcheck()' for the
    first time.

AUX FUNCTIONS
  add_word(word)

    Adds a word to the dictionary. Be careful of capitalization. If
    you want the word to be added "case-insensitively", you should
    call `add_word_lc()'

  add_word_lc(word)

    Adds a word to the dictionary, in lower-case form. This allows
    ispell to match it in a case-insensitive manner.

  accept_word(word)

    Similar to adding a word to the dictionary, in that it causes
    ispell to accept the word as valid, but it does not actually add
    it to the dictionary. Presumably the effects of this only last
    for the current ispell session.

  parse_according_to(formatter)

    Causes ispell to parse subsequent input lines according to the
    specified formatter. As of ispell v. 3.1.20, only 'tex' and
    'nroff' are supported.

  set_params_by_language(language)

    Causes ispell to set its internal operational parameters
    according to the given language. Legal arguments to this
    function, and its effects, are currently unknown by the author
    of Text::Ispell.

  save_dictionary()

    Causes ispell to save the current state of the dictionary to its
    disk file. Presumably ispell would ordinarily only do this upon
    exit.

  terse_mode()

  nonterse_mode()

    In terse mode, ispell will not produce reports for "correct"
    words. This means that the calling program will not receive
    results of the types 'ok', 'root', and 'compound'.

    ispell starts up in NON-terse mode, i.e. reports are produced
    for all terms, not just "incorrect" ones.

LIMITATIONS
    Currently this package assumes, and only supports, the default
    language, i.e. English. It does not provide access to the
    features of ispell which allow the selection of alternate
    languages or dictionaries.

FUTURE ENHANCEMENTS
    Take advantage of these ispell options:

      -d file
           Specify an alternate dictionary file.
           For example, use -d deutsch to choose a German dictionary.

      -p file
           Specify an alternate personal dictionary.

      -w chars
           Specify additional characters that can be part of a word.

      -B   Report run-together words with missing  blanks  as
           spelling errors.

      -C   Consider run-together words as legal compounds.

      -P   Don't generate extra root/affix combinations.

      -m   Make possible root/affix combinations that  aren't
           in the dictionary.

    I should consider allowing these kinds of options to be set at
    any time; this would entail stopping and restarting the
    coprocess.

DEPENDENCIES
    Text::Ispell uses the external program ispell, which is the
    "International Ispell", available at

      http://fmg-www.cs.ucla.edu/geoff/ispell.html

    as well as various archives and mirrors, such as

      ftp://ftp.math.orst.edu/pub/ispell-3.1/

    This is a very popular program, and may already be installed on
    your system.

    Text::Ispell also uses the standard perl modules FileHandle,
    IPC::Open2, and Carp.

AUTHOR
    jdporter@min.net (John Porter)

    This module is free software; you may redistribute it and/or
    modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.