How can spell checking be turned off for a portion of a OneNote page
up vote
41
down vote
favorite
How can spell checking be turned off for a portion of a OneNote page?
The set language form does not have a checkbox (like the one for Word 2010 has). There are over 100 languages to choose from, but all of then will perform some sort of proofing.
microsoft-onenote-2010
add a comment |
up vote
41
down vote
favorite
How can spell checking be turned off for a portion of a OneNote page?
The set language form does not have a checkbox (like the one for Word 2010 has). There are over 100 languages to choose from, but all of then will perform some sort of proofing.
microsoft-onenote-2010
add a comment |
up vote
41
down vote
favorite
up vote
41
down vote
favorite
How can spell checking be turned off for a portion of a OneNote page?
The set language form does not have a checkbox (like the one for Word 2010 has). There are over 100 languages to choose from, but all of then will perform some sort of proofing.
microsoft-onenote-2010
How can spell checking be turned off for a portion of a OneNote page?
The set language form does not have a checkbox (like the one for Word 2010 has). There are over 100 languages to choose from, but all of then will perform some sort of proofing.
microsoft-onenote-2010
microsoft-onenote-2010
asked Oct 4 '11 at 19:43
Jay Elston
6032721
6032721
add a comment |
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
up vote
6
down vote
accepted
I'm afraid this is not possible. In order for this to happen, a OneNote page would have to be come much more complicated, there is no way to 'fine-tune' spell-checking that specifically.
However, you can tinker with the spell checking options in Tools -> Spelling -> Spelling Options:

Try experimenting with some of the highlighted options above. For example, you can have it suggest words from the main dictionary only, or use a custom dictionary, or even edit the word list yourself...
You can also disable spell checking or only have it check it in one sweep. To have it check in one sweep, uncheck Check spelling as you type.
Not the answer I was hoping for, but good to know.
– Jay Elston
Oct 4 '11 at 22:07
1
The other answers here suggest that it would not be so much more complicated for this useful feature to be implemented.
– sdenham
Jun 28 '16 at 12:40
1
I would have hoped MS would have put a null language in the list. Word had this (called "(no proofing)") before the "Do not check spelling and grammar" checkbox replaced it.
– Stewart
Apr 26 '17 at 12:23
add a comment |
up vote
59
down vote
A variation on the language support trick from Petri above seems to do what you want:
- Select a block of text in your document that you want to disable for spell checking
- Go to the Review tab and select Language > Set Proofing Language
- Select a language for which you and your likely readers have no dictionary, e.g. Afrikaans, Cherokee etc. work for me.
The other text will still default to being in the original language, e.g. English (UK) in my case and will still be spell checked as normal.
You can also keep the proofing language pane open to make it quicker to apply the same change to multiple areas of your document.
I guess the reason for this functionality is for when you quote something in another language, you can spell check it correctly.
Cheers,
Andy
Works on the Mac version of OneNote too except the menu is Tools->Set Proofing Language…
– Philip Kearns
May 28 '17 at 13:45
3
Thanks - don't know why MS could not just include "none" as an option.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:26
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
Install OneTastic addin, which has one of macros, named "No spell check"
http://omeratay.com/onetastic/
http://www.omeratay.com/onetastic/?r=downloadMacro&id=1DF08B3C629840759A86237CC090F8A9
Works perfectly
P.S. Onetastic is an add-in, which is made by Microsoft OneNote team developer, and has lots of useful features. You can trust it.
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
The trick works for me is to set page language to something you don't have language support in your computer. For example I changed page language to "Afrikaans". Then OneNote does not make spelling checking for this page because Afrikaans -dictionary is missing.
3
It worked for me. Highlight the area you don't want spell-checked then set proofing language to Afrikaans. Only the selected section of the page uses the new language.
– xcud
Mar 30 '15 at 14:52
Thank you! While it is somewhat obvious, this "hack" has never occurred to me!
– MFH
Mar 20 '17 at 22:44
This is workable. I wonder if there is any way to add a language named "disableProofing"?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 21:00
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I discovered by accident that if you precede the paragraph where you don't want red spell checking marks to show up with the symbol for, "therefore" then that paragraph will not show words that contain spelling errors underlined.
You can make the symbol for, "therefore" (3dots) by holding down the Alt key then typing 8756 then releasing the Alt key. This works on Windows anyway. I don't know if it works on other operating systems.
If you don't want the symbol to show up you can just select the symbol and make it white or the same color as the background if you are using a colored background. You could also reduce it's font size to 1.
Note: this will only get rid of the red spell check marks; it will not turn spell check as you type off. So words that are normally corrected as you type such as: recieve will still be corrected to: receive as you type.
This I have GOT to try.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 16:57
Holy canoly! That actually works. Remove this symbol and all the misspells are marked. Add the symbol back and words already marked will remain marked, but any further misspelled words will not be marked. That is quite an interested workaround Jerry.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 17:09
That's crazy! Shame you can't define custom bullets or arbitrary tag symbols. Not sure I'll use this rather than marking the text with a missing proofing language, but I've set up auto-correct to turn :. into ∴ just in case.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:37
Nice -- it works for a paragraph. But what happens if you have several lines (such as a directory listing or a section of code). Each line is its own paragraph. I don't see hoe this helps that case.
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 20:59
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
As of version 2016 there is an option in File -> Options -> Proofing then check Hide spelling and grammar errors. Even though one leaves on the other checkboxes, one is not directly informed of a spelling error unless one hovers over the word, even if it is typed in.

Hit Save when you are done.
Thank you for posting this. I have a question -- this is a global option, is there any way to enable this for only a portion of a one-note page?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 19:24
Sadly no. I am able to use it because my use is generally for notes on technical items and processes, so spelling is not important. When needed, turn the option to the default position to show the red lines.
– ΩmegaMan
Nov 15 at 20:15
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
6
down vote
accepted
I'm afraid this is not possible. In order for this to happen, a OneNote page would have to be come much more complicated, there is no way to 'fine-tune' spell-checking that specifically.
However, you can tinker with the spell checking options in Tools -> Spelling -> Spelling Options:

Try experimenting with some of the highlighted options above. For example, you can have it suggest words from the main dictionary only, or use a custom dictionary, or even edit the word list yourself...
You can also disable spell checking or only have it check it in one sweep. To have it check in one sweep, uncheck Check spelling as you type.
Not the answer I was hoping for, but good to know.
– Jay Elston
Oct 4 '11 at 22:07
1
The other answers here suggest that it would not be so much more complicated for this useful feature to be implemented.
– sdenham
Jun 28 '16 at 12:40
1
I would have hoped MS would have put a null language in the list. Word had this (called "(no proofing)") before the "Do not check spelling and grammar" checkbox replaced it.
– Stewart
Apr 26 '17 at 12:23
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
accepted
I'm afraid this is not possible. In order for this to happen, a OneNote page would have to be come much more complicated, there is no way to 'fine-tune' spell-checking that specifically.
However, you can tinker with the spell checking options in Tools -> Spelling -> Spelling Options:

Try experimenting with some of the highlighted options above. For example, you can have it suggest words from the main dictionary only, or use a custom dictionary, or even edit the word list yourself...
You can also disable spell checking or only have it check it in one sweep. To have it check in one sweep, uncheck Check spelling as you type.
Not the answer I was hoping for, but good to know.
– Jay Elston
Oct 4 '11 at 22:07
1
The other answers here suggest that it would not be so much more complicated for this useful feature to be implemented.
– sdenham
Jun 28 '16 at 12:40
1
I would have hoped MS would have put a null language in the list. Word had this (called "(no proofing)") before the "Do not check spelling and grammar" checkbox replaced it.
– Stewart
Apr 26 '17 at 12:23
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
accepted
up vote
6
down vote
accepted
I'm afraid this is not possible. In order for this to happen, a OneNote page would have to be come much more complicated, there is no way to 'fine-tune' spell-checking that specifically.
However, you can tinker with the spell checking options in Tools -> Spelling -> Spelling Options:

Try experimenting with some of the highlighted options above. For example, you can have it suggest words from the main dictionary only, or use a custom dictionary, or even edit the word list yourself...
You can also disable spell checking or only have it check it in one sweep. To have it check in one sweep, uncheck Check spelling as you type.
I'm afraid this is not possible. In order for this to happen, a OneNote page would have to be come much more complicated, there is no way to 'fine-tune' spell-checking that specifically.
However, you can tinker with the spell checking options in Tools -> Spelling -> Spelling Options:

Try experimenting with some of the highlighted options above. For example, you can have it suggest words from the main dictionary only, or use a custom dictionary, or even edit the word list yourself...
You can also disable spell checking or only have it check it in one sweep. To have it check in one sweep, uncheck Check spelling as you type.
edited Sep 12 at 15:14
answered Oct 4 '11 at 20:22
studiohack♦
11.3k1880113
11.3k1880113
Not the answer I was hoping for, but good to know.
– Jay Elston
Oct 4 '11 at 22:07
1
The other answers here suggest that it would not be so much more complicated for this useful feature to be implemented.
– sdenham
Jun 28 '16 at 12:40
1
I would have hoped MS would have put a null language in the list. Word had this (called "(no proofing)") before the "Do not check spelling and grammar" checkbox replaced it.
– Stewart
Apr 26 '17 at 12:23
add a comment |
Not the answer I was hoping for, but good to know.
– Jay Elston
Oct 4 '11 at 22:07
1
The other answers here suggest that it would not be so much more complicated for this useful feature to be implemented.
– sdenham
Jun 28 '16 at 12:40
1
I would have hoped MS would have put a null language in the list. Word had this (called "(no proofing)") before the "Do not check spelling and grammar" checkbox replaced it.
– Stewart
Apr 26 '17 at 12:23
Not the answer I was hoping for, but good to know.
– Jay Elston
Oct 4 '11 at 22:07
Not the answer I was hoping for, but good to know.
– Jay Elston
Oct 4 '11 at 22:07
1
1
The other answers here suggest that it would not be so much more complicated for this useful feature to be implemented.
– sdenham
Jun 28 '16 at 12:40
The other answers here suggest that it would not be so much more complicated for this useful feature to be implemented.
– sdenham
Jun 28 '16 at 12:40
1
1
I would have hoped MS would have put a null language in the list. Word had this (called "(no proofing)") before the "Do not check spelling and grammar" checkbox replaced it.
– Stewart
Apr 26 '17 at 12:23
I would have hoped MS would have put a null language in the list. Word had this (called "(no proofing)") before the "Do not check spelling and grammar" checkbox replaced it.
– Stewart
Apr 26 '17 at 12:23
add a comment |
up vote
59
down vote
A variation on the language support trick from Petri above seems to do what you want:
- Select a block of text in your document that you want to disable for spell checking
- Go to the Review tab and select Language > Set Proofing Language
- Select a language for which you and your likely readers have no dictionary, e.g. Afrikaans, Cherokee etc. work for me.
The other text will still default to being in the original language, e.g. English (UK) in my case and will still be spell checked as normal.
You can also keep the proofing language pane open to make it quicker to apply the same change to multiple areas of your document.
I guess the reason for this functionality is for when you quote something in another language, you can spell check it correctly.
Cheers,
Andy
Works on the Mac version of OneNote too except the menu is Tools->Set Proofing Language…
– Philip Kearns
May 28 '17 at 13:45
3
Thanks - don't know why MS could not just include "none" as an option.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:26
add a comment |
up vote
59
down vote
A variation on the language support trick from Petri above seems to do what you want:
- Select a block of text in your document that you want to disable for spell checking
- Go to the Review tab and select Language > Set Proofing Language
- Select a language for which you and your likely readers have no dictionary, e.g. Afrikaans, Cherokee etc. work for me.
The other text will still default to being in the original language, e.g. English (UK) in my case and will still be spell checked as normal.
You can also keep the proofing language pane open to make it quicker to apply the same change to multiple areas of your document.
I guess the reason for this functionality is for when you quote something in another language, you can spell check it correctly.
Cheers,
Andy
Works on the Mac version of OneNote too except the menu is Tools->Set Proofing Language…
– Philip Kearns
May 28 '17 at 13:45
3
Thanks - don't know why MS could not just include "none" as an option.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:26
add a comment |
up vote
59
down vote
up vote
59
down vote
A variation on the language support trick from Petri above seems to do what you want:
- Select a block of text in your document that you want to disable for spell checking
- Go to the Review tab and select Language > Set Proofing Language
- Select a language for which you and your likely readers have no dictionary, e.g. Afrikaans, Cherokee etc. work for me.
The other text will still default to being in the original language, e.g. English (UK) in my case and will still be spell checked as normal.
You can also keep the proofing language pane open to make it quicker to apply the same change to multiple areas of your document.
I guess the reason for this functionality is for when you quote something in another language, you can spell check it correctly.
Cheers,
Andy
A variation on the language support trick from Petri above seems to do what you want:
- Select a block of text in your document that you want to disable for spell checking
- Go to the Review tab and select Language > Set Proofing Language
- Select a language for which you and your likely readers have no dictionary, e.g. Afrikaans, Cherokee etc. work for me.
The other text will still default to being in the original language, e.g. English (UK) in my case and will still be spell checked as normal.
You can also keep the proofing language pane open to make it quicker to apply the same change to multiple areas of your document.
I guess the reason for this functionality is for when you quote something in another language, you can spell check it correctly.
Cheers,
Andy
answered Apr 8 '14 at 9:34
user203235
69153
69153
Works on the Mac version of OneNote too except the menu is Tools->Set Proofing Language…
– Philip Kearns
May 28 '17 at 13:45
3
Thanks - don't know why MS could not just include "none" as an option.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:26
add a comment |
Works on the Mac version of OneNote too except the menu is Tools->Set Proofing Language…
– Philip Kearns
May 28 '17 at 13:45
3
Thanks - don't know why MS could not just include "none" as an option.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:26
Works on the Mac version of OneNote too except the menu is Tools->Set Proofing Language…
– Philip Kearns
May 28 '17 at 13:45
Works on the Mac version of OneNote too except the menu is Tools->Set Proofing Language…
– Philip Kearns
May 28 '17 at 13:45
3
3
Thanks - don't know why MS could not just include "none" as an option.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:26
Thanks - don't know why MS could not just include "none" as an option.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:26
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
Install OneTastic addin, which has one of macros, named "No spell check"
http://omeratay.com/onetastic/
http://www.omeratay.com/onetastic/?r=downloadMacro&id=1DF08B3C629840759A86237CC090F8A9
Works perfectly
P.S. Onetastic is an add-in, which is made by Microsoft OneNote team developer, and has lots of useful features. You can trust it.
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
Install OneTastic addin, which has one of macros, named "No spell check"
http://omeratay.com/onetastic/
http://www.omeratay.com/onetastic/?r=downloadMacro&id=1DF08B3C629840759A86237CC090F8A9
Works perfectly
P.S. Onetastic is an add-in, which is made by Microsoft OneNote team developer, and has lots of useful features. You can trust it.
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
up vote
8
down vote
Install OneTastic addin, which has one of macros, named "No spell check"
http://omeratay.com/onetastic/
http://www.omeratay.com/onetastic/?r=downloadMacro&id=1DF08B3C629840759A86237CC090F8A9
Works perfectly
P.S. Onetastic is an add-in, which is made by Microsoft OneNote team developer, and has lots of useful features. You can trust it.
Install OneTastic addin, which has one of macros, named "No spell check"
http://omeratay.com/onetastic/
http://www.omeratay.com/onetastic/?r=downloadMacro&id=1DF08B3C629840759A86237CC090F8A9
Works perfectly
P.S. Onetastic is an add-in, which is made by Microsoft OneNote team developer, and has lots of useful features. You can trust it.
edited Mar 24 '15 at 19:29
answered Mar 24 '15 at 19:03
Andrew
18113
18113
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
The trick works for me is to set page language to something you don't have language support in your computer. For example I changed page language to "Afrikaans". Then OneNote does not make spelling checking for this page because Afrikaans -dictionary is missing.
3
It worked for me. Highlight the area you don't want spell-checked then set proofing language to Afrikaans. Only the selected section of the page uses the new language.
– xcud
Mar 30 '15 at 14:52
Thank you! While it is somewhat obvious, this "hack" has never occurred to me!
– MFH
Mar 20 '17 at 22:44
This is workable. I wonder if there is any way to add a language named "disableProofing"?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 21:00
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
The trick works for me is to set page language to something you don't have language support in your computer. For example I changed page language to "Afrikaans". Then OneNote does not make spelling checking for this page because Afrikaans -dictionary is missing.
3
It worked for me. Highlight the area you don't want spell-checked then set proofing language to Afrikaans. Only the selected section of the page uses the new language.
– xcud
Mar 30 '15 at 14:52
Thank you! While it is somewhat obvious, this "hack" has never occurred to me!
– MFH
Mar 20 '17 at 22:44
This is workable. I wonder if there is any way to add a language named "disableProofing"?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 21:00
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
The trick works for me is to set page language to something you don't have language support in your computer. For example I changed page language to "Afrikaans". Then OneNote does not make spelling checking for this page because Afrikaans -dictionary is missing.
The trick works for me is to set page language to something you don't have language support in your computer. For example I changed page language to "Afrikaans". Then OneNote does not make spelling checking for this page because Afrikaans -dictionary is missing.
answered Dec 20 '13 at 10:43
Petri
7111
7111
3
It worked for me. Highlight the area you don't want spell-checked then set proofing language to Afrikaans. Only the selected section of the page uses the new language.
– xcud
Mar 30 '15 at 14:52
Thank you! While it is somewhat obvious, this "hack" has never occurred to me!
– MFH
Mar 20 '17 at 22:44
This is workable. I wonder if there is any way to add a language named "disableProofing"?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 21:00
add a comment |
3
It worked for me. Highlight the area you don't want spell-checked then set proofing language to Afrikaans. Only the selected section of the page uses the new language.
– xcud
Mar 30 '15 at 14:52
Thank you! While it is somewhat obvious, this "hack" has never occurred to me!
– MFH
Mar 20 '17 at 22:44
This is workable. I wonder if there is any way to add a language named "disableProofing"?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 21:00
3
3
It worked for me. Highlight the area you don't want spell-checked then set proofing language to Afrikaans. Only the selected section of the page uses the new language.
– xcud
Mar 30 '15 at 14:52
It worked for me. Highlight the area you don't want spell-checked then set proofing language to Afrikaans. Only the selected section of the page uses the new language.
– xcud
Mar 30 '15 at 14:52
Thank you! While it is somewhat obvious, this "hack" has never occurred to me!
– MFH
Mar 20 '17 at 22:44
Thank you! While it is somewhat obvious, this "hack" has never occurred to me!
– MFH
Mar 20 '17 at 22:44
This is workable. I wonder if there is any way to add a language named "disableProofing"?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 21:00
This is workable. I wonder if there is any way to add a language named "disableProofing"?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 21:00
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I discovered by accident that if you precede the paragraph where you don't want red spell checking marks to show up with the symbol for, "therefore" then that paragraph will not show words that contain spelling errors underlined.
You can make the symbol for, "therefore" (3dots) by holding down the Alt key then typing 8756 then releasing the Alt key. This works on Windows anyway. I don't know if it works on other operating systems.
If you don't want the symbol to show up you can just select the symbol and make it white or the same color as the background if you are using a colored background. You could also reduce it's font size to 1.
Note: this will only get rid of the red spell check marks; it will not turn spell check as you type off. So words that are normally corrected as you type such as: recieve will still be corrected to: receive as you type.
This I have GOT to try.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 16:57
Holy canoly! That actually works. Remove this symbol and all the misspells are marked. Add the symbol back and words already marked will remain marked, but any further misspelled words will not be marked. That is quite an interested workaround Jerry.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 17:09
That's crazy! Shame you can't define custom bullets or arbitrary tag symbols. Not sure I'll use this rather than marking the text with a missing proofing language, but I've set up auto-correct to turn :. into ∴ just in case.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:37
Nice -- it works for a paragraph. But what happens if you have several lines (such as a directory listing or a section of code). Each line is its own paragraph. I don't see hoe this helps that case.
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 20:59
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I discovered by accident that if you precede the paragraph where you don't want red spell checking marks to show up with the symbol for, "therefore" then that paragraph will not show words that contain spelling errors underlined.
You can make the symbol for, "therefore" (3dots) by holding down the Alt key then typing 8756 then releasing the Alt key. This works on Windows anyway. I don't know if it works on other operating systems.
If you don't want the symbol to show up you can just select the symbol and make it white or the same color as the background if you are using a colored background. You could also reduce it's font size to 1.
Note: this will only get rid of the red spell check marks; it will not turn spell check as you type off. So words that are normally corrected as you type such as: recieve will still be corrected to: receive as you type.
This I have GOT to try.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 16:57
Holy canoly! That actually works. Remove this symbol and all the misspells are marked. Add the symbol back and words already marked will remain marked, but any further misspelled words will not be marked. That is quite an interested workaround Jerry.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 17:09
That's crazy! Shame you can't define custom bullets or arbitrary tag symbols. Not sure I'll use this rather than marking the text with a missing proofing language, but I've set up auto-correct to turn :. into ∴ just in case.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:37
Nice -- it works for a paragraph. But what happens if you have several lines (such as a directory listing or a section of code). Each line is its own paragraph. I don't see hoe this helps that case.
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 20:59
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
I discovered by accident that if you precede the paragraph where you don't want red spell checking marks to show up with the symbol for, "therefore" then that paragraph will not show words that contain spelling errors underlined.
You can make the symbol for, "therefore" (3dots) by holding down the Alt key then typing 8756 then releasing the Alt key. This works on Windows anyway. I don't know if it works on other operating systems.
If you don't want the symbol to show up you can just select the symbol and make it white or the same color as the background if you are using a colored background. You could also reduce it's font size to 1.
Note: this will only get rid of the red spell check marks; it will not turn spell check as you type off. So words that are normally corrected as you type such as: recieve will still be corrected to: receive as you type.
I discovered by accident that if you precede the paragraph where you don't want red spell checking marks to show up with the symbol for, "therefore" then that paragraph will not show words that contain spelling errors underlined.
You can make the symbol for, "therefore" (3dots) by holding down the Alt key then typing 8756 then releasing the Alt key. This works on Windows anyway. I don't know if it works on other operating systems.
If you don't want the symbol to show up you can just select the symbol and make it white or the same color as the background if you are using a colored background. You could also reduce it's font size to 1.
Note: this will only get rid of the red spell check marks; it will not turn spell check as you type off. So words that are normally corrected as you type such as: recieve will still be corrected to: receive as you type.
answered Mar 19 '17 at 4:12
Jerry
311
311
This I have GOT to try.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 16:57
Holy canoly! That actually works. Remove this symbol and all the misspells are marked. Add the symbol back and words already marked will remain marked, but any further misspelled words will not be marked. That is quite an interested workaround Jerry.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 17:09
That's crazy! Shame you can't define custom bullets or arbitrary tag symbols. Not sure I'll use this rather than marking the text with a missing proofing language, but I've set up auto-correct to turn :. into ∴ just in case.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:37
Nice -- it works for a paragraph. But what happens if you have several lines (such as a directory listing or a section of code). Each line is its own paragraph. I don't see hoe this helps that case.
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 20:59
add a comment |
This I have GOT to try.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 16:57
Holy canoly! That actually works. Remove this symbol and all the misspells are marked. Add the symbol back and words already marked will remain marked, but any further misspelled words will not be marked. That is quite an interested workaround Jerry.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 17:09
That's crazy! Shame you can't define custom bullets or arbitrary tag symbols. Not sure I'll use this rather than marking the text with a missing proofing language, but I've set up auto-correct to turn :. into ∴ just in case.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:37
Nice -- it works for a paragraph. But what happens if you have several lines (such as a directory listing or a section of code). Each line is its own paragraph. I don't see hoe this helps that case.
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 20:59
This I have GOT to try.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 16:57
This I have GOT to try.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 16:57
Holy canoly! That actually works. Remove this symbol and all the misspells are marked. Add the symbol back and words already marked will remain marked, but any further misspelled words will not be marked. That is quite an interested workaround Jerry.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 17:09
Holy canoly! That actually works. Remove this symbol and all the misspells are marked. Add the symbol back and words already marked will remain marked, but any further misspelled words will not be marked. That is quite an interested workaround Jerry.
– music2myear
Mar 20 '17 at 17:09
That's crazy! Shame you can't define custom bullets or arbitrary tag symbols. Not sure I'll use this rather than marking the text with a missing proofing language, but I've set up auto-correct to turn :. into ∴ just in case.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:37
That's crazy! Shame you can't define custom bullets or arbitrary tag symbols. Not sure I'll use this rather than marking the text with a missing proofing language, but I've set up auto-correct to turn :. into ∴ just in case.
– Ian Horwill
Aug 15 '17 at 8:37
Nice -- it works for a paragraph. But what happens if you have several lines (such as a directory listing or a section of code). Each line is its own paragraph. I don't see hoe this helps that case.
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 20:59
Nice -- it works for a paragraph. But what happens if you have several lines (such as a directory listing or a section of code). Each line is its own paragraph. I don't see hoe this helps that case.
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 20:59
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
As of version 2016 there is an option in File -> Options -> Proofing then check Hide spelling and grammar errors. Even though one leaves on the other checkboxes, one is not directly informed of a spelling error unless one hovers over the word, even if it is typed in.

Hit Save when you are done.
Thank you for posting this. I have a question -- this is a global option, is there any way to enable this for only a portion of a one-note page?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 19:24
Sadly no. I am able to use it because my use is generally for notes on technical items and processes, so spelling is not important. When needed, turn the option to the default position to show the red lines.
– ΩmegaMan
Nov 15 at 20:15
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
As of version 2016 there is an option in File -> Options -> Proofing then check Hide spelling and grammar errors. Even though one leaves on the other checkboxes, one is not directly informed of a spelling error unless one hovers over the word, even if it is typed in.

Hit Save when you are done.
Thank you for posting this. I have a question -- this is a global option, is there any way to enable this for only a portion of a one-note page?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 19:24
Sadly no. I am able to use it because my use is generally for notes on technical items and processes, so spelling is not important. When needed, turn the option to the default position to show the red lines.
– ΩmegaMan
Nov 15 at 20:15
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
As of version 2016 there is an option in File -> Options -> Proofing then check Hide spelling and grammar errors. Even though one leaves on the other checkboxes, one is not directly informed of a spelling error unless one hovers over the word, even if it is typed in.

Hit Save when you are done.
As of version 2016 there is an option in File -> Options -> Proofing then check Hide spelling and grammar errors. Even though one leaves on the other checkboxes, one is not directly informed of a spelling error unless one hovers over the word, even if it is typed in.

Hit Save when you are done.
edited Nov 15 at 15:56
answered Nov 15 at 15:18
ΩmegaMan
1114
1114
Thank you for posting this. I have a question -- this is a global option, is there any way to enable this for only a portion of a one-note page?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 19:24
Sadly no. I am able to use it because my use is generally for notes on technical items and processes, so spelling is not important. When needed, turn the option to the default position to show the red lines.
– ΩmegaMan
Nov 15 at 20:15
add a comment |
Thank you for posting this. I have a question -- this is a global option, is there any way to enable this for only a portion of a one-note page?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 19:24
Sadly no. I am able to use it because my use is generally for notes on technical items and processes, so spelling is not important. When needed, turn the option to the default position to show the red lines.
– ΩmegaMan
Nov 15 at 20:15
Thank you for posting this. I have a question -- this is a global option, is there any way to enable this for only a portion of a one-note page?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 19:24
Thank you for posting this. I have a question -- this is a global option, is there any way to enable this for only a portion of a one-note page?
– Jay Elston
Nov 15 at 19:24
Sadly no. I am able to use it because my use is generally for notes on technical items and processes, so spelling is not important. When needed, turn the option to the default position to show the red lines.
– ΩmegaMan
Nov 15 at 20:15
Sadly no. I am able to use it because my use is generally for notes on technical items and processes, so spelling is not important. When needed, turn the option to the default position to show the red lines.
– ΩmegaMan
Nov 15 at 20:15
add a comment |
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