

It can’t correct “If can’t” to “It can’t”. Four times seems to be the usual times you type a new word before the software “knows” it. It can even cope with “Lovecraft” after you type his name a few times. It seems the software will learn those as it goes along. As such, it’s not necessary to manually set up a personal configuration file of words. And type “Stoke-on-Trent” a few times and it even gets the hang of that. Initially I thought it was not very British, as it wanted to offer Stanford for “Stoke-on-Trent”, but it can do the county name “Staffordshire” out of the box. Running the Lightkey uninstaller as Admin should cure this). (Note: If you installed a previous version, then uninstalled, a later re-install may hang. But once you finally get out the other side of that slough, and the profile-building, LightkeyPad turns out to be a pleasing simple text editor with fluid predictive auto-typing and some light-touch spelling/grammar correction. Assume you’ll be spending a while on getting it down, and then installed and up and running.

#DISCOUNT ON LIGHTKEY SOFTWARE .EXE#
exe here, for those who want offline installs. There’s also a direct download link for the. The paid version works with Microsoft Office 2010 (and higher) and the Google Chrome Web browser (only a few online apps, and not WordPress or an offline text editor working inside a browser).īut the free version of Lightkey seems fine, albeit after a download and install that seemed to take aeons. This offers the LightkeyPad text editor with smooth predictive (autocomplete) text, and the editor learns rapidly as you type.
