Many thanks for the replay!
GD is very useful and a great program, and with all the future improvements the next versions will be amazing.
Tvangeste wrote:Mostry BGL dictionaries do that.
Tvangeste wrote:Or not use such broken dictionaries at all.
Yes, mostly the BGLs are the ones constantly failing. Unfortunately they contain the best dictionaries, with a great selection of dictionaries in other languages, and they are in a nice format (color entries, etc.). For me, not use them, would not be a solution, but a bigger problem. My copies (licensed ones) work great with Babylon, so I know for sure they are not broken.
Tvangeste wrote:The best solution is, naturally, to fix the broken dictionaries that do these stupid things
For a newbie like me is not easy at all to fix a BGL. If anyone has already done it please let me know so we can get in communication outside the forum.
I converted a BGL dictionary to Dict using “pyglossary-2011.06.16”. The conversion was a “success” and I could run it on GD; it worked. However each time I was looking up a word, although I receive the right one (and
only the right one), I also got "a big number of 7 digits long" on the top of the entry word. Additionally, after the conversion most of the nice BGL formats (entry with font colors, etc.) was lost; I just had plain black fonts, etc.
Could you (or someone else) please explain me how to covert a BGL file to another format supported for GD in order to resolve the “Display not only the target entry!” problem? There is a better way that using "pyglossary"? (I use only windows)
If you could consider to change the program to force it to present us only the correct entry would be amazing. I believe for people who want to use BGL with GD, and who are newbies, is the only real solution.