Sometimes I say bad words. Not in my stories — The Washington Post is a family publication — but in messages to friends, in person, while making coffee, during meetings and anywhere it won’t get me fired. So like many of us, I am familiar with the conservative stance most auto-correct systems have on salty language.
This week, we look at this issue and other quirks of auto-correct and how to get around them. As always, hit us with your technology questions through our submission form here or at yourhelpdesk@washpost.com. If we can’t solve your problem, at least we can help you curse about it.
We are still battling with auto-correct: Auto-correct is capitalizing words for no reason. PLEASE tell me why this is happening in random words in the middle of sentences in iMessage. It drives me insane, thanks.
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— Anonymous reader
Auto-correct being incorrect is a widely experienced quirk of modern typing technology. Auto-correct is a feature available on Android and Apple smartphones, PCs and applications like Outlook. Its goal is to make typing a little easier by automatically changing words, letters or punctuation it thinks you entered incorrectly. It can, for example, capitalize the first word of a sentence or change “teh” to “the” or “goorgling” to “googling.”
But sometimes this feature does things we don’t want it to. In this reader’s case, their iPhone would capitalize words in the middle of a sentence such as And or Front. Sometimes it will change a person’s name to all caps, like you are yelling it, or learn something by mistake and change a real word to nonsense. And of course, it notoriously tries to change bad words to more wholesome ones, like duck.
Every time I type "tomorrow" on my iPhone, it autocorrects to "To.Oreos." Which of course isn't even a thing, though it does make me hungry.
— seisenstadt (@seisenstadt) December 15, 2021I am not here to complain about a magical handheld computer’s mostly amazing artificial intelligence. Auto-correct is great; it saves many of our butts regularly and my long-but-clumsy fingers are glad it exists.
That said, if you are frustrated with auto-correct, here are some things you can do to try to remedy it. On smartphones, most settings can be found in your keyboard settings.
- Turn it off: This way any typos will be yours and yours alone. There are different parts of auto-correct you can turn off depending on the problem. If it’s just a capitalization feature, turn off auto-capitalization. Same goes for auto-punctuation. Or you can disable it completely.
- Use slide typing: This is a smartphone feature that Google launched first and Apple added later. Instead of tapping out each letter, you slide your finger around the keyboard from letter to letter, lifting only at the end of the word. In my experience, it has a higher accuracy rate than when I absolutely butcher things with tap-tap-tapping.
- Use dictation: It’s another AI tool built into our phones and computers that is not perfect, but getting better all the time. Dictation will let you say your thoughts out loud, then do its best to turn them into typed words. This option works best when you’re someplace quiet, or is a good option if you’re driving and really need to send a message.
- Send a voice memo: If you want to make sure your words are received exactly as you meant them, just send a recording. Texting voice memos is increasingly popular, and is handy for any rants or thoughts that would take too long to type. The feature is also built into most messaging apps.
- Add your bad or unique words to the dictionary or text-replacement list: If you frequently deploy obscenities in messages and are tired of having them changed, add them to the dictionary or set up a custom text replacement, which lets you set up shortcuts and say what you want to auto-correct to. You can use this feature for things like turning “TY” into “Thank you.” But for curse word text-replacements, just put the same exact word in both fields. This also works for any words you use often that aren’t in the dictionary, say lingo from your industry.
- Reset the dictionary: If you’re on a smartphone and it seems to have a lot of quirks (random caps, changing real words to fake ones), you can reset the dictionary and start from scratch. On an iPhone, you go to Settings → General → Transfer or Reset iPhone, then tap Reset. You’ll see an option to “Reset Keyboard Dictionary.”
- Keep correcting it: The auto-correct tools on smartphones are constantly learning how you type. For example, if you capitalize a word often enough, it should assume you are using a proper noun and begin automatically capitalizing it when it detects the right context. Or sometimes it will take a stab just based on the rest of the sentence. (For example I found that it doesn’t cap for “Have you seen my tiger?” but does in “See you at the party, Tiger.”). If there’s an auto-correct issue you just can’t shake, try fixing it every time and see if the device learns your preference.
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