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NAME

       .acheck - Acheck configuration file

DESCRIPTION

       This is the configuration file for acheck. If it exists, it must be at
       the top of your home directory ($HOME). This file is optional unless
       you don’t want to use default values.

       Lines beginning with a number sign (‘#’) and empty lines will be
       ignored.  Spaces at the beginning and the end of a line will also be
       ignored as well as tabulators.  If you need spaces at the end or the
       beginning of a value you can use apostrophes (‘"’).  An option line
       starts with it’s name followed by a value. An equal sign is optional.
       A comment starts with the number sign, there can be any number of
       spaces and/or tab stops in front of the #.  Some possible examples:

        # this line is ignored
        option   value
        option = value                               # this is a comment
        option        "value ending with space   "

       You have to escape number signs with a backslash (‘\’) to use it in a
       value.

       Default values are provided into square brackets, they should be
       suitable for most installations.

SPELLING

       Define if you want to use ispell for checking spelling and how to use
       it.

       check_spelling
           use Aspell for spelling if set to ‘yes’ [yes]

       dictionary
           Language dictionary to use with Aspell, use default if empty
           [empty]

       word_letters
           regular expression to define characters allowed to write a word,
           pattern matches according locale [\w]

       $review_mode
           set to ‘yes’ if you want review comments to be added in the output
           file after parsed line, otherwise just fix error [no]

COLORS

       Set text colors for clear presentation.

       The recognized colors (all of which should be fairly intuitive) are:
       clear, reset, dark, bold, underline, underscore, blink, reverse,
       concealed, black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, white,
       on_black, on_red, on_green, on_yellow, on_blue, on_magenta, on_cyan,
       and on_white.  Case is not significant.  Underline and underscore are
       equivalent, as are clear and reset, so use whichever is the most
       intuitive to you.  The color alone sets the foreground color, and
       on_color sets the background color.

       Note that not all colors are supported by all terminal types, and some
       terminals may not support any of these sequences.  Dark, blink, and
       concealed in particular are frequently not implemented.

       error_color
           color used to highlight errors, this should highlight space
           characters [bold on_red]

       fix_color
           color used to highlight suggestions, this should highlight space
           characters [bold on_green]

       error_head_color
           color used to display the error line header [bold red]

       error_color
           color used to display the suggestion line header [bold green]

       comment_color
           color used for comments and hints [cyan]

OTHERS

       bak_ext
           extension for backup files [bak]

       comment
           comment string for review [>> ]

       debug
           verbosity level [0]

       Verbosity Levels:

       0 quiet, normal
           only warnings and errors

       1 debug
           names of subroutines

       2 debug verbose
           names and arguments of subroutines

       3 .. 5 debug very verbose
           output parsing and checking details

SEE ALSO

       acheck(1), acheck-rules(5)

AUTHOR

       Nicolas Bertolissio <bertol@debian.org>