One new tool that Microsoft engineers are working on for Chromium is a change to the current spellchecking tool. Currently, Chromium uses Hunspell, but in a commit, Microsoft proposes using its own Windows spellchecker: “This CL aims to implement windows spellchecker integration in Chromium project, so that user can switch to use windows spellchecker or hunspell spellchecker at run time. “We need to implement platform agnostic interfaces to integrate windows spellchecker into Chromium. We also need to refactor some code to enable runtime switch between Windows spellchecker and hunspell spellchecker.” As this explains, Microsoft does not want to outright replace the Hunspell default. Instead, the company wants Windows users to see another option for spellchecking. When typing, users would see a choice of which tool to use. “Use the Windows OS spellchecker” is now a part of Chromium builds running through Canary development branch. However, it only seems to be in Canary for Google Chrome and not for Microsoft Edge.
Development
Of course, Chromium Edge is still in preview following its release earlier this year. Microsoft has recently introduced the Canary branch to Windows 7 and Windows 8, alongside the Developer channel. “Delivering the next version of Microsoft Edge to all supported versions of Windows is part of our goal to improve the web browsing experience for our customers on every device, and to empower developers to build great experiences with less fragmentation,” the company said.