Comparison of the Word Count in Across and MS Word
Words with apostrophe
In Word, words separated by an apostrophe are counted as one word. On the contrary, Across counts them as separate words.
Examples | Word | Across |
l'idea | 1 word | 2 words (and 1 punctuation marks) |
I'm fine today | 3 words | 4 words (and 1 punctuation marks) |
Ocean's Eleven | 2 words | 3 words (and 1 punctuation marks) |
Punctuation mark
In Word, a word that is followed by a punctuation mark is counted as one word. However, if the word and the punctuation mark are separated by a space (e.g. as in French), Word will count the punctuation mark as a separate word. In both cases, Across counts the punctuation marks as punctuation marks, not as words.
Examples | Word | Across |
Wie geht es Dir? | 4 words | 4 words (and 1 punctuation marks) |
Ça va ? | 3 words | 2 words (and 1 punctuation marks) |
Internet addresses (with hyperlink)
In Word, Internet addresses with hyperlink are counted as one word. In Across, the counting method depends on the setting under Tools > System Settings > Document Settings > Word 2000-2003 or > Word 2007-2016 > Advanced: If the Internet address is processed as an editable field, Across will count the address as a placeable (i.e. not as a word). If the content/text of the Internet is extracted and written to separate paragraphs, Across will count both the components of the Internet address and the components of the link target.
The following figures show the different ways of processing Internet addresses in crossDesk:
Example | Word | Across |
www.across.net (with link target http://www.across.net) | 1 word | 1 placeable (and 0 words) or 1 placeable and 7 words (and 7 punctuation marks) |
here (with link target http://www.across.net) | 1 word | 1 placeable (and 0 words) or 1 placeable and 5 words (and 5 punctuation marks) |