Thank you very much for those informations. I did not succeed in getting them anywhere but here. They are going to be very useful (i'll translate them on the french discuss forum too)
One last thing about this matter of OOXML. No average user is going to know (nor to care) about which OOXML version he is using. And, 99,99% of the time, it's going to be transitionnal OOXML. Which is un-recommended by law now, and which has to change whithin 3 years max. The question is, how do we enforce the rules with the greatest efficiency possible. In my opinion, an automatic reply of the administration ingoing email platform would be the best solution. It would reply automatically to anyone who sends an email with a transitionnal OOXML attached. This email would be written very carefully whith information about IGR v2, about the 2 versions of OOXML and about what are the best practices to communicate with a french administration (ODF). I'm not sure if it can be done technically, but I'm going to know it soon. If anyone has a better idea, please don't hesitate to tell. Therefore is the following question : What is the easiest way to know wether a file is written in strict OOXML or not ? Surely we will have to unzip and check something in the OOXML file. Any way to do it without the need of unzipping it ? (check file property or check file header) If not, is there a single file in which we could check a tag for every kind of OOXML file (docx, pptx, xlsx..) ? (Unzip. Open xxx.xml. Find <yyy> tag. If value NEQ [xmlstrict] then send email to sender ) Or would we be obliged to have a different method for every kind of OOXML files. (Unzip. In case of filename ends with docx Open xxx.xml. Find <yyy> tag. If value NEQ [xmlstrict] then send email to sender. In case of filename ends with xlsx [...] ) Or maybe just checking if a single file exists or not would tell us if the file is strict or transitionnal ? ----- Mail original ----- De: "Italo Vignoli" <it...@libreoffice.org> À: discuss@documentfoundation.org Envoyé: Mercredi 27 Avril 2016 19:39:14 Objet: Re: [tdf-discuss] OOXML ECMA-376, transitionnal and strict On 26/04/2016 12:46, mjollni...@laposte.net wrote: > Is it correct to say that the Transitionnal OOXML format is not > compliant with any international standard or norm ? Neither ECMA, nor > ISO, nor anything but MS$ itself. OOXML Transitional is not the standard format, but a tweaked version of OOXML integrating bynary blobs and other non standard components, which was supposed to help the transition from the legacy file formats to OOXML Strict (which is the only standard file format). > If so, Does this means that NO version of MS$ office (from 2010 to > the actual) writes BY DEFAULT in a standardized or normalised format. > (cf. > https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc179191%28v=office.16%29.aspx > for default formats) Yes. Every Microsoft Office version since 2007 defaults to OOXML Transitional, implementing a slightly different version of the OOXML Transitional non standard file format. Only MS Office 2013 and MS Office 2016 implement OOXML Strict, with a process that makes it virtually impossible for any normal user to get a real OOXML Strict file format (the user should save the document using the OOXML Strict option - listed as last of the "save as" options - before writing a single character). Because of this behaviour which intentionally prevents the creation of OOXML Strict files, the number of OOXML Strict files available is close to zero. In addition, Microsoft fonts used as default by MS Office since 2007 - known as C-Fonts or Calibri, Cambria, Candara, Consolas, Constantia and Corbel) - can only be used by MS Office licensed customers, as they are included in MS Office EULA, to add another level of incompatibility. > Is anyone confident enough in his knowledge of OOXML to acknowledge > this ? Maybe this place is not the best one to ask the question ? If > so, would please somebody advice me the best place to post the > question ? I am confident enough to answer most questions about OOXML issues. Please do note that after the UK decision on July 22, 2014, not even Microsoft has dared to define OOXML as standard in public, because it is perfectly clear that the file format is not standard and will never be a standard (after nine years and four different implementations of OOXML Transitional, which was supposed to last a maximum of two MS Office versions). -- Italo Vignoli - LibreOffice Marketing & PR mobile +39.348.5653829 - email / jabber it...@libreoffice.org hangout / jabber italo.vign...@gmail.com - skype italovignoli GPG Key ID - 0xAAB8D5C0 DB75 1534 3FD0 EA5F 56B5 FDA6 DE82 934C AAB8 D5C0 -- To unsubscribe e-mail to: discuss+unsubscr...@documentfoundation.org Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.documentfoundation.org/www/discuss/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted -- To unsubscribe e-mail to: discuss+unsubscr...@documentfoundation.org Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.documentfoundation.org/www/discuss/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted