We have used a release based numbering scheme until 2023, and we have
moved to a calendar based numbering scheme starting from 2024.
LibreOffice 7.6.7 is the last release of the LibreOffice 7.6 family, the
last based on the old numbering scheme. LibreOffice 24.2.3 is the third
release of the
Hi Harvey,
Thanks, that's good to know. By the way, what exactly does 24.2.1.2
mean? It's my current version from OpenSUSE.
Using OpenSuSE here also. But I have installed many versions from LO
directly in parallel mode.
Version 7.6.7.2 is the version with most bugfixes. Will be the last
On Wed, 2024-05-15 at 09:15 +0200, Robert Großkopf wrote:
> Hi Thomas,
>
> > Probably I am a little stupid, but what is the difference between
> > "24.2.3" and "7.6.7" (in my case 7.6.6).
> > These number look VERY different.
>
> Version numbering had been changed.
> 24 → Year 2024
> 2 →
Hi Thomas,
Probably I am a little stupid, but what is the difference between
"24.2.3" and "7.6.7" (in my case 7.6.6).
These number look VERY different.
Version numbering had been changed.
24 → Year 2024
2 → February
3 → third bugfix release.
Or does it not really matter?
Doesn't matter
On 2024/05/15 14:54, jbfa...@libreoffice.org wrote:
Hi,
Yes, you are missing something: this option is in LibreOffice, starting with
24.2. So upgrade to 24.2 and you will have it.
Probably I am a little stupid, but what is the difference between
"24.2.3" and "7.6.7" (in my case 7.6.6).
These
Hi,
Yes, you are missing something: this option is in LibreOffice, starting with
24.2. So upgrade to 24.2 and you will have it.
Best regards
JBF
Le 15 mai 2024 03:41:15 GMT+02:00, Thomas Blasejewicz a écrit
:
>Good morning
>I was wondering, whether it is possible to highlight entire rows
Good morning
I was wondering, whether it is possible to highlight entire rows and/or
columns when selecting a cell.
A search on the internet showed, that people have been asking for this
for over ten years,
either finding no solution at all or not so elegant work arounds.
Then I found this: