2014-03-22 21:04 GMT+01:00 Dale Erwin dale.er...@casaerwin.org:
Is there some reason why the master document does not render the
sub-documents in the same was as they are rendered when opened separately?
One possibility is that there is a style conflict/override.
Master document's styles
Hi :)
Arrgh, that approach sounds like it might be worth creating a new
master document and then
1. import the existing master document into that (in the way Cley described)
2. go into styles and modify the important ones to rename them
3. use Cley's advice to import the styles from the first
If I open a new impress document and justput some text on the opening page and
thenmake it red or any colour.
If I print handouts it's in colour but if I printslides it's in grey scale.
Any ideas anyone ??
Ta
M
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Problems?
Hi Owen, all
Owen Genat wrote
The 14 standard PostScript fonts are now (under v4.2+) always embedded, as
required by PDF v1.5. I provide some detail here:
http://ask.libreoffice.org/en/question/30069/pdf-font-embedding-in-libreoffice-42/?answer=30071#post-id-30071
This may be
Hi :)
lqtm :) It's been quite a good thread imo, with useful ideas which
may lead to better work-flow and/or save a bit of money by helping be
able to fix stuff. So it's not been a waste of time and didn't
bother the list
I use a track-ball at work. At first it was really difficult to get
the
Well, I'm confused by your problem -
I've been using LO since it was OO; merely using 'save as' when
I'm finished writing for the moment, then when I re-open it, I just start
writing again.
Are you perchance, plopping some text - written in another style -
into the
On 03/24/2014 12:25 PM, Pedro wrote:
Hi Owen, all
Owen Genat wrote
The 14 standard PostScript fonts are now (under v4.2+) always embedded, as
required by PDF v1.5. I provide some detail here:
At 16:27 23/03/2014 -0500, Dale Erwin wrote:
Since no one else has answered, I can only assume that no one here
knows the answer.
Er, there have been five responses to your message (all archived on
the web). You may not have liked them, but it's not true that no-one answered.
I think it
On 3/24/2014 1:15 PM, Kracked_P_P---webmaster wrote:
CUPS since it only creates a portrait formatted page output.
Just ran a test printing in Landscape from LibreOffice Writer Version:
4.1.5.3 on Windows 7 Pro 64bit with HP Universal Printing PS driver to
Ubuntu 12.04 LTS using CUPS-PDF
On 03/24/2014 02:45 PM, Paul D. Mirowsky wrote:
On 3/24/2014 1:15 PM, Kracked_P_P---webmaster wrote:
CUPS since it only creates a portrait formatted page output.
Just ran a test printing in Landscape from LibreOffice Writer Version:
4.1.5.3 on Windows 7 Pro 64bit with HP Universal Printing
Hi :)
Is it possible to completely disable all the styles in a master
document so that the ones from the sub-document do remain untouched?
Regards from
Tom :)
On 24 March 2014 09:31, Tom Davies tomc...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi :)
Arrgh, that approach sounds like it might be worth creating a new
I'm trying to configure LibreOffice to use digital certificates for
signing documents. Under OptionsSecurity, There's a Certificate
button, which opens a panel for configuring where the certificate is
located. However, it appears to be impossible to change that location.
After clicking OK and
I'm wondering if there is a way to define a field as the first word on
the page and the last word on the page (like in a dictionary). If that
could be done, then the desired information could be placed in a header,
as Dale wants to do. That would obviate the manual gymnastics that he's
trying
On 3/24/2014 3:51 PM, Tom Davies wrote:
Hi :)
Is it possible to completely disable all the styles in a master
document so that the ones from the sub-document do remain untouched?
Regards from
Tom :)
I would think that would take away the benefit of a master document. By
having the style
!--
/* Font Definitions */
@font-face
{font-family:宋体;
panose-1:2 1 6 0 3 1 1 1 1 1;}
@font-face
{font-family:Cambria Math;
panose-1:2 4 5 3 5 4 6 3 2 4;}
@font-face
{font-family:Calibri;
panose-1:2 15 5 2 2 2 4 3 2 4;}
@font-face
On 3/24/2014 2:51 PM, Tom Davies wrote:
Hi :)
Is it possible to completely disable all the styles in a master
document so that the ones from the sub-document do remain untouched?
Regards from
Tom :)
That should not be necessary if you follow the instructions for creating
a master document.
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