My thought when I looked at it was to literally add a section something like:

You see a macro on a web site and you want to copy the text and paste it into your copy so that you can run it.

1. you need to decide where to store it (which library, which module, why does it matter).

2. How to do this (step by step)

3. Now, run it.

Perhaps this can be at the end, or, do you prefer the beginning before they get started.


On 10/07/2010 06:50 AM, TJ Frazier wrote:
On 10/7/2010 01:23, Jean Hollis Weber wrote:
Yes, that's the latest file. I appreciate the time problem. If you
can't, you can't. Or maybe TJ will step in and draft something?

--Jean

Maybe :-) The subject is already mentioned in the section, "Downloading macros to import". Maybe another sentence there? --/tj/


On Thu, 2010-10-07 at 00:51 -0400, Andrew Douglas Pitonyak wrote:
Working 12+ hours days, but, will see what I can do.

I assume that this is still the latest from which I should work...

http://www.oooauthors.org/english/userguide3/gs3/V3_3_revisions/0113GS3-GettingStartedWithMacros_JHW_20101003.odt/view



On 10/06/2010 10:33 PM, Jean Hollis Weber wrote:
Andrew,

I think the Getting Started with Macros chapter needs a short addition
to explain how to put someone else's macro code (copied, say, from an
email or a blog) into a macro on my computer. To apply the info that's
in the chapter needs a lot of puzzling out by the naive reader (such as
myself). This could be part of, or follow, the section "Writing macros
without the recorder". Could you write something suitable?

--Jean




--
Andrew Pitonyak
My Macro Document: http://www.pitonyak.org/AndrewMacro.odt
My Book: http://www.hentzenwerke.com/catalog/oome.htm
Info:  http://www.pitonyak.org/oo.php
See Also: http://documentation.openoffice.org/HOW_TO/index.html


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