Thank you very much for your help !

I've followed the steps and manage to create a UNO package. :)

But it still remains a problem : I've made the really simple macro : 
Sub TestHelloworld
      helloworld =
createUnoService("org.openoffice.helloworld.Helloworld")
      print helloworld.sayHello() 
End Sub

And I get this error when calling the sayHello() method :

BASIC runtime error. Property or method not found.

Tough I don't think that I've missed something in the tutorial... My
files are the same as the ones described at
http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/JavaEclipseTuto

Any idea ?

On Wed, 2006-11-29 at 21:44 +0100, Arthur wrote:
> >>> The Eclipse plugin works only with Official OOo installations.
> >>> The Ubuntu, Debian, and may be other distributions packagings
> >>> aren't supported. You can find correct debs on Pavel FTP: 
> >>> http://ftp.linux.cz/pub/localization/OpenOffice.org
> 
> >> For development work I make .tgz-packages from the official rpms
> >> with alien (alien -t bla.rpm). Like this you can install different
> >> versions in parallel and you don't need root access.
> 
> > I've also tried to install OOo from the deb packages of this file : 
> > http://ftp.linux.cz/pub/localization/OpenOffice.org/2.0.4/OOo_OOD680_m5_LinuxIntel_install_cs_deb.tar.gz
> 
> Those are not the .tgzs I meant.
> 
> > But I don't manage to install it because of conflicts with my
> > installed version.
> > 
> > I've also tried to use the official version available on the official
> >  website http://www.openoffice.org, but I can't install it for the
> > same reason.
> 
> Step by step for OOo2.0.4 (similar for the SDK):
> Download and unpack (tar xzf)
> OOo_2.0.4_LinuxIntel_install.tar.gz from the openoffice.org site.
> 
> In the OOD680_m5_native_packed-1_en-US.9073/RPMS directory (who has put 
> this path name in a stable release?!?) you'll find the rpms. Convert 
> them all to .tgz with the "alien -t" command.
> 
> Create a new directory where you want OOo installed. Run
> tar xzf ../path/to/whatever.tgz
> in the destination directory for every .tgz. You'll get a new 
> subdirectory à la opt/openoffice.org/. You can start OOo with 
> path/to/installation/opt/openoffice.org/soffice .
> 
> This naturally won't automatically assign the OOo MIME-types to your new 
> installation or magically integrate it into your desktop environment. 
> But it's highly useful for installing different OOo versions at the same 
> time. Only caveat might be user preferences which are stored under 
> ~/.openoffice.org2. You might want to back them up if you often go back 
> to an older or possibly incompatible version.
> 
> I really wish OOo would come in tarballs like this. It makes live on 
> various distributions much easier than the RPMs.
> 
> Good luck
> 
> Arthur
> 
> 
> 
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