https://bz.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=126798
[email protected] changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |[email protected] --- Comment #3 from [email protected] --- I tried to replicate this issue, but was not able to. When I ran the steps, I was able to view a document that wasn’t missing any characters in Writer. When viewed in Writer, Word 2010 and Google Docs, I was seeing the same content in all 3 applications. OS: Windows 7 Professional, Service Pack 1 Writer version: 4.1.2 Steps I tried: 1) As input, I created a Word document with Chinese text and saved as .docx format 2) Open this document in Writer and Google Docs 3) Compare the contents of the document when view in Writer, Word and Google Docs I tried out additional scenarios to see if could replicate this issue: I varied the test by modifying the content of the .docx file with some formatting of the text: 1) Modify the Word document to include numerically bulleted items 2) Open this document in Writer and Google Docs 3) Compare the contents of the document when view in Writer, Word and Google Docs 4) Repeat the test with other style elements in the Word document: Underlined text, extra spaces, newlines between some characters Results: In each case, the document’s contents appeared to match up with the contents of the Word document (.docx format) There may be other factors involved such as the original file being corrupted in some way, file being inadvertently altered when opened, or a specific configuration that this occurred on, but without additional details provided I’m not able to narrow down the factors and can only speculate on possible causes. If possible, providing the original document would help greatly in see if this issue appears on other machines. It would also be helpful if another screenshot was provided, to compare against the one attached, showing what the contents should look like so it can be determined what and how much has changed. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the issue.
