Hi Rick,

IMO, the *very* first step any new developer needs to undertake is to get the 
LO codebase from git, compile it and then make sure it runs.

This might sound facetious to a newcomer, but actually it’s not. That is 
normally the first stumbling block for any new starter (it was for me) and 
whilst the build is now unbelievably better than from the old dmake days, there 
can still be snags. 

Grab a copy of lode (the LibreOffice Development Environment) - should make 
your life much simpler to start off with. 

https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/lode

Feel free to hop onto IRC on freenode, our developer channel is #libreoffice - 
so long as we’ve all had our morning coffee we’re usually a pretty friendly 
bunch :-) My nick is chris_wot, if I don’t answer you it’s probably because 
I’ve forgotten to set my away message. 


Chris

> On 9 Jan 2016, at 11:52 AM, Rick C. Hodgin <rick.c.hod...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I am a developer and would be willing to make these changes for the project, 
> but I've never worked on the LibreOffice code base and would need some help 
> getting started with the correct source files.
> 
> -----
> I had an idea to allow for a new type of cell formatting under "Category."  
> It would be for numbers, and operate similarly to the standard numbers on 
> integer values, but for fractions it would perform some special processing.
> 
> The category is called "Metric."
> 
> When conveying fractional values, such that 1.2345E-08 (which is 
> 0.000,000,012,345), it would do so in a metric-relative way using the 
> standard milli (10^-3), micro (10^-6), nano (10^-9), pico (10^-12), and so 
> on... 
> 
> In the example, the Metric display would cause the value to show up as 
> "12,345 pu" (pico-units) if the thousands separator was used.  There would be 
> an option to override the default "u" character in use, changing it into 
> something that may have significance for the cell, such as "s" or "seconds" 
> for seconds, "m" or "meters" for meters, and so on.
> 
> An ability to lock in a working range would also exist, such as "show 
> everything in nano-units" so that everything is adjusted to that base.  In 
> such a case, the above example above would present as "12.345 nu" instead of 
> in its default pu.
> 
> Thank you in advance.
> 
> Best regards,
> Rick C. Hodgin
> 
> _______________________________________________
> LibreOffice mailing list
> LibreOffice@lists.freedesktop.org
> http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice


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