Den sön 17 mars 2019 kl 00:30 skrev Dave Howorth :
> On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 19:40:52 +0100
> Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
> > > > First of all, sorry for mailing you privately. This mailing lists
> > > > doesn't behave like any of the other lists I'm subscribed to, so I
> > > > often forget to hit
On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 19:40:52 +0100
Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
> > > First of all, sorry for mailing you privately. This mailing lists
> > > doesn't behave like any of the other lists I'm subscribed to, so I
> > > often forget to hit ”reply to all”…
> >
> > On my mailer (claws) I just hit reply and
Den lör 16 mars 2019 kl 01:29 skrev Dave Howorth :
> On Fri, 15 Mar 2019 22:58:51 +0100
> Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
>
> > Den fre 15 mars 2019 kl 02:35 skrev Thomas Blasejewicz
> > :
> >
> > > On 2019/03/15 2:04, Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
> > > > Den tors 14 mars 2019 kl 16:57 skrev Thomas
Thomas Blasejewicz writes:
> Now I can change the contents and after newly adding the "(c)" (which I
> still cannot find anywhere in the preexisting lists),
Please note that the replacement lists are language specific, plus there is a
list for [ALL].
So it might be that the replacement for (c)
On 2019/03/16 9:28, Dave Howorth wrote:
>> The problem: there *** IS NO *** (c) in the replacement
Someone suggested the following and I would like to pass that idea on:
"Libre Office installs to an area on your system that isn't user
specific, but is available to all users. What you
On Fri, 15 Mar 2019 22:58:51 +0100
Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
> Den fre 15 mars 2019 kl 02:35 skrev Thomas Blasejewicz
> :
>
> > On 2019/03/15 2:04, Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
> > > Den tors 14 mars 2019 kl 16:57 skrev Thomas Blasejewicz
> > > mailto:ny...@hb.tp1.jp>>:
> > >
> > > On 2018/12/24
Den fre 15 mars 2019 kl 02:35 skrev Thomas Blasejewicz :
> On 2019/03/15 2:04, Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
> > Den tors 14 mars 2019 kl 16:57 skrev Thomas Blasejewicz
> > mailto:ny...@hb.tp1.jp>>:
> >
> > On 2018/12/24 16:46, Brian Barker wrote:
> > > At 15:55 24/12/2018 +0900, Thomas
At 00:56 15/03/2019 +0900, Thomas Blasejewicz wrote:
Since I am struggling with the autocorrect options again ...
I remember that entering (c) once worked .. but not any more.
(c) IS listed under exceptions, but nevertheless it is ALWAYS
converted to the copyright symbol, regardless of what I
Hi Thomas,
Le 14/03/2019 à 16:56, Thomas Blasejewicz a écrit :
Since I am struggling with the autocorrect options again ...
I remember that entering (c) once worked .. but not any more.
(c) IS listed under exceptions, but nevertheless it is ALWAYS converted
to the copyright symbol, regardless
On 2018/12/24 16:46, Brian Barker wrote:
At 15:55 24/12/2018 +0900, Thomas Blasejewicz wrote:
The problem: there *** IS NO *** (c) in the replacement list. (only
(R)) I have looked at least twice. In all three languages I use.
As you will have seen, V Stuart Foote finds ".*(C)" there.
I
At 15:55 24/12/2018 +0900, Thomas Blasejewicz wrote:
Tip Icon
To quickly undo an AutoCorrect replacement, press Ctrl+Z. *This also
adds the word or abbreviation that you typed to the AutoCorrect
exceptions list.*
As I said, I'm surprised. There is no mention of this in the Writer
Guide. And
On 2018/12/24 13:21, Brian Barker wrote:
At 12:26 24/12/2018 +0900, Thomas Blasejewicz wrote:
The help section says, typing Crtl+z immediately after the (c) input
reverts the autocorrection and adds it to the list of exception.
The first part - that Edit | Undo or Ctrl+Z undoes the
At 12:26 24/12/2018 +0900, Thomas Blasejewicz wrote:
I am frequently working on patent
specifications, in which there references to all
those numbers and symbols in the accompanying
figures. This also often includes something like
"(c)". LibreOffice insists on converting this
into the
Good afternoon
I am frequently working on patent specifications, in which there
references to all those numbers and symbols
in the accompanying figures.
This also often includes something like "(c)".
LibreOffice insists on converting this into the copyright symbol.
I tried Tools -> Autocorrect
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