At 16:08 15/03/2013 -0700, Gilles Noname wrote:
I need to format the first couple of pages in two columns, insert a
manual page break, and then have the remainder of the document
formated as single-column. After adding a manual page break, the
focus is on the new page, formatted as two columns
Problem solved: I selected the new page improperly formated as two columns,
told LO to format it as three columns, then formated it back to one column,
and presto. Weird.
--
View this message in context:
http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/4-0-0-3-Windows-Write-How-to-resume-single-column-tp40
Hello
I need to format the first couple of pages in two columns, insert a manual
page break, and then have the remainder of the document formated as
single-column.
After adding a manual page break, the focus is on the new page, formatted as
two columns; I select Format > Columns > 1 column, but L
WebSphere Portal Enable 7 for z/OS
Enabling Document Conversion Services
Document Conversion Services are used when working with the Common Mail
Portlet, WCM authoring and previewing, and search.
Document conversion is now supported on z/OS.
Perform the following configuration steps to ensure
Le 14/03/2013 03:38, David Gulley a écrit :
Does anyone know what might be causing this? I appreciate any help I can
get on this one.
All this seems very weird. I never had any problem with sorting in
LibreOffice. Perhaps the data contains "strange" things, such as
unwanted end-of-line or ca
At 14:03 15/03/2013 +, Tom Davies wrote:
... but i tend to distrust freeware ...
You'd better avoid LibreOffice, then.
Brian Barker
--
For unsubscribe instructions e-mail to: users+h...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Steve
No luck with either Hyperlink from the INSERT menu, or Hyperlink from the
Functions.
The Help pages are anything but on this subject.
Can you send me a copy of your file so that I can try it.
Many thanks, Tink.
--
View this message in context:
http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/Hyp
Hi :)
Ok, i googled it and found a few interesting ideas for Rtf - Html. There seems
to be a few freeware tools but i tend to distrust freeware and then there were
some guides on how to write your own and some with just coding in C# and stuff.
Oddly i didn't look through our own Extensions sit
Hi :)
Could the output be piped through something to convert to html? Would it be
difficult to construct? Is anyone here able to do something simple or is it
likely to be horribly complex?
Regards from
Tom :)
>
> From: Robert Prins
>To: Virgil Arrington
Virgil,
On 15 March 2013 12:46, Virgil Arrington wrote:
> Interesting discussion. For years, I have been an RTF fan for the very
> reasons mentioned by Robert. A small word processor I use a lot, called
> Atlantis, uses RTF as its native format. I also found that nearly every word
> processor on
Am 14.03.2013 03:38, schrieb David Gulley:
... strange results when I try to execute the sort...
Does anyone know what might be causing this?
The first idea that came up to my mind is that unrecognized or
misinterpreted EOL sequences might exist within the file.
If you have a \n sequence
Interesting discussion. For years, I have been an RTF fan for the very
reasons mentioned by Robert. A small word processor I use a lot, called
Atlantis, uses RTF as its native format. I also found that nearly every word
processor on the planet is able to read RTF files.
But, as Robert found an
Hi :)
Then perhaps use html for the formatting?
Is the aim to create files that won't be able to be read in the future? If so
then keeping on with Rtf does make sense but if you do want them to be able to
be read in the future then you need to change to a different format.
MS have taken the
Tom,
On 15 March 2013 10:50, Tom [via Document Foundation Mail Archive]
wrote:
> If it's just text then why not use the txt format?
Because it's text with limited bolding of some words.
> I'm not sure why your Odts are ending up so large. Typically around 20-50Kb
> seems fairly normal for just
Hi :)
If it's just text then why not use the txt format?
I'm not sure why your Odts are ending up so large. Typically around 20-50Kb
seems fairly normal for just a couple of pages.
I feel i should apologise that MS never made the Rtf format OpenSource rather
than proprietary and hid the fo
Tom,
On 15 March 2013 09:09, Tom Davies wrote:
> The Odt format is a zip container that holds an Xml file(s). So my guess is
> that if you can generate Xml in text-files then it should be reasonably
> easy.
You've got to be kidding...
Take this line from a file (in fixed pitch font):
=== SOURC
Hi :)
The Odt format is a zip container that holds an Xml file(s). So my guess is
that if you can generate Xml in text-files then it should be reasonably easy.
But as you point out it does generate fairly different results on different
machines using different OSes or / and different progra
Tom,
Maybe...
But RTF has one huge advantage, it's very easy to create on other
systems, as it is pure text. The "file" I posted is generate on IBM's
z/OS. Maybe you can tell me how I can generate an ODT file on that
platform?
Robert
--
Robert AH Prins
robert(a)prino(d)org
On 15 March 2013 00
18 matches
Mail list logo