On 24/07/15 09:03 PM, charles meyer wrote:
It's gratifying seeing so many posts about who's using Linux, which
resources and other software.
I haven't found a good Linux forum so I appreciate those using Linux
on this forum as you share your workouts and solutions.
Evince (pdf reader) was, I be
Am 24.07.2015 um 20:32 schrieb H:
> I am using LibreOffice on Linux and very happy with it. Often, however, I
> would like to use my Android tablet, or even phone, to draft an outline of a
> document that I would later develop further on my desktop.
>
> Ideally, a simple application such as an o
It's gratifying seeing so many posts about who's using Linux, which
resources and other software.
I haven't found a good Linux forum so I appreciate those using Linux
on this forum as you share your workouts and solutions.
Evince (pdf reader) was, I believe, originally a Linux product. They
now h
I was not clear. I am well aware that LibreOffice allows me to create etc.
outlines.
I am looking for a simpler/quicker to use program that only does LibreOffice
compatible outlines, similar to the DOS program PCOutline.
Also, can someone explain to me why a reply to messages here - unless you
Thank you.
From: Dave Barton
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 4:50 PM
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Question about LO Writer and "complex
documents"
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
From: Anne-ology
Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2015 16:08:53 -0500
>Maybe someone would be so kind as to expl
Isn't that what everyone does ;-)
From: Dave Barton
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 4:51 PM
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Question about LO Writer and "complex
documents"
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
anne-ology wrote:
>I still don't understand that problem of opening at the
huh ???
Are you attempting to open a new document to contact this list or
what?;
what's your question?
You surely don't mean that you're unable to open a blank e-mail to
send a document ;-)
Curiously wondering,
From: Philip Ward
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 2015
You're right, that was probably not the best word to choose;
although I think I explained my meaning -
I note you deleted that part of the e-message ;-)
I merely meant that when saving an LO document to MsFt, the versions
will not appear the same ...
t
anne-ology wrote:
>I still don't understand that problem of opening at the beginning
> only;
> my documents always re-open at the spot where last saved.
That's because you have put a/your name in the "User Data" section of
the "Options" dialog.
This is one of the program's littl
Original Message
From: Anne-ology
Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2015 16:08:53 -0500
>Maybe someone would be so kind as to explain the difference between
> .ODT & .OTT;
> when is the latter used & how does it differ?
ODT (OpenDocument Text) = Writer Document
OTT (OpenDocum
I may or may not be understanding your question;
but if you're referring to the document adding the Roman numerals
... numerals ... letters to form an outline;
LO does this - & so do other programs.
But I would not recommend any of them since these computer-generat
Sorry guys, not part of the current thread, how do i start a new thread?
or question etc?
been a while, and totally forgot!!
cheers
Phil
On 24/07/2015 21:59, anne-ology wrote:
As for me, I much prefer to use LO.
Although it's not compatible with MSFT; this makes it difficult
I still don't understand that problem of opening at the beginning
only;
my documents always re-open at the spot where last saved.
From: Stephen Harding
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 10:25 AM
Subject: RE: [libreoffice-users] Question about LO Writer and "complex
documents"
To: Dan
Maybe someone would be so kind as to explain the difference between
.ODT & .OTT;
when is the latter used & how does it differ?
From: Dan Lewis
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 10:05 AM
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Question about LO Writer and "complex
documents"
To: users@global.
On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 1:59 PM, anne-ology wrote:
>As for me, I much prefer to use LO.
>
>Although it's not compatible with MSFT; this makes it difficult to
> send a document to someone.
>
This is simply a false statement. "It's not compatible." Please don't give
new users a fal
As for me, I much prefer to use LO.
Although it's not compatible with MSFT; this makes it difficult to
send a document to someone.
I will then - if a small document, copy/paste into an e-mail or
save as MSFT to send to them -
and while so doing, I'm thinkin
I am using LibreOffice on Linux and very happy with it. Often, however, I would
like to use my Android tablet, or even phone, to draft an outline of a document
that I would later develop further on my desktop.
Ideally, a simple application such as an outliner would be ideal and I remember
such
Am 24.07.2015 um 15:31 schrieb Tom Williams:
> Question: in what ways does LO Writer "fail" at editing or creating
> "complex documents"?
>
Take some letter that had been edited by a dozend of editors because
nobody ever learned about templates. One opens the letter document,
clears the text bod
At 06:31 24/07/2015 -0700, Tom Williams wrote:
... I've read many comments about whether or not LibreOffice is a
good alternative to MS Office. Some say yes, others say no. One
common comment made by those who say no is Writer isn't good for
"complex documents". For "basic" word processing, it'
On 07/24/2015 01:31 PM, Tom Williams wrote:
> Question: in what ways does LO Writer "fail" at editing or creating "complex
> documents"?
This where a definition for "complex documents" is mandatory.
> Does anyone here have any experience with LO Writer and "complex documents"?
I've had as ma
Hi there!
I've had experience working with LibreOffice and "complex documents". Back
in the days of Libre/OpenOffice 3.x and Office 2003, Writer was much better
than Word in handling large documents with complex formatting and a large
number of included objects (say, around 100 pages, with around 1
I've had no problem using Writer to create 200+ page documents with over a
hundred illustrations, annotated screen shots and drawings, imported from
Microsoft's Visio or LO Draw (LO Draw works best) and JPEG photos. Also
frequently use tables to show information. The documents have many, ma
On 07/24/2015 09:31 AM, Tom Williams wrote:
Greetings! With all of the recent discussion about Linux being a viable
alternative to Windows, in today's computing world, I've read many
comments about whether or not LibreOffice is a good alternative to MS
Office. Some say yes, others say no. One
Greetings! With all of the recent discussion about Linux being a viable
alternative to Windows, in today's computing world, I've read many
comments about whether or not LibreOffice is a good alternative to MS
Office. Some say yes, others say no. One common comment made by those
who say no is Wr
Indeed I believe this should be the problem.
To solve just select "english/us" on the amounts columns when you import
CSV.
In this way it should consider and replace decimal dots with your country's
decimal separator (comma).
Il 24/lug/2015 10:42, "James Wilde" ha
scritto:
> I see your name is
I see your name is Nielsen, which could indicate that you are Danish or
Norwegian. Can it be that you have one of these two languages/regions
as your default, which means, amongst other things that the decimal
separator is a comma. If you are importing from an english or american
bank, the decima
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