( answering from mobile ) and another thing we could do is to use the
kgethotstuff library tô enable the user to provide template alternatives
and tô also download user provided alternatives from the web.

Em Sex, 6 de mar de 2015 08:29, Lubomir I. Ivanov <neolit...@gmail.com>
escreveu:

> On 6 March 2015 at 13:13, Robert Helling <hell...@atdotde.de> wrote:
> >
> > On 06.03.2015, at 10:31, Anton Lundin <gla...@acc.umu.se> wrote:
> >
> > As far as i can understand http://qt-project.org/wiki/QtWebEngine , Qt's
> > html renderer is based on chromium so i don't think its lacking any
> > bells and whistles.
> >
> >
> > I am glad to hear that. Still we need it to describe a printed page
> rather
> > (with elements to grow/shrink to fit paper sizes etc) than an page in a
> web
> > browser. As a start, I just tried to produce some simple example with
> > LibreOfficeWriter and save that as html but the output is not even close
> to
> > the way the document looked.
> >
>
> yeah, HTML is really only well fit for web browsers and as everyone
> knows when you print a web-page it may look *a bit* different in terms
> of layout / scaling etc.
> we are going to need some experiments with Grantlee and a renderer
> (e.g. WebKit) to see to what extent we can get it to be WYSIWYG.
>
> lubomir
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