Hi Barbara, '>'From: Barbara Duprey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
'>'>> The languages that I worked in were mainframe-based, as you '>'>> can probably guess from the timeframe (S/360 Assembler, anyone?), and '>' '>'>> didn't include Java or any of the C variants (though I have an in-house '>' '>'>> expert in C/C++ in my son). Those are the implementation languages for '>' '>'>> OOo, right? '>'>> '>'> '>'> C++ instead of C, then yes. '>'> '>'> '>'> Setting up the environment to build OOo is the first pre-requisite. '>'> Depending on your preference, this could be done on Linux or Windows '>'> (well, of course also Solaris and FreeBSD and Mac and other supported '>'> platforms - but the majority probably uses Linux or Windows). Linux is '>'> reported to be easier to get it to fly, Windows is more convenient on '>'> the long run, if you appreciate a development IDE / debugger with all '>'> bells and whistles. '>'> '>'> There's a whole category in the Wiki collecting developer-related '>'> things: http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Category:Development. '>'> I'd say http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Building_OpenOffice.org '>'> could be the first the entry point. '>'> '>'> Ciao '>'> Frank '>'Thanks, Frank. I'm on WinXP at this point, but probably not for too much '>' '>'longer. '>' Perhaps you can join to the Education Project, more about it here: http://education.openoffice.org/ http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Education_Project It's a very good effort to help developers to get a start point into OOo. There's logs about old class rooms here: http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Education_ClassRoom -- Noelson --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
