Hi :)
I have only just noticed that this thread is a hijacking of the thread "Re: 
Using extension EnhancedGraphicExportDialogs with LibO3.5".  

When posting to a mailing list or a forum i think it is usually better to start 
a fresh thread to avoid confusion.  Hopefully by forwarding this to the list it 
might create a new thread and yet still preserve most of the thread.  It misses 
the post by Miguel Ángel 
http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/Using-extension-EnhancedGraphicExportDialogs-with-LibO3-5-td3455268.html#a3456029


BU?
Back-Ups done by LibreOffice/OpenOffice are placed in a sub-folder inside your 
user-profile
http://user.services.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=74&t=12426
NOT in the same folder as the original document.  Eggs and baskets right?  For 
a large work it is a good plan to create a copy on a usb-stick or Cds/Dvd 
and/or another hard-drive on another machine elsewhere.  Some people kept their 
back-ups in the other tower thinking that if some catastrophe affected their 
copy then the other tower would be safe.  Sadly not.  I found that i was 
keeping an external hard-drive in the same bag as the laptops power-supply but 
luckily it didn't have anything crucial on it.  And a usb-stick in front of a 
Crt monitor was pretty dumb too (on at least 2 counts).  


Self Publishing at Lulu.com
http://www.lulu.com/
is worth exploring but i think you are talking about a more traditional, 
professional route.  Perhaps something like 
Editors/Publishing house - Printing company - distribution network/shops?


I thought editors, publishers, printing companies (and all that) demanded using 
doc format or now probably docX?  ODF will become more acceptable once it gains 
market-share through Libreoffice and other programs.  Like OpenOffice there 
have been strong efforts to make sure it gets under-promoted but the shackles 
are off now with TDF driving LibreOffice.  

Since people seem used to getting Rtfs from you i think the best bet is to 
start giving people a copy of your work in both Pdf and Rtf.  

Pdf by default is compressed with very lossy jpg compression but LibreOffice 
allows you to change that.  A Pdf is a lot like a photograph of your work so 
people see how you intended it to be laid out.  Rtf, Doc, DocX and Odt all 
display differently on different machine partly due to having different 
printers and settings.  

Just yesterday i started being able to switch from giving Pdf & doc to Pdf & 
Odt to some people.  Notably (for me) my boss has started using Odt for certain 
specific documents that involve images.  I think for most people i still need 
to use Pdf & Doc or Pdf & DocX.  By giving 2 files they get 1 that they can 
edit and 1 that shows the intended layout.  

Most Pdfs editors seem clunky and Adobe's seems to need constant security 
updates which does not inspire confidence in using it, nor in viewing documents 
that it's edited.  LibreOffice can allegedly edit Pdfs but it's easier to edit 
the Doc, DocX, Odt, Rtf or whatever and then 
File - Export as Pdf
or 
File - Print - To File (instead of to a pritner) - Pdf rather than Ps or 
whatever
I've only seen the 1st option but some say they have the 2nd one too.  
Apparently the 2nd one is better. lol



Rtf
I think Rtf was developed as a format that would allow interoperability between 
different programs on different platforms
http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?displaylang=en&id=10725
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich_Text_Format
I think it's the default format for Wordpad.  Unfortunately it had fairly low 
take-up, possibly as a result of being a lot more closed and proprietary than 
allegedly intended
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich_Text_Format#Criticism

Now, of course, Microsoft has developed a new "Open" standard 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Docx
although MS Office's implementation seems to be sufficiently quirky that 
documents created in non-Microsoft programs that are then opened in MS Office 
appear to be quite messed-up, particularly pictures.  This has effectively 
forced people to buy the newer MS Office suites, 2007 and 2010 (or on Mac their 
MSO 2008) in order to be able to use their new "cross-platform" "Open" 
standards.  

The new docX format seems to have led to MS stopping development of Rtf.  
According to 
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-gb/library/dd797428.aspx
(from http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=8628 )
it seems that people can still read/write the current version of Rtf in MS 
Office 2010 but it's not clear what will happen in the newer MS Office when it 
comes out in a year or two.    

Part of the attraction of Rtf was that it eliminated macros.  When malicious 
code and malware was spread by MS document formats it was often through macros, 
so using Rtf was a good security precaution.  The newer DocX does allow macros 
but, of course, MS assures us that macros are now safe in the new format just 
as they previously assured us that macros were safe in their old formats.  Rtf 
also significantly reduced other clutter and resulted in much smaller 
file-sizes and better protection of privacy.  


Odf; Odt, Ods
OpenDocument Formats such as Odt (for text or more accurately, word-processor 
documents) also allow macros but use a sufficiently different programming 
language's implementation that so far there appear to have been no malware, 
malicious code or exploits "out in the wild".  

MS Office 2007 & 2010 can read/write Odt but only using the older version of 
the format, unlike most programs that support Odf
http://opendocumentfellowship.com/applications
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDocument_software#Text_documents_.28.odt.29

To make LibreOffice (or i guess OpenOffice too) use the older format to 
increase compatibility with MS Office try
Tools - Option - Load/Save - General
(been here before, see Steve's answer) and about halfway down change the 
drop-down backward up 2 places from "1.2 Extended (recommended)" to "1.0/1.1"

Odf seems to support much more sophisticated placement of pictures or perhaps 
it's just LibreOffice/OpenOffice.  After saving a document as Odt you can 
right-click on a picture and change the "Anchor Point" to a greater variety 
than Office 2007 offers (and i think 2010 too) which allows you move pictures 
around much more easily and freely.  On that right-click menu choosing 
"Picture" (or frame) brings a pop-up box with many tabs allowing many options 
for wrapping text around a picture, creating a border and/or margin around the 
picture, even easily adding a hyperlink to make the picture clickable.  


Doc
Is the older MS Office format and seems to now be the one format that is most 
widely used in the greatest variety of programs.  You can set it as the default 
in LibreOffice / OpenOffice
Tools - Option - Load/Save - General
(again) at the bottom keep the drop-down that says "Text document" (slightly 
inaccurately) but change the drop-down beside it backwards up 1 place to 
"Microsoft Word 97/2000/Xp".  If you change the other types of documents 
(Spreadsheets (Ods) and Presentations (Odp)) then it's 2 places otherwise you 
save things as templates which can get messy and confusing.  

Of course Doc is probably about the most vulnerable format and wide open to 
malware and a wide range of problems but none of those will be generated from 
LibreOffice.  A 3rd party might infect it but if the documents is going to go 
from
You - Editor/Publishing house - Printers
then it should be fairly safe, or at least fairly obvious who to blame.  If 
professional printing companies and editors/publishing houses still demand that 
only Doc format is used then hopefully the keep their software updated enough 
to avoid the problems.  If they demand DocX they can probably still cope with 
Doc.  

Doc probably can't handle the full range of options for pictures and things 
that Odt allows and it's vulnerable but at least most people are able to use 
it!  


Pdf
"Portable Document Format".  Not many people can edit these.  Not many programs 
can.  Another advantage is that pictures and stuff don't get re-arranged and 
also the layout remains the same on every computer no matter what printers are 
attached or what settings are chosen for the machine.  With most word-processor 
documents if the person viewing has their setting set as US Letter and you had 
yours at A4 then all the text and everything all get shifted around very 
noticeably.  Pdf is like a photograph of your document.  With LibreOffice, 
unlike Word, you can easily choose how much compression to set or even make it 
lossless to avoid any compression.  Even if you choose a high compression it 
still gives people a rough idea of the layout you intended.  


I hope something there helps!  Switching to LO is a huge improvement for me 
especially as it has developed so fast, and since the long-awaited official 
release of the ODF 1.2 that so many people had been using for ages already 
anyway.  LO seems much better than Word 2007 and a bit better than Word 2010 
both of which are beginning to make me growl when forced to use them.  The 
ribbon in 2010 is far better than the 2007 and i really miss it in LO but it 
takes up a lot of space without really adding anything except glossy good 
looks.n  Hopefully you will find LO a vast improvement on Wordpad!! lol
Regards from
Tom :)




--- On Wed, 26/10/11, Don Parris <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: Don Parris <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] LO auto save
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Wednesday, 26 October, 2011, 23:04

<snip />

> I can say it is extremely unlikely that your printer relies on a specific
> document format - it should print any type of document you send it.
> 
> As for document formats, I would think that ODT is a "better" format, but
> you can also save as a regular Microsoft Word document (should you need to),
> or export to PDF format.  I self-published my book using LO (years ago) and
> exported to PDF to publish it on Lulu.com.
> 
> I am 99.99% certain that, while it might take a little bit of adjustment,
> you will find switching to LO a super nice adjustment to make.  :-)
> 
> Regards,
> Don
> -- 
> D.C. Parris, FMP, LEED AP O+M, ESL Certificate
> Minister, Security/FM Coordinator, Free Software Advocate
> https://www.xing.com/profile/Don_Parris  |
> http://www.linkedin.com/in/dcparris


--------


--- On Wed, 26/10/11, Murray White <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: Murray White <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] LO auto save
> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
> Date: Wednesday, 26 October, 2011, 22:41
> Thanks to both of you. I'll save this
> in a folder as I have a good memory -- just short!
> 
> I'm working on a very large document currently at 215 pages
> and have been using Wordpad and I do a BU of that each day
> when I add any new text which I create in a separate file.
> 
> I have to now decide whether to continue with the use of
> WordPad for my daily work and just add to the LO file after
> doing the WP doc as .rtf. I'm currently saving the LO file
> as .odt but will likely do another save as .rtf to see how
> it looks as I'm not sure what the differences are. I also
> don't know if the printer of the book being created will be
> able to work from .odt or will prefer .rtf.
> 
> Unfortunately, WP does not show how many pages are complete
> or give the page breaks and because this document has both
> text and photos (many) the LO is nice to use.
> 
> For years I have used Works but for this I felt it might be
> an issue when the document goes to a printer as we will be
> doing close to 40 books.
> 
> Any thoughts from experienced LO users would be
> appreciated. At some point I really need to look up some LO
> tutorials to fully understand all that the program will do
> and offers.
> 
> I have not checked the "always make BU as I thought that if
> that occurs after each save, it could create some delays
> when dealing with a big file but once I adjust the current
> file and then begin to do the additional add on of
> information, I think I'll try the auto BU. I assume it will
> save a file called "copy" (previous file name) into the same
> folder.
> 
> Thanks again.
> 
> MW
> 
> 
> ________________________________
> From: Tom Davies <[email protected]>
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Wednesday, October 26, 2011 3:48:36 PM
> Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] LO auto save
> 
> Hi :)
> Yes, or use Steve's answer to set it at a reasonably longer
> time-interval (jic you do get carried away and forget). 
> Hmmm, longest is 60mins apparently.  It is a good idea to
> have the back-up thing ticked jic but i think that is
> unticked by default while the autosave is ticked.  
> Regards from
> Tom :)
> 
> 
> --- On Wed, 26/10/11, Steve Edmonds <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> 
> > From: Steve Edmonds <[email protected]>
> > Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] LO auto save
> > To: [email protected]
> > Date: Wednesday, 26 October, 2011, 20:39
> > Hi.
> > In options>load/save>general.
> > this is under my Tools menu item.
> > 
> > I turn off (untick) the backup and auto recovery options.
> > 
> > steve
> > 
> > On 27/10/11 08:29, Murray White wrote:
> > > I just downloaded and install LO today and am trying
> > out some things. One thing I wonder is if there is any way
> > to turn off the auto save? I prefer to use Ctrl + S at my
> > own choosing or to return to auto save if I find I prefer
> > that option.
> > >
> > > MW

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