Hi :)
Yes, we have had people on this list that have solved their problems by 
installing the official LO from "upstream" at LibreOffice rather than using 
their *buntuised version from their repos.  


Regards from
Tom :)





>________________________________
> From: Dan Lewis <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Thursday, 17 January 2013, 17:17
>Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Broken file
> 
>On 01/17/2013 10:53 AM, Sandy Harris wrote:
>> On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 8:32 AM, Dan Lewis <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>>>       I'm not sure about this: Where did you get your copy of LibreOffice?
>> Via the Xubuntu Linux distro, 64-bit X86, 3.5.something kernel.
>> 
>>> And would you mention what version you
>>> are using again please?
>> "about" says Version 3.6.2.2 (Build ID: 360m1(Build:2))
>> 
>> All updates Xubuntu has released are applied.
>     My reason for asking is that versions of LibreOffice provided by an OS's 
>repository sometimes have unintended bugs in them because of the changes they 
>have made in their version.  I haves seen complaints over the years about bugs 
>that exist in an OS version of OOo that did not occur in the OOo website 
>version. I think I have seen this with LO, but I'm not real sure.
>     As it has been mentioned, repeatedly changing the document's format could 
>be the guilty culprit.
>     One warning about AbiWord. It has been my experience that it does not 
>handle large text documents with extensive formatting and graphics. I opened a 
>copy of one of my Base chapters (1.6 MB, 45 pages) with it. It crashed after 
>creating a saved version that was 2.4MB! The latter is not a correctly formed 
>zip file.
>     One thing that I forgot to mention earlier is that correctly formed .odt 
>files are zipped files. It can be unzipped by renaming the .odt extension to 
>.zip and using unzip. The content.xml file in it has all the content of the 
>.odt file without any of the styles. If a new text document is created, it can 
>be modified to contain the content.xml file from the problem document. Extract 
>the content.xml from the problem document. Change the extension of the new 
>text document to .zip. Then add the content.xml file to this zip file. I 
>double click a .zip file to open the Archive Manager which you use to add the 
>file. (I don't know the name of this program in Xubuntu.)
>
>--Dan
>
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