Hi :)
Programs with tk (or more usually gtk) at the end or at the beginning are for a 
one type of DE for Gnu&Linux.  Sometimes a G is used instead.  The other main 
type of DE usually has K or Qt at the front of it's programs.  

Often programs have a "back-end" or "command-line" tool that does most of the 
heavy lifting and then different "front-ends" or "Gui"s are put on for each of 
the 2 main types.  

Typically we talk about families of distros but even a single distro might have 
2 or 3 versions with each one having a different type of DE.  If you choose the 
'wrong one' then you can choose whether to install the other DE or get a 
different version of the distro that does have the 'right one'.  Tim at Kracked 
Press has somethings he likes in each of the main DEs so he installs both.  It 
makes his system a bit more bloated but means he can use choose more apps.  

DE = Desktop Environment.  The main 2 are Gnome and KDE.  Most of the rest 
(Xfce, Unity, Enlightenment and probably hundreds more) tend to be able to use 
front-ends written for one or the other.  

Ok, so it's not quite that simple.  2 extra wrinkles;  
1.  Gtk or tk are pretty rarely used but are for the Xfce DE (well really a WM 
(=window manager (note the lower-case w)) but that is nearly a DE) and Xfce 
apps work well in Gnome.  Gnome is a bit heftier (a bit more "fully 
functionally" if you know what i mean) so it's fairly normal to find a G 
(stands for Gnome) instead of the rarer Gtk but then that's a pain because the 
app might need a 3rd front-end instead of just having 2 to reach everyone.  
2.  Going back to seeing the K at the beginning of apps written for KDE makes 
sense but why the Qt?  Well, until recently Qt was less streamlined and was a 
lot of the weight in KDE.  Now it is a lot faster and lighter it seems that 
Gnome or distros using Gnome have pulled it in but just not quite enough of it 
for Tim's requirements.  
3.  Since Gnome often can run apps built for the 3 main DEs shouldn't that make 
it the DE of choice!?  Oddly not.  It's been forked in at least 2 or 3 
different directions and in Ubuntu it's been replaced by Unity (which can also 
run a lot of the Gnome, Xfce or KDE apps but is extremely unpopular amongst 
purists)  

I hope that helps!!  I hope i got it about right too otherwise i'm going to get 
deluged with unwanted flaming or something!  Something i like about Gnu&Linux 
is the passion and that we go all sorts of different ways but somehow manage to 
grow and learn from each other or make use of each others achievements and even 
build on them (if individuals are gifted enough)  
Regards from 
Tom :)  





>________________________________
> From: anne-ology <lagin...@gmail.com>
>To: Felmon Davis <dav...@union.edu> 
>Cc: users@global.libreoffice.org 
>Sent: Friday, 12 April 2013, 16:29
>Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Importing PDF problem
> 
>
>       Curiously wondering what this 'new' PDFtk is -
>           and how to acquire it ...
>              or is this something only for Linux users  ;-)
>
>       The longer I'm on this amazing list, the more I'm learning about
>these 'glorified-typewriters'  :-)
>
>
>
>On Sat, Apr 6, 2013 at 12:49 AM, Felmon Davis <dav...@union.edu> wrote:
>
>On Fri, 5 Apr 2013, David Ronis wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Hi Jay,
>>>
>>> Thanks for the reply.  I'm using Linux (Slackware).  Unfortunately,
>>> exporting to text is not an option here as the PDF's contain various
>>> drawings that can't be omitted.
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>
>> what format does this 'single file' have to be in? if it can be itself a
>> pdf then use pdftk.
>>
>> pdftk allows you to 'join' multiple pdfs into one.
>>
>> take the .doc stuff and convert to pdf then put it all together via pdftk.
>>
>> the syntax for pdftk is a bit weird (I find it hard to remember) but at
>> the same time very simple.
>>
>> Felmon
>>
>>
>>
>>> From: Jay Lozier <jsloz...@gmail.com>
>>> To: users@global.libreoffice.org
>>> Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Importing PDF problem
>>> Date: Fri, 05 Apr 2013 17:18:42 -0400
>>>
>>> On 04/05/2013 04:18 PM, David Ronis wrote:
>>>
>>>> I'm currently working on a large project that requires me to import many
>>>> documents from my colleagues, some in word or PDF formats, into a single
>>>> file.  Libreoffice doesn't work if I try Insert->File... on a PDF file
>>>> (I get an error popup saying Error rereading the file).
>>>>
>>>> I can open the PDF file (in draw) and cut and paste each PDF page into
>>>> the document, but that is painful.
>>>>
>>>> Is there a way to make File->Insert work, perhaps via a macro?  If not,
>>>> consider this a feature request.
>>>>
>>>> David
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>  What OS are you using?
>>>
>>> In some pdf readers you can export the entire file as a plain text file
>>> and this file can be opened in Writer or imported into Calc. I do not
>>> know if this would less or more painful. You would have the entire file
>>> at once but would need to format the text.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>> --
>> Felmon Davis
>>
>
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