And trying now I had to <delete> the lines between and couldn't
<backspace> the line. Then I could merge tables. Always wondered how to
do that.
Steve
On 2013-09-08 05:48, Tom Davies wrote:
Hi :)
This is a public mailing list so it's a bit informal. Hopefully several people
will help steer this to arrive at a right answer that suits you. We might have
to ask a few 'dumb' questions to try to clarify things along the way. Feel
free to do the same.
1. Have you considered using Calc instead? If there is stuff outside of the tables then
it might be easier to use Calc and then have text-boxes or "merge cells" to
contain the normal text.
2. I take it the size of the table on page 1 grows as stuff is entered into
the table? Is that data re-typed in from a printed source? if so it might be
possible to get Base (database program) to read that source directly and
produce a more dynamic report.
Keeping it in Writer might be best for now though.
I found that i had to delete all the newlines between the 2 tables, so that it looked like they
were joined even though they weren't really. Then the "merge tables" options
un-"greyed out" and that let me really join the table together.
In my case i had a different number of columns in each table but that didn't
seem to worry it at all. Then
Table - Select - table
selected all of both tables.
It might help to toggle the back-to-front P in the toolbar so that you can see
all the non-printing characters so that you can see the newline characters that
appear when you press Enter. That makes it easier to see what is going on and
makes it easier to delete the right things.
The best documentation (imo) is here
https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/Publications
There are also video tutorials for this and other OpenSource programs at
http://spoken-tutorial.org/
The quality of the English in the ones i watched was better than that spoken in
most places around where i live. There are other guides and Faqs that might
also prove useful and there is always the in-built help too (F1 or the Help
menu)
Please feel free to write in to the list as soon as a problem arises even
before you have had a look around for yourself. Hopefully you might find the
answer before we do (by googling it or through documentation or something) and
if you do please let the list know the crucial bit of the answer.
Don't worry about switching programs to get the odd one or few things done.
During a migration from one program to another it is quite normal to fully
understand the old way and not yet be fully familiar with the new one. As time
goes on you find less and less need to go back to the old program and may even
find yourself batching up a few jobs for final tweaks in the old program.
Most of us have both LO and MS Office on our systems. Often it's just to help out
colleagues with their problems when they don't know how to do something in MSO, or to
check how things look. Usually it's an old version. Sometimes employers like to buy the
newest thing even though we don't really use it. After using LO for even a little while
you will probably find that you gain a MUCH deeper understanding of how MSO works and
your colleagues will seek your guidance. So, don't worry about them ridiculing you right
now, to quote Gandhi "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight
you, then you win".
MS Office doesn't usually allow people to have 2 versions of their Office Suite
on the same machine. A normal install will typically wipe out the previous
version. So when they try to upgrade to MSO 2013 they will be really stuck
with tons of things they don't know how to do and no way of going back to the
old version to get them done there. Typically they will need to go off on
training courses and all sorts costing either than or the company a lot of
money just in order to do what they could do on the older versions. MSO
prefers to make people spend money and make life difficult rather than give
them an easy migration route.
So, feel free to ask and if you find the answer first then just let us know!
Regards from
Tom :)
________________________________
From: Robert Burnett <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, 7 September 2013, 16:25
Subject: [libreoffice-users] Table Breaks in Writer
Good afternoon, after 2-3 hours today, no idea how many hours on other days on
the following problem, so I have decided to contact you to find the solution.
Problem, I use writer and have a 2 page document that holds a table on each
page. As time passes the size of the table on page one changes so that rows
end up in page two. When this happens I do a table split and everything is
fine.
The problem arises when I attempt to remove the gap/break between the tables,
this occurs when I need to join the tables on page two. The same problem
albeit on page one occurs when I reduce the rows in the table on page one, the
break rises from page two, so that I end up with a gap between two tables on
the bottom of page one. The table merge is greyed out, no other action works
so I have to close the document, open the document in microsoft and all I do
is, place the cursor in the gap and hit cut, gap gone and the two tables are
now joined, on either page.
How can I manage this in Libreoffice as it is embarrassing to have to close one
software program and open another for such a simple task when other people are
observing as it indicates a) I don't know what I am doing or b) libreoffice has
a software issue.
Your assistance would be appreciated in providing a solution, please
Regards
Robert
--
To unsubscribe e-mail to: [email protected]
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted