I am not a Macro person, but I wonder how much of this can be done with Macros.
I know one book writer that does a great deal of his work through macros he created over the years. He could not find any word processor package that did what he wanted so he learned to write macros. First with Star Office, then OOo, and now using LO on his Linux system. I do not remember all of the things he wrote about in his "author's notes" before he got into his e-newsletter, but one time he did talk about all of the things he needed to be done and went out to find a package that could do it through the macros. The last "author's notes" was about getting OOo running on a new Linux system. That was when it was in the late 1.x stage or early 2.x one. Just about 2 years ago, I found out he switched to LO. He no longer writes/co-writes 4 to 6 books a year, but he still does a few, now that he is in his late 70's. So Those who are really good at writing Macros, how much of the info below can be taken care of through some type of macros? On 10/10/2013 06:09 PM, CougarB wrote: > When I was a full-time journalist in the 1980s, I became very successful > using a dedicated outliner called PCOutline. When all the major Word > Processers came along--MS Word, Word Perfect, etc, the lack of outliner > functionality kept me with my archaic outliner until MS Word beat the > functionality of PCOutline. > > I used outlining as my main method of work when a full-time technical writer > in the 90s (e.g., Fujitsu Software in San Jose). While working for a java > house, I was so influenced by the negative developer reactions to MS, that > I've been wishing to move to OpenOffice or LibraOffice ever since they came > along. But you don't have the functionality that I need, and furthermore, > the discussions of outlining on this forum seem to miss the whole point, > from my point of view. > > I'm a very motivated wannabe LibraOffice user who currently can't make the > switch, because although I'm retired and writing fiction, the power of an > outliner for writing in all genres is something I can't live without. > > So my reasons are complex--sorry about that--but tl:dr will not allow you to > understand them. Please take the time. I really want to quit Microsoft > Office forever and ever and ever. Thanx. > > The first functionality I need might seem mickey mouse, but it's the > foundation for everything else. This is that in Word's outliner view, > there's a button in front of every paragraph that I can drag and drop up and > down. It's like cut and paste, but a lot faster. Combined with other > features, it's extremely powerful. > > The second functionality I need is to be able to collapse things. In an > article of 25 paragraphs, I can hide every line except the first line of the > paragraph, thus allowing me to see the entire article of 25 paragraphs on > the screen at the same time. This allows me to completely rearrange the > entire article by drop and drag. > > For editing a single sentence or paragraph, I insert a return between > sentences, phrases, and even words, drop and drag these elements into a new > order, and delete the returns. Voila! A much better constructed paragraph or > sentence in a snap. > > The third functionality is to collapse things within headers. For instance, > if I've interviewed a dozen people for an article or if I've brainstormed 5 > pages of random ideas for a blog or a chapter in a novel, I create headers > for different topics and then drag and drop paragraphs, quotes, ideas, etc > into the headers or buckets I've created. When one header becomes too full > and fills too much of the screen, I collapse it, so that it hides all the > paragraphs already there, which cleans up the screen. When I'm done with > this step, I have half a dozen headers, under which are many different > ideas, all of which are completely hidden. > > So I drag and drop my half a dozen headers into the correct order. Then I > open the first main header and create a bunch of subheaders. Once this is > done, I reorganize all of the points in this first section into subsections > or sub-buckets, collapsing them all as needed until everything is organized > into a number of different subheaders. At this point, I can rearrange all of > these subheaders into the best order that they belong in. I can even drag a > subheader into a different main heading if I choose, where it will remain as > a separate section. > > I can repeat this process as many levels as I wish. This feature in MS Word > is fractal to nine levels. From a chaotic mixture of confusion emerges > order, insight, and wisdom--in one single step. > > As a technical writer, I used to sit in a brainstorming meetings, write down > every developer idea as fast as I could (including those I didn't understand > at all), type it all sequentially, and then very quickly organize all of the > ideas into a coherent whole. The developers thought I actually knew how to > program. (Mwah-hah-hah!) > > I could never have done that with LibreOffice as it's now configured or > OpenOffice, either. Without my Word outliner, I would have been a shitty > technical writer, and I would never have been able to write the developer > guides I wrote. > > As a creative writer today, I currently have a dozen projects that are > percolating, as well as one major project that I'm focusing on. I just > brainstorm for anything that comes up, drag the ideas into the proper > buckets, and I never lose anything of value. (Yes, the word "never" is > absolutely accurate.) > > It's like having a Super Power that's available to everyone, but no one > knows how to get it. Currently, this Super Power is only available in MS > Word. Please make it possible for me to migrate to LibreOffice without > losing my Super Powers. And please make these Super Powers available to the > world. Doing so could cause the entire planet to evolve into better writers. > You can help eliminate crappy writing! > > Until you do this, LibreOffice is like Kryptonite to me. I can't come near > it, even though I truly want to. > > I beg of you: Please help poor little Cougar quit his addiction to > Micro$oft! (Yeah, I know. Outliners do not eliminate the scourge of mixed > metaphors.) > > For those of you who made it this far, thanx for listening. > Cougar > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/Feature-Request-Lack-of-Outliner-Functionality-a-Deal-Breaker-for-Me-tp4077564.html > Sent from the Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > -- 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
