Dave Boland wrote: >I read the documentation, but it says user created macros are beyond the scope of the documentation. REALLY!
Macros, as described in books such as _Six Sigma Statistics with Excel and Minitab_ by Issa Bass (ISBN 0-07-154268-X) or _Spreadsheet Modelling in Corporate Finance_ by Craig W Holden, is a somewhat specialized topic. With LibO, one can legitimately treat books such as _Automated Data Collection with R_ by Simon Munzert et al (ISBN 9781118834817) as the extended documentation for LibO, precisely because one can use R as the preferred macro language for LibO. On second thoughts, Munzert's book isn't an appropriate example, because it is about web scraping. On the gripping hand, extensions such as SMF are, for all practical purposes, webscrapers. Point is, with LibO, if you think that APL is the perfect macro programming language, go for it. > What the heck is the documentation for then? For people to learn what functionality is available. Should the documentation team be creating the LibreOffice equivalent of _Credit Risk Modeling using Excel_ by Gunter Loeffler, or _Quantitative Models for Performance Evaluastions and Benchmarking_ by Joe Zhu? Or would it be more suitable for the team to leave an individual or organization to pursue the goal of "Transform finance education to be based on LibreOffice"? (Slogan is a deliberate misquote of Craig Holden's organization SpreadSheet Modelling. (Now wondering if he'd put an individual who created all of the spreadsheets in _Excel Modelling in Corporate Finance_ using LibreOffice, on his Honour Roll.)) jonathon -- To unsubscribe e-mail to: users+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org 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