Jonathon,
Of course it depends on what the template does. But at some point, it stops 
being a template and becomes a specialized program. Project management is a 
good example, too. Just as some people try to keep all the books of a small (or 
even a medium) business in Excel when they should be using a dedicated database 
and a good double-entry bookkeeping system like e.g. GnuCash, I’m sure some 
will try to manage a project with inappropriate software too. 

And I understand and appreciate your reference to high-priced templates. I’ve 
constructed a template to duplicate a two-page government form that 
self-calculates and shows/hides conditional text. It was tedious to construct, 
and required a bunch of sanding and polishing before it was ready to use. Then 
the government changed the !$@^&*&! form to a six-pager.  I revised it with a 
modest amount of Anglo-Saxon expressions that I learned from early exposure to 
Chaucer. Most users of AOO can’t do that (or perhaps, "are smart enough *not* 
to do that” would be a better way to put it.)

My reply referred to those quickie tasks, like a personal or business letter; 
an invoice; an article for the local paper; or maybe a personal essay. A 
template helps you get started quickly before your lose that spark of 
inspiration. It should also provide enough final polish that it can be 
submitted for publication and subsequently saved in the archive of rejected 
articles….errr…personal essays. For these, “make your own” is the way I’d go. I 
would also advise saving the .ott that you create into AOO’s template system 
(File -> Templates -> Save…), and then save a copy in a separate folder (Save 
as… [ODF Text Document Template (.ott)]) so you can tinker with it and not mess 
up your primary template. 

Jim


> On Nov 3, 2016, at 2:09 AM, toki <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On 02/11/2016 18:58, James Plante wrote:
> 
>> My advice is to make your own. 
> 
> That really depends upon what the template does.
> 
> The typical MSO Template with an MSRP in the US$400 price range, whilst
> creatable by power users, is usually both awkward and tedious to
> construct. Those in the US$10,000 price range are usually beyond the
> territory occupied by power users. Between those two price points,
> things are iffy, but tend towards requiring specialists to construct,
> and power users to utilize.
> 
> On the flipside, it is much easier to download templates for Project
> Management, than it is to construct them from scratch.
> 
> jonathon
> 
> 
> 


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