The entity you are looking for is, in fact, called a "hyperlink." Among its parameters is the URL it points to and its representation in a document. Unfortunately, the designers of OOo decided to refer to its style when it has not been visited as an "Internet Link" and the style when it has been visited at a "Visited Link." It is also true that entering either "Internet Link" or "Visited Internet Link" in the help find dialog does not find either entry. However, finding "hyperlink" leads to "Editing Hyperlinks" which contains the information you are looking for.
(a different) John On Thu, Nov 19, 2009 at 11:00 PM, John Kaufmann <[email protected]> wrote: > In a message dated 2009.11.19 22:00 -0500, Charles T. Bell wrote: > > Seeking info on the automatic use of Writer's character style >>> "Internet Link", I went to OO's Help and did a Find on "Internet Link" >>> - without the quotation marks, it should be noted, because Help's Find >>> does not support the convention of quotation marks to indicate an >>> exact string search - and that is the problem: Is there a way to Find >>> an exact string like "Internet Link"? >>> >> > No. You can't find what isn't there. >> > > ? Nothing about: > - Automatic adoption of certain character styles? > - "Internet Link" [yes, I know elsewhere OO uses "URL"; naming consistency > is not OO's strength]? > Sorry, I don't understand: What is it that isn't there? - and if something > is not there, how would one know before searching for it? > > You might try "hyperlink" which is the correct term for what you want ... >> > > Is it? (I don't think so.) You can look at adjacent thread [Character > styles "Internet Link" and "Visited Internet Link"] for some idea of the > questions I was searching for help on. Unless I'm missing something, what I > was looking for is what I wanted. > > Thanks, > John > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > >
