With Linux, you don't even need to change the extension, your archive manager 
should open it (try the right click menu).

Hagar (under Ubuntu 6.06).

Le 17.01.2007 23:39, Paul a écrit :

The compression used for native OOo documents is the same as used in
.zip files. The easiest is to modify the OOo file extension to .zip,
then open the file with the installed compression archiver.

"content.xml" is the file that contains most of the information I
believe your after.

/paul

On 1/18/07, James E. Lang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am developing an OOo 2.1 Calc template. I need to apply _similar_ conditional formating to a large number of cells. The process is tedious using OOo. For each cell I need to invoke "Format->Conditional Formatting ..." to set the three conditions. Since each formula is at least moderately complex the easiest
means that I've found is to copy each formula from one cell and paste and
modify it in each of the other cells. I also need to do the same kind of thing
with the formula that pertains to the data in each of these cells.

I believe that the document is a compressed archive of XML files. I would like to decompress it, to use a text editor to alter its content, and finally to
recompress it.

What commands do I need to use to accomplish the decompression and
recompression on a Linux system?

--
Jim

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