On Thursday February 15 2007 12:48 am, ben wrote:
> The Writer Help item entitled Opening Documents With Templates
> states the following.
>
> "When you open a document that was created from a template,
> OpenOffice.org checks ... If a document was created using a
> template that cannot be found a dialog is shown that asks you how
> to proceed next time the document is opened. ..."
>
> My 'experiment' [see below] suggests that this may not be correct.
>
> [] At the outset, a template called D is the default.
> [] I open a new blank document, modify one of the para styles, save
> the template -- call it A -- and make A the default template. Close
> the document.
> [] I open a new blank document, verify that the underlying template
> is A, enter several paras of text, apply the modified style to one
> of them. Save the doc as TEST and close it.
> [] Via File > Template > Organize , I DELETE the template A and
> [re-]designate D as the default template.
> [] Now I open TEST . No problem, no message from Writer!!!
>
> But (as I understand the Help item), since A is deleted, Writer
> should now display a dialog, asking me what to do about this
> situation.-- Did I misunderstand something? What exactly should
> happen in this situation?
>
> I THINK the Help item is WRONG. Information about styles [list of
> available styles, and their specifications] is carried in the
> document, in what I think of as a 'virtual' template associated
> with the document. So the fact that A [which defined the initial
> associated template, when the document was created] no longer
> exists is irrelevant and there is no need for any message from
> Writer and no need for any decision by the user. --- Does that seem
> right?
Perhaps you need to do a little differently. Create the new style
and save it as a template (A). DO NOT set it as the default template.
Then create a new document (TEST) based upon this new style. Save the
document. Delete the new template (A). Open the new document (TEST).
You will likely see the dialog about the missing template.
My thinking is this. You created the document (TEST) from the
DEFAULT template. Even though it has the styles of template A, it
still the DEFAULT template. Likely your document (TEST) was linked to
the DEFAULT rather than the A template. So, when you opened TEST, it
had an associated template: DEFAULT. This is true even if the styles
of the DEFAULT template had been changed.
Dan
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