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Re: [tlug] Gentoo Binaries?
On Saturday 29 December 2007 03:41:52 Scott Robbins wrote:
> I would at least give the binaries another shot--I can't believe they
> wouldn't have language support.
Back when I tried it last, the binary version worked fine with kinput2/canna,
but it did not work with SKIM. Yes, I will give it another shot when I can
find the time.
> If not, what about the lighter alternatives, e.g., Abiword (for .doc type
> stuff.)
My reason for using OOo over lighter alternatives is the hierarchical styling
system (with inheritance). (I guess I should just say "cascading styles.")
I used to have access to a site-wide licensed Adobe FrameMaker (on Solaris)
and used that software for all of my writing (aside from LaTeX for technical
documents). I no longer have access to that software after moving to Japan,
but I have found that OOo actually has most of the features that I need. I
wish OOo had a strict mode, though, to disable the ability to override the
style of selected text. I have not highlighted text and changed the font in
many years, but a strict mode would allow me to prevent other people from
doing so on a shared document. OOo does have master document support,
though, which allows you to override any such changes quite easily.
> That's assuming you liked Gentoo enough to go through the trouble of
> trying one of these.
I miss Gentoo on my desktop system, as it was significantly more stable than
other distros that I have used since. My problem is time, which Gentoo tends
to require lots of...
> (However, I would definitely avoid trying to compile it--in FreeBSD, I go
> through the same thing--it's always a gamble whether it will compile or
> not. )
I am mostly satisfied with the functionality of the OOo word processor, but it
is a shame that it is so difficult to compile. Perhaps one day somebody will
write an open source FrameMaker-like application and give it a solid design.
Cheers,
Travis
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