130 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
130 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1715
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Title: HPR1715: 48 - LibreOffice Calc - Cell Styles
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1715/hpr1715.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 08:08:51
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---
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It's Friday 27th on February 2015, this in HBR episode 1,715 entitled 48 Libra Office
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Hulk, Cell Style, and in part on the series, Libra Office, it is hosted by a hukka and in
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about 15 minutes long. Feedback can be sent to Wilnicat and Wilnic.com or by leaving a comment
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on this episode. The summary is how to use Cell Style to control the appearance of yourself.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared
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hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello, this is a hukka, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our ongoing series on Libra Office, Calc. And today, the topic is Cell Style.
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Now if you are already familiar with styles from Libra Office Writer, and Lord knows,
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we spent enough time talking about them, you should be, I think Cell Style is the equivalent
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of Writer's paragraph styles. Just as a single writer document can have a variety of paragraph
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styles applied to different paragraphs, for instance, headings, lists, actual paragraphs.
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A single spreadsheet can have multiple cell styles. And the same arguments for using
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styles also apply. If you have consistently used cell styles in your spreadsheet, you
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can update the appearance easily, just by changing the style, instead of needing to go through
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the file looking for every cell that needs to be adjusted. And by using styles, you can
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apply a large number of formatting choices to many cells with just a few mouse clicks. So
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it really does pay to learn how to use cell styles. Now, Calc comes with a minimum of five
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built in styles. Not a lot. We'll add to them. All right, first one is the default. As you
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might guess, from the name, when you just start typing in a cell in a new spreadsheet without
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doing anything else, you get the default cell style. The next one is heading, and then there's
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a heading one, result, and result two. Now, you can apply any of these styles by first opening
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the styles and formatting window, assuming you don't already have it opened and angered to
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the left as I suggested, selecting the cell or group of cells to which you wish to apply the
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style, then double clicking on the style in the styles and formatting window. This is much
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the same as applying a style and writer. If you do that in a new spreadsheet with each of the
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built in styles, you can see what they would look like. Now, the default should be pretty
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straightforward, because that is just your basic sans serif font, you know, what you're
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used to seeing. Heading looks like it's larger, bold, and italic. Heading one is also larger, bold,
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and italic, but it's rotated 90 degrees, so it reads sideways. So that's an interesting thing.
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Result and result two look the same and appear to be bold and italic, but the same size font is
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the default. There's another way to apply styles, though, that you have to dig for as it is not
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visible out of the box, and that is the apply style button. To make this visible, you first need
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to go to a blank spot on the formatting toolbar. This is the toolbar that has the font selector.
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Right-click to bring up a context-sensitive menu, and then select visible buttons, and then go to
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apply styles. This will add a drop-down style button, just like the one that is the default in
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writer, which will appear on the left side of the formatting toolbar. To use this, just highlight or
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select the cells you want to apply the style to, and select the style from the drop-down. It is
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handy enough that I keep mine on the toolbar, but it does not show all of the styles in my experience,
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so I always keep my styles in formatting window open and docked on the left.
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Finally, there is the fill format mode, which can be very handy when applying a style to
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widely scattered cells. To use this, have your styles in Format Window open. Click on the style you
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want to apply, then click the fill format button. This is located on the top of the styles in
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formatting window right next to the new style from selection button. This will turn your
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cursor into a graphic of a bucket pouring out the liquid of your imagination. When it looks like
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this, every cell you click on will have the selected cell style applied. When you're done,
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clicking the fill format button again turns it off. Now, as with page styles, there is a properties
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window for each cell style, and you can set a lot of options here. To get this properties window for
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an existing style, right click on it in the styles in formatting window to select it,
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and in the pop-up menu select modify. You get surprise surprise, a window with a bunch of tabs.
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It will look very familiar. In fact, it's very similar to the one we saw with page styles,
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it's very similar to the ones we saw with LibreOfficeRider.
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So, let's go through the tabs. First one, organizer. Now, as with page styles,
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anytime you're looking at a built-in style, you cannot change anything on the organizer tab.
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But if you're creating a new style, you can name it, you can link it, and so forth.
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As before, I advise against linking styles if you're not an expert on it.
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Second, numbers. This sets the cell format as number, percent, currency, date, time,
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scientific, fraction, boolean value, and text. Now, we covered all of these options in one of our
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first tutorials, LibreOfficeCalcCells. So, refer back to that if you need a refresher on the subject.
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Font. This is where you choose the font family, for instance, aerial,
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helvetica, etc., the font style, bold, italic, and the font size for yourself.
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Font effects. You can make your font be a color,
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underlined, or any of several other effects.
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Alignment. You can set right aligned, center, and left aligned here. But with spreadsheet
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shells, you have an additional option to set the vertical alignment to top, bottom, or middle.
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You can also set the option to automatically wrap text here, which is handy when you're using
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a spreadsheet for a text heavy use. I do that a lot in my work, actually, where I might keep a
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running issue list going in a spreadsheet. Borders. This lets you set borders for the cells.
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You can set them to one side, or several, or all four. And you can choose a line style, weight,
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and color. Background. You can put a background cover in any cell. Cell protection.
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If you first apply protection to the current sheet, you can then protect a cell, or a group of
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cells, which will stop people from changing the contents. You can also hide your formulas,
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or prevent cells from being printed. Now, many of these tabs have other options that are rarely
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used, and I don't plan to cover them in this tutorial, or it would get even longer.
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Now, what about creating styles? You know, if you really want to take advantage of the
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power of cell styles, you're probably going to want to create some. The built-in styles are few
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and rudimentary and won't get you far. But when you do this, remember the rule we have discussed
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so often before, that styles only persist if they are saved in a template. If you're working on a
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spreadsheet and get the idea for a style, you can certainly create it. And it will stay in that
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spreadsheet forever. But if you want to use it again, you need to save it inside of a template
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for future use. I plan to do an example of creating a template with various styles,
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to demonstrate the proper approach as my next tutorial in this series.
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But for now, I just want to run through your alternatives.
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First of all, you do have the option of creating a new style in the styles and formatting window.
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With the window open, make sure you have selected cell styles by clicking the very first button.
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Then, right-click in the window, select new, and your cell style properties window will open.
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Go through each tab, make your settings as necessary, then click OK to save it.
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Then, create a new style from a selection. If you find it easier to set up your style in the
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spreadsheet, get a cell to look the way you want it. Add a background color, if you like,
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set the font size, font style effects, alignment, and so on. You'll want to have some text in the
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cell to see the full results, but this won't matter. When it looks the way you like, click the
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new style from selection button, which is right next to the fill format button. You should get a
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window for entering a name. Just give your new style a name and it will appear in your styles
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in formatting window. Note that it will not pick up any of the actual text you used, just the settings.
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Modify an existing style. The last approach is to modify one. There's a couple of ways to do that.
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Open your styles in formatting window. Click on cell styles, then right-click on an existing
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style and select modify. This will open the cell style properties window. Go through each tab
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and make the necessary changes to create the style you need.
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Or select a cell that is using the style you want to modify. Make your changes in the cell itself
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until you like how it looks, then click the update style button, which is on the other side of
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the new style from selection button. Again, it will not pick up the text, just the settings.
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Finally, copying a style. Sometimes you just want to copy a style from one cell to another,
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even a one that is in a different spreadsheet file altogether. To do this,
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select the cell and copy it to the clipboard. Go to the cell where you want this style to be copied,
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select it and go to edit, paste special. The selection you want to make here is formats and
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nothing else should be selected. This will copy all of the style definition without affecting the
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contents. You need to make sure that the destination cell is selected and has a black line around it.
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This will also add the style to your styles and formatting window. This is a good way to copy a
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style you have created to a template in case you forgot to do this in a template. Just open the
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template, do this type of copy operation, then save the template. So, that rounds off this
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episode of Hacker Public Radio. This is Ahuka signing off reminding you as always to support
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free software. Bye-bye.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org. We are a community
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