216 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
216 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1136
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Title: HPR1136: LibreOffice 01 Introduction to Office software
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1136/hpr1136.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:39:18
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---
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Want to do something different this coming New Year's Eve? Want to make some new friends,
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share some laughs and give something back to the community? Then please come along and join
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in with a Hacker Public Radio New Year's Eve show, a 24 hour oddcast marathon. We're running
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for the full 24 hours starting from Monday December 31st at 1200 UTC. I'll be there and I really
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want to spend my New Year's Eve getting to know you too. Full participation details are available
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at www.hackerpublicradio.org
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Hi, this is Ahuka. Welcome to another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio. In this occasion,
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I want to start what will probably be a fairly long series of recordings in which I'm going to talk
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about different aspects of Libra Office and I'm going to kick that off today. I hope to have at least
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a few things to say about all of the different components of Libra Office. In some cases, I might
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have more than a few things to say, but I think it's going to be fun and one of the reasons that I
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really want to do this is I've discovered this is one of those packages that everyone talks about,
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most people use, and yet when I talk to them fairly carefully or show them things, it usually turns
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out that they had no idea. So for instance, I had very recently done a presentation on Libra Office
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for a local Linux users group, Metropolitan Detroit, and there were people there, friends of mine,
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who are Linux experts, to some degree, had been active in the Linux users group for a long time,
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very knowledgeable, use Linux and things like that in their jobs, and I'd show them things as like,
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I never knew that. And boy, that's going to save me a lot of trouble now that I know how that works.
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So I think it's one of those areas that people just aren't as knowledgeable about, and maybe I can
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help with that. I happen to be an office software geek in that sense, and there had to be one somewhere
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now, you know, you found one here. I know I'm not the only one. I've talked to some others,
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in fact, recently, I had a chance to go to dinner with a fellow in Ohio named Andy Pataniak,
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who is also an office software geek, and we just got together to talk about things, and it was
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very enjoyable. So I want to see what I can do to help people to understand how all of this stuff
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works. And it does work very, very nicely, but you need to know some things about it.
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The first thing I want to say is that if you think about this in terms of learning a particular
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program, you are already off on the wrong track. That's not a good thing to do. In fact,
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I sometimes will talk to people who are in schools, and they will say something like,
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yes, we are teaching our students Microsoft Office, and they're going to be very proud of themselves
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for doing that, you know, because that's a very forward thinking thing to do, and you know,
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they're going to go with Microsoft Office because that's what's used in the workplace and everything
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else. And the problem with that is that you are then completely helpless if you're put in front
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of any other program. And the thing that I think a lot of people don't realize is they all work
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pretty much the same. There's not a huge difference between Libra Office, and Open Office,
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and Microsoft Office, and Corel Word Perfect Office, and for that matter, in any other office
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suite you want to mention, they all do pretty much the same thing, and they tend to do it in pretty
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much the same way. And if you understand that, and if you start to learn the proper way to think
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about these things, and you start to understand the concepts underlying what they do, then you are
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in very good shape. Because if you know those things, you can be in front of any program at all,
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and it really doesn't matter, because you'll know what it is that you need to do,
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and then the problem that you'll run into, which is comparatively a rather minor one,
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is to say, okay, for this particular program, where did they put this?
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So you're going to find that things are sometimes in a different place, or they have a different name,
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or whatever, but if you know what it is you're looking for, that's half the battle.
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You know, I had someone talk to me about, oh, you know, we introduced Libra Office, and the feedback
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we got was, you know, we couldn't do text boxes, and I thought, that's rather odd, that's a pretty
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standard kind of thing. But it turns out, probably the biggest part of it is that in Libra Office,
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they don't call them text boxes in the word processing program, which is writer. They call them
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frames. That's simply a terminology thing. In fact, the Libra Office frames are more powerful
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than the text boxes you see in most other programs. So in fact, rather than it being a weakness
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of Libra Office, it really should be a strength if you know that. And if you don't know that,
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then you have a problem. So when someone tells me, oh, I can't find this or that feature,
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I start to say, well, you know, wait a minute, tell me how you looked. Did you look at the documentation?
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You know, there's a lot of ways that you can get up to date on this stuff.
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So that's what we want to do. We're going to, we're going to kick this thing off here.
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And so the first thing we're going to say is, all the things I'm going to talk to you about,
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or at least as far as I can tell at this point, maybe we'll find something that is unique.
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But I'm going to say that basically everything we talk about will be just as applicable
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if you use Open Office. It'll be just as applicable if you use Microsoft Office. It'll be just
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as applicable if you use Corel Word Perfect Office. All right. So we're going to talk about the
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basic concepts that are involved and not get into the minutia of, you know, which buttons I,
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I will start giving you some guidelines about those things as well. But one of the things that
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I have said and I still think this is true is that if you look at all of the software programs
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that people run, the most used program is, or one of the most used programs certainly is word
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processing. That's right. I mean, I suppose email in the web browser might be more often used.
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But word processing is right up there. It's one of those apps virtually everyone uses.
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And I would also say the number one most misused application is word processing.
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Because not one person in a hundred has learned how to think about this properly.
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So I see this when I have someone sitting down at a computer and you know, you open up your,
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your word processing program, whatever it is. Because remember what I'm saying is the stuff
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applies to all of them. And you get basically a blank looks like a sheet of paper on your screen.
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And you're going to start, okay, what font do I want to use? Do I want to make it bold? Do I
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want to change the size? And you start clicking buttons all over the place. And when I see that,
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what that tells me is, you have no idea what you're doing, don't you? Because that's not the way to
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use a word processing program. There may be rare instances where that's as good as anything you can do.
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But a lot of times that's not the best way to think about things. You know, we sometimes have blinders
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that at one point we had typewriters and then word processing came along and it's like, oh,
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this is just a slightly better version of a typewriter because I can make corrections without
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using white out. No, word processing should imply something more than that.
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And because we have blinders, we sometimes forget what the software is actually capable of doing.
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I have a great example of just this blindness that hits people. Years ago, I was teaching a class
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in applied statistics. And this was in the computer lab because I always would teach that class
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very hands-on that you were at the computer doing your calculations and everything,
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doing all of your work at the computer. And so at one point, there was a statistical test
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that had to be applied. And I gave everyone the formula. This is the statistical test you're supposed
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to use. And you know, one of my students pulls a calculator out of his backpack.
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And I said, ah, interesting. So what are you doing? He said, well, I'm taking out the calculator
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professor because you want me to calculate this, right? And I said, yeah, I do. And I said,
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let me just ask you a question. What's that thing in front of you? He said, it's a computer.
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I said, what does the word computer mean? Eventually, the light bulb went off and he realized, oh,
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yeah, this is a machine that by its very nature is capable of doing any calculation I want and
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probably faster and easier than pulling a calculator out of the backpack. But he just hadn't
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occurred to him to think about it that way. Now, in terms of word processing,
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let's do a little thought experiment about all of this, shall we? Let's think about what happens
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when we're using a word processor. All right? So we open up our word processor
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and what are we going to do? Well, let's say, for instance, you're typing a letter.
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All right? It's a very common sort of thing to do. So how would you type a letter with a word processor?
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Well, you know, there's slight differences, but what I would probably do at the very top is I
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might click the flush right button and then type in today's date. And I might hit enter a couple
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of times and then hit the flush left button and type, dear Mary comma and then start typing my letter.
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And then when I'm done, I might do something like hit the tab button seven times to move over just
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past the middle of the page and I would type sincerely comma. And I'd hit enter three, four more
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times to put a blank space and hit the tab seven more times and put my name Kevin O'Brien
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or maybe just Kevin if this is a letter to someone I'm on fairly familiar terms with.
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That's a business letter I'd put Kevin O'Brien and then I would hit space and hit tab seven more
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times and put in my address, enter, hit tab seven more times, put in the rest of my address and so on.
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Now, the thing that you want to think about is and this is what a real expert would start thinking
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about don't all letters work mostly the same. Don't they have a lot of common features?
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Why would you do all of that manual work over and over and over?
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I used to say that the secret of my success with understanding computers and I'm not calling myself
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the words foremost authority but there are some things I know fairly well and I've always said
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that the reason that I get good at those things that I do know fairly well is that I am very lazy.
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I'm lazy in the intelligent way which is to say I don't want to keep doing the same thing over and over
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and that's the whole point about computers. Computers are a device for automating things that you do over
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and over and over. In fact I would say anything I do more than twice I want to figure out how to
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automate it. Now you can do that with word processing. You can give you can do all sorts of
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wonderful things once you figure out the secrets to it. All right. So if we don't forget what we're
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doing we can go in there and we can set it up so that I only need to do this once and then I've
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got it there. So what does that mean? Well what that means is we need to be talking about two key
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concepts templates and styles and these are the key. All right. Any word processor will have
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templates and styles. In fact if they don't have it my feeling is it's not a word processor it's
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a text editor. Nothing wrong with text editors okay they do serve a function in this life
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and when you want to use one that's a great thing but a word processor is something more than a
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text editor. It's something more than just a typewriter on steroids. It's something that has a
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tremendous amount of power if you use it properly. Now before we get into this I want to talk about
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something and if you're a programmer you're probably quite familiar with this already and this is
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the concept of objects. So what do we mean by objects? You know in programming there is this
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concept of object oriented programming. All right and that is to treat things it could be snippets
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of code or what have you. We treat things as objects and those objects can move around. It can
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appear in different places. So in a word processing document we can have all kinds of objects.
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Some of them are probably going to seem fairly straightforward. If you ever put a graphic
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into a word processing document you probably know that's an object and you'd be absolutely correct.
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It is an object. What you might not be aware of is everything else on the page is an object.
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A paragraph is an object. A heading is an object. A footnote is an object and so on. All of these
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things are objects. Now objects have a number of characteristics that we want to keep in mind here.
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I'm going to mention three of them. Objects have properties and there is now a general convention.
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It may not apply 100% of the time but most of the time it does that the properties for any object
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can be found on most computer systems by right clicking on the object and looking for the properties.
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So if you have a word processing document open if you were to right click in the middle of a
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paragraph you would see the paragraph properties. If you were right click on a photo you would see
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photo properties. In fact right clicking on an object will often bring up a window that has
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additional for instance with photos or graphical objects it might bring up a
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not extensive but a lot of editing capabilities that you can edit this object.
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You could create a graph in a spreadsheet application. Spreadsheet applications tend to have a lot of
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graphing and take that object and put it into a word processing document and if you right click
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on it it would often bring up the same properties you'd see if you were still in the spreadsheet
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application with the same editing things. So that's the first thing. Objects have properties
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and right clicking will generally get you to them. Another thing is that objects can function as
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containers. In fact very often this is like those Russian dolls you've seen. Every doll has another
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doll inside of it and that one has a doll inside of it and so on and just many levels of dolls
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inside of dolls inside of dolls. What we are dealing with with office programs very often is objects
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containing objects containing objects containing objects and they're just different levels of them.
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One of the things that can lead to is something called inheritance. An object can inherit properties
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in a number of ways either by being linked to another object in some way or by being contained
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in another object that might influence what its properties are. I realize that's a little bit
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abstract but please hold on to that idea of objects as we go forward in this series and I will
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occasionally point out that hey we're dealing with objects here remember what I said
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and that's going to help you to get a handle on that. Now templates. Templates and styles I
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said are the key. What is it about templates? Well the way that office programs work is that they
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are all based upon templates. So when you open up a word processing program and you see that blank
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sheet of paper on the screen what actually happened in the background is that your word processing
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program has a file that it thinks of as a template that says this is how new documents should look
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and it is making a copy of that and so your new document is an object it is linked to another
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object called a template and as a result it inherits properties from that link. So whatever you
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had set up the template to do your new document will do. That's a very important concept.
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Now we can have all kinds of templates and I think it's fairly straightforward when you look at
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something like word processing and I think people have started to get a sense of that. What you
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may not realize is that the same thing is true with spreadsheets. Your spreadsheet program when you
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create a new spreadsheet is based on a template your slide deck program presentation graphics.
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You create a new slide show based on a template and when you understand that then you understand
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oh I could make my template do whatever I want to do. Now years ago I was responsible for training
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all of the faculty and staff of a fairly small college and training them all using
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Microsoft Office at the time. I think when I started it was Office 97 that I was teaching them
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on and then what was next Office 2000. Don't even remember. But one of the things I remember
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from back then is that Microsoft Office every time you started a new document it was always
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times new Roman 10 point and 99 times out of 100 from what I could see the very first thing people
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would do is change that to 12 point because 10 point is really too damn small. I have no idea what
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they were thinking of but I frequently feel that way with Microsoft so people would have to go
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and change that. Now what I did was I just went into the template and I changed the template.
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So from that I just made that one change in the template and then from then on every time I
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opened it up instead of being 10 point it was 12 point automatically. People would occasionally see
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that. How did you do that? Well I'd show them how. It can be so much more.
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I did a demonstration when I was at Ohio Linux Fest and I taught a two hour session on Libra Office
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at Ohio Linux Fest this past year just about a month ago now and one of the things that when I
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got for a Libra Office writer I simply opened up a new document and then without touching the keyboard
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or the mouse or doing anything I had people take a look at the screen and say what can you see
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on the screen and eventually they started to realize oh your document has opened saying
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heading one and yeah that's right your document opened with the cursor in the middle of the page
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that's right and I would say that's because for what I do for my workflow that made a lot of sense.
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The heading one is the title of your document I tend to put the I tend to center my titles
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on the document so I simply set it up in the template open up everything that way ready to go
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and then we would go on through doing various other things and I'll show you more about how you
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automate all of these things so the point of what we're talking about here is that you could
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set up the template to do that and then you don't need to manually change everything every time
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you go in there so that's an example of what I call using it intelligently so this is our
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introduction and I'm going to get into the nuts and bolts next time I'm going to actually take you
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through changing the default template in Libra Office and maybe even talk about setting up some
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other templates and explain exactly how you do that and then we'll get into styles and we're just
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going to have a wonderful time going through all this so this is a hookah signing off catch you later bye
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does our
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