115 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
115 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1445
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Title: HPR1445: 22 - LibreOffice Writer Other Frame Styles
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1445/hpr1445.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 03:03:32
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---
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Whoo!
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Hello, this is Ahuka, and welcome to another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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And we're going to continue our Libra Office series.
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And we've got a few more programs to do on Libra Office Writer before I then move on
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to Libra Office Calc.
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So let's get going shall we?
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Now in the last episode, we looked at the frame style for text.
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Confusingly, it's not called text, it's simply called frame.
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But you know, that it is what it is.
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Well, this is a very common use of frames.
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You can use frames for any number of things.
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It's a very powerful technique.
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So we want to take a look at some of these others.
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But to start with, let's get back to the basic concept of objects.
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Libra Office is an object-oriented program.
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And you should keep this in mind when dealing with this software.
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A piece of text can be an object, and it can contain other objects.
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Paragraphs, sentences, words, characters, or it can be contained within other objects.
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Sections, chapters, document.
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In the case we are looking at, a frame is an object.
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In turn, it contains other objects.
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And in turn, it is contained within larger objects, such as a page, a section, or a document.
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Depending on the objects being contained, the frame styles can be different.
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And that is what we need to look at now.
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First, let's take a look at the formula frame style.
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This style is for objects created using the formula application,
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which in earlier versions of Libra Office was referred to as math, but that was a little bit confusing.
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This application is not for doing calculations.
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You would do that in Calc, but it is intended primarily for educators and academics
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who want to create proper formulas to embed inside of documents.
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So it's really just creating a visual appearance of how the formula should look.
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It's not actually doing anything other than that.
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So the subject of using formula will be explored later on, because that is, in fact, an application within Libra Office.
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But for now, if you go to insert object formula,
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it will open the formula editor, and you can create your formula.
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When you click Save, the formula will be entered into your writer document,
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with a formula frame automatically added to hold it.
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If you check the frame properties for this frame, you will see that it is automatically sized to fit the formula.
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If you double-click inside the frame, the formula editor will open again, and you can make changes, including the font size.
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And when you save it, the frame will resize again to fit the object.
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One thing to note is that by default, the formula frame is anchored as a character,
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which means it is designed to be used in line in a sentence.
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Because it automatically resizes all of the size settings are grayed out,
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and other options in the style properties are like what we saw for the text frames.
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Now, the next one we're going to look at is the graphics frame style.
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As you might expect, this holds pictures. They could be photos.
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They could be drawing objects created in the draw application.
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You first have to have the picture or the drawing or whatever the graphic is.
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But once you have it, you can insert it into writer.
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And when you do a graphics frame is automatically created to hold the object.
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Now, if you want to do a draw object, one of the things you can do is go to insert object,
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OLE object, and that opens up a window of options.
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And when you do this, this may trigger some thought, oh my goodness,
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I could also embed a spreadsheet, a chart, a drawing, a presentation, or a formula.
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I'm not going to leave it at that for now.
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At some point, we may want to get into object linking and embedding,
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which is what OLE stands for, and understand it some more.
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But that's a very deep topic all in itself, and we've got to keep moving here.
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So the next one is the label frame style.
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Now, this is intended for use with sheets of labels.
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And according to the Libra Office documentation is not really intended for users to work with.
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Libra Office writer is set up to use these internally when you create a document for printing labels.
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Essentially, if you've ever worked with sheet labels,
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you know that the manufacturer has put a identifying part number on each type of sheet label that they do.
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And most of those, you already have all of the definitions embedded into Libra Office writer to begin with,
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so you can just select that and start printing.
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That's all I'm going to say on that subject.
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Next is the marginalia frame style.
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This creates a frame next to the left margin, which can be used to add comments on the rest of the text.
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It's also used commonly to create subheads in technical writing.
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To do this, you need to have actually two frames, one marginalia frame for the subheads,
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and one text frame called frame, remember, for the body.
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Then there's OLE, which is, as we discussed a moment ago, object linking and embedding.
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This takes an object from one source and embeds it in another object.
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For example, you can create a chart in Libra Office Calc and embed it in a writer document.
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But writer remembers what kind of object it is.
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And if you double-click the object, it opens up the original application so that you can edit it.
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Again, a false discussion of OLE is beyond the scope of this particular tutorial.
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And last one is watermark.
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As the name suggests, this style is replacing a watermark on the page.
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This would be a background graphic, and it would default to being what's called a through wrap,
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if you remember our discussion of wrapping options.
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And that means that the text passes over the frame and anything that's in the frame.
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Now, you should take care that the graphic still allows the text passing over it to be readable.
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This can also be used to create a draft marking in the background.
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One thing that you might want to consider is a possibility.
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You can either create a work with this watermark style and create a variation on it
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that has already got draft as part of it.
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Save that as a style and put it in your default template.
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Or you can create a template to use for drafts.
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Whichever way you go, remember that any style that you're going to use over and over again
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must be saved in a template.
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So I would say creating a draft page style and saving it in a template is an excellent idea
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so that you don't have to start from the beginning every time you need to do this.
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So that, I think, concludes our discussion of the other kinds of frame styles.
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So this is Ahuka signing off for Hacker Public Radio and reminding everyone to please support free software.
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Thank you.
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