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133 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1685
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Title: HPR1685: 45 - LibreOffice Calc - Styles and Templates Introduced
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1685/hpr1685.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 07:42:20
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---
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It's Friday 16th of January 2015. This in HP are episode 1,685 entitled, 45, Libra
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Office Calc, Tile, and Template introduced, and in part on the series, Libra Office.
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It is hosted by AYUKA, and in about 15 minutes long. Feedback can be sent and willnicat and
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willnic.com, or by leaving a comment on this episode. The summary is, how the concept
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on Tile and Template can be useful in print sheets. This episode of HP are is brought to
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you by AnanasThost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello, this is AYUKA, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our ongoing series on Libra Office Calc. In this particular episode, we're going to introduce
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something that we've already talked about a great deal, but we talked about it in terms
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of writer, in terms of word processing. Now, we're going to talk about styles and templates
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in the context of spreadsheets, which you might not have thought of. Now, there's a certain
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difference in that I would say when you're talking about writer or any word processor, styles and
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templates are the key concept. You really cannot be considered at all proficient if you are not
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making use of them. They're not quite as central in spreadsheet use. So I think one can arguably
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be a reasonably proficient user without necessarily resorting to styles and templates, but they do
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give you control over the appearance of your spreadsheets and can give the sheets you create
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uniform appearance. So they're very useful. Particularly when we get into templates,
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being able to create templates within a spreadsheet program has some uses. I hope to illustrate
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some of that as we go ahead. So I'm going to hope that some of the knowledge that we created in
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the writer episodes is going to carry over a bit, but let's get to some basic concepts,
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okay? So first of all, a template. A template is a model that is used to create a new spreadsheet.
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Calc comes with a built-in template that it uses as a default if you do not specify anything.
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So what you see when you open a new spreadsheet out of the box is a copy of the default template.
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You are free to keep using this, but you may wish to have a default that has settings more to
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your liking. You can create a new template, save it, then set it as the default, and then if you
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change your mind, you can set it back to the original default setting. The thing to keep in mind is
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that templates are essentially containers. They allow you to create various settings,
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apply styles, add graphics, and then have all of them appear when you create a new spreadsheet
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based on the template. This is another application of the concept of objects and templates are objects
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that contain other objects. Now you can find some templates online which you can download.
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One source of course is LibraOffice itself. There is a template center in it's at templates.libraoffice.org
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slash template-center and I've put all these links in the show notes. Another source that I found
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is something called vertex42.com and they have templates, what they call templates for open
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office and LibraOffice. At this point they're still pretty similar. Generally speaking, if you find
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a template that works in open office, it'll work in LibraOffice. Is that going to be the same five
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years from now? I don't know. I think they are gradually diverging and frankly LibraOffice is
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moving ahead rapidly. I think open office is sort of languishing at this point, but we'll see what
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happens. So basically if you want to build up your template library with downloads do a little
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searching and you will find templates for Calc as well as other LibraOffice modules. Of course the
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other option for making things work exactly the way you want is to either customize an existing
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template or create one from scratch. You can do either in Calc, but just as with writer one of the
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main things you would want to do with your template is to store styles. So that brings us to our
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other big concept here. A style is essentially a set of formats that you apply to some element.
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As we saw with writer, you can have multiple formats applied as part of a single style.
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Among the choices you have are to choose a font family, a font size. You can add character formatting.
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For example, the out-of-the-box setting I have on this particular machine says that when I create
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a new spreadsheet, my font is aerial 10 point. That is the default style. But I could change it if I
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wish to something like Euphemia 11 Bold that would be applying a style. You can do it manually,
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of course, by selecting each of these settings one at a time in a new spreadsheet. But if it were a
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change I wanted to make often, creating a style and saving that style in a template makes my work
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much easier. Remember, if you create a style and want to use it again, it must be saved inside of
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a template. Otherwise, it is lost. In Calc things are a little simpler. Instead of the five
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kinds of styles we head with writer, in Calc there's only two kinds, paid styles and cell styles.
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You can access them in the same way as with writer. Go to the format menu and select styles and
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formatting, or you can use the hotkey f11. Either one will open the styles and formatting window,
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just as with writer. This initially appears as a floating window,
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but you can anchor it to the left side of the screen by holding down the control key and double
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clicking on the bar that holds the icons just under the title styles and formatting. Now note,
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the behavior of this window like much that is in Libra Office is actually set for the entire suite.
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If you could anchor your styles and formatting window to the left side in writer as I recommended,
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it will already be there in Calc when you open it. If you close it in Calc, it will be closed
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the next time you open up writer. Now whether this is a good or a bad thing may depend on how
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integrated you think Office Suite should be, but you probably do want to know about this behavior.
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And you probably won't be surprised to learn that it will show up again in impress, in draw,
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and so on. I think that if you use all of the modules of Libra Office with some frequency,
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you should probably get used to having it anchored. But if all you ever do is spreadsheet work,
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you may not need it on the screen at all times and might prefer to open it when required,
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but do get used to what it can do. Even in spreadsheets, I hope to show it is useful.
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The styles and formatting window has five icons or buttons on that top row.
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So if you hover your mouse over each of them, you get a brief description.
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The first one says, sell styles. This lets you apply styles to a cell or group of cells within a sheet.
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Page styles. This lets you apply styles to an entire sheet.
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Fill format mode. This lets you select a cell style and apply it to a cell or group of cells.
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The main use of this is to make a group of scatter cells identical in format.
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New style from selection. This lets you create a new style based on a style that is already existing.
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That's good if you want to make a different style that is only different in one or two respects.
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From the existing one rather than recreating it all from scratch.
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And finally, update style. This lets you change the style definition by applying what you have
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done to a specific cell. So it's a way of applying a style, in other words.
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Now, page styles. All right, that's a style that's applied to an entire sheet.
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And that's a little bit different from cell styles.
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Now, note that a sheet can actually be many physical pages when printed.
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But when we talk about page style, we're talking about an entire worksheet.
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Now, within a spreadsheet, you can have multiple worksheets.
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And each sheet can have its own page style if you desire.
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You can see which page style is applied to a sheet by looking at the bottom status bar.
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In the second section of the status bar, for instance, you might see that it says default,
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which indicates that it is the default page style that is applied here.
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If you have the styles and formatting window open and you go to the page styles tab,
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you can see that this is one of two styles available to you. The other is the report style.
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As in writer, you can open the properties window for a style by right-clicking on the styles name
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in the styles and formatting window and selecting modify from the pop-up menu.
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Now, you can set the properties for the page style here.
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So if the default style is not what you want, modify it here to reflect what you need it to be.
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If you would rather leave this as it is and instead make a new one based on this style,
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click on the style name in the styles and formatting window and then go to the new style from
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selection button, give it a name and then modify the new style in the same manner as above.
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Note that you cannot change the name of any built-in style.
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If you want a style that has a different name, either create a new style from the existing style
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or create a new one from scratch.
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Now, cell styles apply formatting to specific cells or groups of cells.
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The best analogy for a proficient user of writer is that they're very similar to paragraph styles
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in that module. The out-of-the-box options for cell styles are pretty limited. You get headings
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and results. As with page styles, though, you can create your own, either by modifying an existing one
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or creating a new one from scratch. Right-click on a style name in the styles and formatting window
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to bring up the properties window. As you would expect, the properties options are a little different
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here since cells and pages are two different type of object. In fact, two different levels of
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object. In general, everything we set about page styles applies to cell styles as well.
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From here, we will go into the specifics of using styles in templates, and I will make some
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suggestions as to how you can use all of these to simplify your workflow.
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But if you want some added reading material to help with this, there is a document called
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using styles and templates in Calc, and I have a link to that in the show notes, so you might
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find that of some interest. But for now, I think that's enough for a nice little tutorial.
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This is Ahuka signing off for Hacker Public Radio, and reminding you, as always, to support free
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software. Bye-bye.
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