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49 lines
3.1 KiB
Plaintext
49 lines
3.1 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4204
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Title: HPR4204: LibreOffice Importing External Data
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4204/hpr4204.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 21:21:01
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4204 for Thursday the 12th of September 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, LeBrofus importing external data.
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It is part of the series LeBrofus.
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It is hosted by GemLog and is about three minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, it's how to use the normal menu items to make online tabular data easier to use.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q.
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We are airing it now because we had free slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello HBR, GemLog here again.
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This isn't a very long tip, kind of a tech tip, but I've found it enormously useful.
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And it has to do with when you come across a site of tabular data like on Wikipedia or
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God forbid statistics Canada, there are just horrible UX pages where you can't
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sort the columns and the column headers don't stay in the right place.
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I used to try to copy paste them, but some of the pages are just too huge.
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What you can do, and I didn't know it was in there until
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not many months ago, really, I've been using it for years, I've been using
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LeBrofus since it was open office and before that star office.
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But under the menu called Sheet, there is a way to link to external data.
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And you choose that, and you can just copy paste the URL for Wikipedia or statistics Canada
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or any of the other things into there, and you can import them.
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And usually the names don't make a heck of a lot of sense, you can't really tell which
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table it is. So I just bring them all in and then I delete the ones I don't want.
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I just delete those rows and try to get the row with the column headings up on the top.
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And then you can go to data and set an auto filter on those
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on those rows so that you can sort them. And then the next thing you need to do
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is move down to the second row and then you know about eight two I suppose usually.
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And freeze it under the view menu so that the column headers stay in the same places to scroll down
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because, for example, on statistics Canada, the pages are just extremely long if you're trying
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to read a census. And as soon as you've missed the first screen, you don't, you're just in a
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sea of numbers and you can't tell what column you're in. It's extremely frustrating.
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So the ability to just quickly import it into Libra off his calc is is marvelous.
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Yeah, that's really the only tip. I know it's not a very long show but it's all I've got.
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Sorry.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thoughts
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of recording podcast, you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our
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things.net. On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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