If this suite
is advertised as a personal office suite
rather than
professional the apps remain viable for many
Trinity
users. The tight
integration with TDE is a bonus too.
absolutely, yes.
I like kword and kspread well, ligthtweight, fast, well
integrated,
does (nearly) every thing I need, so far.
some quirks though (inconsistent font sizes, e.g.).
(I also tried koffice2.x several times, before it became
calligra, and it was
a complete mess, unusable, data loss etc.).
OO, however, is a monster and just plain overkill, I just
use it rarely when I
have to look at some M$-office documents sent from
someone...
I think our approach must not focus on MS compatibility. That is a hill far too steep to
climb. Not even the OO/LO people have achieved that --- and they never will. Every time I
test importing complex Word documents into OO/LO Writer they look broken. I'm talking
complex documents, not simple letters and memos with manual formatting. :) I have no hope
of any free/libre word processor having full compatibility with MS Office --- nor do I
care. The TDE team should focus "marketing" efforts on KOffice as a personal
office suite. Ignore the compatibility discussions.
Because of our recent discussions about maintaining Trinity user guides, I have been
looking into what KWord can actually do. I never used KWord. Yet as I read more about
KWord I am finding the feature set palatable for personal use.
With respect to sharing files created in KOffice, the compatibility bridge is resolved by
printing documents as PDF, which the underlying TDE print engine supports. Importing files
is another issue, but if users realize they can print to PDF perhaps they will demand
others do likewise. I have done this professionally too. I use an old version of MS Office
and when people send me a docx file I tell them to try again. Guess what? They do. :)
I want to spend several days using all of the KOffice apps in a focused manner to develop
a more healthy opinion about what is provided.
Somebody mentioned ODF support. We might need to ensure ODF support is up to date.
Tim, if KOffice ODF support is lagging, can we add that as a candidate for R15 (not R14
--- R15)?
I hope KOffice
is not removed from the Trinity line,
but I am wondering how
much work is involved to package the apps
separately.
Likely there would
need to be a koffice-base package that contains
all
the common libraries,
headers, etc.
hm, there ARE separate packages, e.g. kspread:
> aptitude show kspread-trinity
Well, then. Looks like I need to learn how to package the apps separately. Can anybody
here help with that? A mini how-to?
Darrell