When trying out betas I would really like an appimage or flatpak so that I do not overwrite my distros installation of LibreOffice. I will send them an e-mail and see if they plan on offering one.
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LibreOffice 5.3 Beta Available For Beta Testing
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Originally posted by Candy View PostAlready done that! Still switching back to Excel because of the performance bottlenecks within LibreOffice Calc and charts. The only thing that helped so war was disabling Antialiasing inside LibreOffice options. Though! It still crawls!
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Originally posted by ssokolow View Post
In what way? I dread the day it gets The Ribbon™.
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Originally posted by phoronix38 View PostWhen trying out betas I would really like an appimage or flatpak so that I do not overwrite my distros installation of LibreOffice. I will send them an e-mail and see if they plan on offering one.
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Originally posted by eydee View PostAnd the UI is still stuck in 1995.
Yeah....and you're still stuck typing in LibreOffice with a QWERTY keyboard invented in 1873 based on Latin Script which is based on the Latin Language that is more than 3000 years old.
Just because it isn't new and shiny like MicroSuck's ribbon monstrosity doesn't mean it is either useless or impedes work flow. Sometimes certain ideas and designs are close to timeless. They may need a small tweak here and there. But sometimes a wholesale change without context, precedent or proper training and assimilation is disastrous to productivity.
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Ah, the serial trolls. They're turning this place to shit just like what happened with Slashdot. "Waaaaaaa! It doesn't use Qt so I refuse to use it. Waaaaaaa! It doesn't use C++ so I refuse to use it!"
Pathetic.
As for the constant march of updates from the LibreOffice team ... I salute thee!
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Something really interesting on 5.3 that will provide joy to all the typographic buffs (like myself) is OpenType support using extended font names. The syntax is similar to the Graphite support. You can use real small caps, fractions (not alternative fractions, though), historic ligatures, etc. just by adding a colon and the corresponding OpenType's 4 letters tag to the font name. Of course the font needs to support the feature. For example for EB Garamond 12 you can use
EB Garamond 12:smcp
to obtain real small caps. You can apply several features simultaneously: use a & to add a new tags after the previous one. See here.
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Originally posted by caligula View PostYou could also try gnumeric. Libreoffice calc has had an awful performance recently. Maybe it's just too bloated and nobody cares. They're doing "a lot" and each release contains tons on "improvements", but let's be honest, the software is so huge that it's a walking time bomb. They should have switched to some sane language with good resource management such as Rust. It's not even modular, it's a huge monolithic pile of crap.
The Libreoffice issue is that the rendering engine still runs like crap in calc, and whoever is using calc does not care about contributing code to fix it as they just switch back to excel (gnumeric is faster, but not as excel).
It's as simple as that. You want it to get better? Do something yourselves.
As long as you whine and troll in forums nothing will get better.
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Originally posted by sheldonl View PostI'm just waiting and praying for either MS Office to come native to Linux or for it to get "The Ribbon™" Once you get used to "The Ribbon™" it's impossible to go back and everything else just seems clunky.
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