https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=153682
Bug ID: 153682 Summary: FORMATTING: Objects are moved in LibreOffice Draw even if I group them Product: LibreOffice Version: 3.6.7.2 release Hardware: Other OS: Linux (All) Status: UNCONFIRMED Severity: normal Priority: medium Component: Draw Assignee: libreoffice-bugs@lists.freedesktop.org Reporter: wilhelm.e...@web.de Description: I used LibreOffice Draw to create some structures. Therefore I pasted a screenshot into a new slide and added some rectangles to the slide and placed them over parts of the screenshot. To avoid moving some objects, I grouped them for each slide and saved all. After opening the file again, the screenshot is looking different (it's larger than the area I cut and chose) and all the objects on the slide were moved so the slide doesn't look like I made it. Steps to Reproduce: 1. Paste a screenshot or an other image file into LibreOffice Draw. 2. Right-click on the object and choose "Cut". 3. Cut the image. 4. Choose some rectangles from the toolbar and add them onto the image. 5. Mark all objects on a slide using Ctrl+A and right-click choosing "Group". 6. Save the file. 7. Close the file. 8. Reopen the file again. Actual Results: The rectangles aren't at the position where I have placed them the last time I have worked with the file. Furthermore, the images are cut in another way than I cut them. Expected Results: The slide looks the same as it looked when I saved it the day before. All the objects are on the position where they should be. Reproducible: Always User Profile Reset: No Additional Info: [Information automatically included from LibreOffice] Locale: de Module: DrawingDocument [Information guessed from browser] OS: Linux (All) OS is 64bit: yes [Information added manually] Version: 7.3.6.2 / LibreOffice Community Build ID: 30(Build:2) CPU threads: 4; OS: Linux 5.14; UI render: default; VCL: kf5 (cairo+xcb) Locale: de-DE (de_DE.UTF-8); UI: de-DE Calc: threaded -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.