scribus at lists.scribus.net Peter the answer to your question ?right-click the text frame and select Get text?? is yes, I do.
I use the most well known font ?New Time Roman?, because of the good italics in that font.. I can import text from MS word, no problem but it still dose not import Styles at all. I have also attempted import from Open Office on another computer with the same problem. The thing is that I used to be able to import from Open Office some 2 years ago. Could some one who is able to import from Open Office send me a small file to see if I can import that? Wena -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] To: scribus at lists.scribus.net Sent: Wed, 10 Oct 2012 12:59 Subject: scribus Digest, Vol 55, Issue 19 Send scribus mailing list submissions to scribus at lists.scribus.net To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to scribus-request at lists.scribus.net You can reach the person managing the list at scribus-owner at lists.scribus.net When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of scribus digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: Creating multi- page magazine (Peter Nermander) 2. Re: Creating multi- page magazine (Sveinn ? Felli) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Wed, 10 Oct 2012 13:02:04 +0200 From: Peter Nermander <[email protected]> To: scribus at lists.scribus.net Subject: Re: [scribus] Creating multi- page magazine Message-ID: <CAODejysoF2SRbmaDFsxwza8nzAEV48_8cGSOcmMNvSo7_H3A2g at mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 > I can see ODT, text file, but it wont import into Scribes, the text box > which is highlighted too. As I said I can copy and past the text into > Scribus but not the underline, bold, or italics. Did you try to right-click the text frame and select Get text? It seems to me you are doing something else... http://wiki.scribus.net/canvas/Working_with_text_frames#Loading_Text_from_a_File You should be getting this dialog: http://wiki.scribus.net/canvas/File:03file_dialog.png /Peter ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Wed, 10 Oct 2012 11:12:03 +0000 From: Sveinn ? Felli <[email protected]> To: scribus at lists.scribus.net Subject: Re: [scribus] Creating multi- page magazine Message-ID: <mailman.2495.1349867652.25036.scribus at lists.scribus.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Hi, ?ann ?ri 9.okt 2012 18:54, skrifa?i Joe Zeff: > On 10/09/2012 11:28 AM, wena-parry at talktalk.net wrote: >> Greg, >> >> I have tested a peace of text in Open Office and saved a >> file in ODT, >> but that wont even import into Scribus 1.4.1. I can past >> the text but no >> stile at all. >> >> My OS Windows XP Pro What is LO/OO there is a few >> reference to this in >> the mail? >> > > How strange. For the last several years I've been creating > my weekly contributions to an APA (Think of it as a two-page > newsletter.) in Open Office until Fedora migrated to Libre > Office and importing it into Scribus for formatting with no > problems. In my case, however, all of the styles are > imposed in Scribus. > Strange indeed. Paragraph styles in an .odt from several versions of LibreOffice import quite well (latest LO is version 3.6.2, Icelandic on LinuxMint 13, 64bit). Scribus Version 1.4.1. The only issue I've experienced so far is when a font does not exist in real bold/italic versions, character styles may get a bit strange if the font substitution is not adequate. So I'd recommend carefully choosing fonts and styles in LibreOffice/OpenOffice before importing to Scribus. Example from a .sla file: <para PARENT="test_Preformatted_20_Text"/> <ITEXT CH="When I have tried it, you should be able to import simple applications"/> <para PARENT="test_Preformatted_20_Text"/> <ITEXT CH="of "/> <ITEXT FONT="Liberation Serif Regular" CH="bold"/> <ITEXT CH=" and "/> <ITEXT FONT="Liberation Serif Regular" CH="italics"/> <ITEXT CH=" as character styles, but I think using actual"/> <para PARENT="test_Preformatted_20_Text"/> <ITEXT CH="paragraph and character styles in LibreOffice works best. You should"/> In this case the bold/italic attributes are messed up into the same plain character style, forcing a manual intervention to recover their differences. The font for the test_Preformatted_20_Text style was Droid Sans Mono which does not have bold/italic versions on my system. Simple font substitution; Liberation Serif for Droid Sans Mono, during import does not carry over these attributes - Scribus can't guess that if I want to substitute all missing fonts with Liberation Serif, then it should use Liberation Serif Italic for the italics etc. Fortunately Scribus is too precise for that. However, by using DejaVu Sans (Book) as a font for the style in the .odt, the result is quite different: <para PARENT="test_Preformatted_20_Text"/> <ITEXT CH="When I have tried it, you should be able to import simple applications"/> <para PARENT="test_Preformatted_20_Text"/> <ITEXT CH="of "/> <ITEXT FONT="DejaVu Sans Bold" CH="bold"/> <ITEXT CH=" and "/> <ITEXT FONT="DejaVu Sans Oblique" CH="italics"/> <ITEXT CH=" as character styles, but I think using actual"/> <para PARENT="test_Preformatted_20_Text"/> <ITEXT CH="paragraph and character styles in LibreOffice works best. You should"/> In this case Scribus finds easily the bold/italic counterparts of the same font. Which is understandable because the Droid font is designed for screen viewing, not printing. This is just saying that character styles coming from OOo/LibO are sort of hardcoded, while paragraph styles are more flexible. And saying that at least on Linux, Scribus does a good job of importing .odt styles. Maybe the font substitution is somewhat problematic on Windows ? Just thoughts, Sveinn ? Felli ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ scribus mailing list scribus at lists.scribus.net http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus End of scribus Digest, Vol 55, Issue 19 ***************************************
