Le samedi 25 septembre 2010 à 10:25 -0400, Lennart Sorensen a écrit :
On Sat, Sep 25, 2010 at 09:57:30AM +0200, Fabian Greffrath wrote:
No joke, it has been yesterday that somebody told me Debian is weird,
because it installs two word processors by default.
Am Montag, den 26.04.2010,
Am 27.09.2010 09:04, schrieb Josselin Mouette:
I’ve seen that (with both abiword and gnumeric), and I’ve seen the
opposite too: documents that display fine in OOo but have everything
messed up in abiword.
Right, but is this really a good reason to keep both of them (i.e.
that they fail
Le lundi 27 septembre 2010 à 11:25 +0200, Fabian Greffrath a écrit :
Am 27.09.2010 09:04, schrieb Josselin Mouette:
I’ve seen that (with both abiword and gnumeric), and I’ve seen the
opposite too: documents that display fine in OOo but have everything
messed up in abiword.
Right, but is
Am 27.09.2010 12:19, schrieb Josselin Mouette:
As I already explained a the beginning of the bug report, OOo
integration with GNOME is a bad joke. The question is more: do we want
Yes, sorry, I forgot this part of the issue.
an office suite that can open this or that document, or an office
On Mon, Sep 27, 2010 at 12:19:58 +0200, Josselin Mouette wrote:
As I already explained a the beginning of the bug report, OOo
integration with GNOME is a bad joke. The question is more: do we want
an office suite that can open this or that document, or an office suite
that is consistent and
Am 27.09.2010 12:29, schrieb Julien Cristau:
As far as I'm concerned, the former (for what that's worth, which is
probably not much).
Should this discussion be escalated to -devel? I mean, it affects
every single Debian desktop install.
- Fabian
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Unfortunatly, popcon data can't be used to help with these kinds of
decisions. It produces graphs like these, which probably only show
that abiword and OOo have desktop file and icons that are read when
gnome is used.
No joke, it has been yesterday that somebody told me Debian is weird,
because it installs two word processors by default.
Am Montag, den 26.04.2010, 11:02 +0200 schrieb Josselin Mouette:
That’s not a good solution either, since there are lots of features OOo
has that abiword/gnumeric don’t.
On Sat, Sep 25, 2010 at 09:57:30AM +0200, Fabian Greffrath wrote:
No joke, it has been yesterday that somebody told me Debian is weird,
because it installs two word processors by default.
Am Montag, den 26.04.2010, 11:02 +0200 schrieb Josselin Mouette:
That’s not a good solution either,
Le dimanche 25 avril 2010 à 21:58 +0200, Fabian Greffrath a écrit :
Package: tasksel
Version: 2.81
Severity: minor
Tags: squeeze
Hi, tasksel installs two entire office suites on a freshly installed Debian
desktop system, namely openoffice.org and gnome-office. So there are two word
Le lundi 26 avril 2010 à 10:50 +0200, Fabian Greffrath a écrit :
Am 26.04.2010 09:33, schrieb Josselin Mouette:
I agree it is a problem, but there is no perfect solution.
* The OOo integration with GNOME is a joke.
* Gnumeric and Abiword both have features that OOo has not.
Am 26.04.2010 09:33, schrieb Josselin Mouette:
I agree it is a problem, but there is no perfect solution.
* The OOo integration with GNOME is a joke.
* Gnumeric and Abiword both have features that OOo has not.
So you suggest to drop OOo altogether? Well, that would be rigorous
Am 26.04.2010 11:02, schrieb Josselin Mouette:
This is how we end up with two office suites and two navigators.
By navigators you mean web browsers?
Yeah, you’re probably right. Let’s demote it to suggests.
xsane does not integrate well with GNOME either. How about simple-scan
or
Package: tasksel
Version: 2.81
Severity: minor
Tags: squeeze
Hi, tasksel installs two entire office suites on a freshly installed Debian
desktop system, namely openoffice.org and gnome-office. So there are two word
processing and two spreadsheet applications (plus the IMHO rather useless
planner
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