On 28/10/2012 Rod Lockwood wrote:
Is there a reason why, after changing the case of the filename of the
standard dictionary, OpenOffice would create a new one? The extra
standard.dic doesn’t show up in the Tools > Options > Language Settings
> Writer’s Aids, but it does show up on the drop-down
-Original Message-
From: Ariel Constenla-Haile [mailto:arie...@apache.org]
Sent: Sunday, October 28, 2012 08:51
To: ooo-users@incubator.apache.org
Subject: Re: Standard.DIC duplicate?
On Sun, Oct 28, 2012 at 08:44:10AM -0700, Dennis E. Hamilton wrote:
> This seems to be a problem in HTML render
On Sun, Oct 28, 2012 at 08:44:10AM -0700, Dennis E. Hamilton wrote:
> This seems to be a problem in HTML rendering of messages. Try reading
> the mail as plaintext.
>
> Rod, if you have the means, please send plaintext messages to lists
> such as this one. HTML-formatted mail is not recommended.
...@stny.rr.com]
Sent: Sunday, October 28, 2012 03:21
To: ooo-users@incubator.apache.org; rodlockw...@provide.net
Subject: RE: Standard.DIC duplicate?
Your text arrives as 6-point (maybe smaller). It is all but unreadable. Is
that something you're doing or an Internet hiccup?
Maurice
urday, October 27, 2012 8:00 PM
To: OpenOffice Users Mailing List
Subject: Standard.DIC duplicate?
Is there a reason why, after changing the case of the filename of the
standard dictionary, OpenOffice would create a new one? The extra
standard.dic doesn't show up in the Tools > Options > L
Is there a reason why, after changing the case of the filename of the standard dictionary, OpenOffice would create a new one? The extra standard.dic doesn’t show up in the Tools > Options > Language Settings > Writer’s Aids, but it does show up on the drop-down list when you click on Add in the sp