I don’t have OpenOffice but do have the very similar LibreOffice, developed as a fork from the OO project. OO can open PDFs in the Draw component and can save as PDF but by default saves as it’s own format xx.for word processing of xx.ods for spreadsheets. Draw allows some PDFs to be opened for editing but not all, and probably Foxit would be more convenient as a purely PDF reader.
I wonder if the file name problem is that it takes the first “.” as the start of a file extension? Could try substitution with some other character like an underscore?
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Open Office and Foxit Issues
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Open Office and Foxit Issues
madhatter wrote:I wonder if the file name problem is that it takes the first “.” as the start of a file extension?
Putting full stops as part of file names is always likely to be troublesome. Changing the program associated with file extensions is a Windows level thing. It's in Control Panel or its Windows 8/10 equivalent.
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: Open Office and Foxit Issues
Alaric wrote:Putting full stops as part of file names is always likely to be troublesome.
Especially if file extensions are hidden!
I believe that's the Windows default but that setting can be corrected by following various routes. Check the File Explorer 'view' options, for example. Precise details are probably version-dependent but readily discovered by a web search.
Being able to see the actual extension can make some other problems much clearer. ;^)
Cheers!
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- Lemon Pip
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Re: Open Office and Foxit Issues
Putting full stops as part of file names is always likely to be troublesome.
Much better to name files using convention 'YY-MM-DD xxx.(ext)'. In that way they can be sorted in datal order.
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: Open Office and Foxit Issues
dragnips wrote:Putting full stops as part of file names is always likely to be troublesome.
Much better to name files using convention 'YY-MM-DD xxx.(ext)'. In that way they can be sorted in datal order.
My method is to use
YYYYMMDD_name.ext
Where MM or DD are not known I replace with xx
So a scan to of a letter dated "Feb 2019" would be called 201902xx_ScannedLetter.pdf
YYYY is used because I have documents from the last century, and I like "one rule for all"
Padding with xx is used so that sorted directory listings are consistent, and it means vaguely dated stuff turns up in the right place/order when I do a search.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Open Office and Foxit Issues
pochisoldi wrote:dragnips wrote:Putting full stops as part of file names is always likely to be troublesome.
Much better to name files using convention 'YY-MM-DD xxx.(ext)'. In that way they can be sorted in datal order.
My method is to use
YYYYMMDD_name.ext...
Did you know that the date order YYYY-MM-DD is defined as the ISO 8601 date format? (yes, I use it too, good to know we are all ISO-compliant )
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
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