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bibtexconv-odt(1) [debian man page]

bibtexconv-odt(1)					    BSD General Commands Manual 					 bibtexconv-odt(1)

NAME
bibtexconv-odt -- ODT Helper Script for BibTeX Converter SYNOPSIS
bibtexconv-odt Template_ODT Output_ODT BibTeX_File Export_Script DESCRIPTION
bibtexconv-odt runs bibtexconv to generate an Open Document Text (ODT) content.xml file, which is then joined with an existing template ODT file into an output ODT file. OPTIONS
The following arguments have to be provided: Template_ODT The template ODT file. Output_ODT The output ODT file. BibTeX_File The input BibTeX file for BibTeXConv. Export_Script The input export script for BibTeXConv. EXAMPLE
bibtexconv-odt /usr/share/doc/bibtexconv/examples/ODT-Template.odt MyPublications.odt /usr/share/doc/bibtexconv/examples/ExampleReferences.bib /usr/share/doc/bibtexconv/examples/odt-example.export Uses export script /usr/share/doc/bibtexconv/examples/odt-example.export to export references from /usr/share/doc/bibtexconv/exam- ples/ExampleReferences.bib to MyPublications.odt as OpenDocument Text (ODT), according to the template ODT file /usr/share/doc/bib- texconv/examples/ODT-Template.odt. bibtexconv-odt May 12, 2012 bibtexconv-odt

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ODFHIGHLIGHT(1p)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					  ODFHIGHLIGHT(1p)

NAME
odfhighlight - search, replace and highlight text in a document SYNOPSIS
odfhighlight "source.odt" "search string" -r "replacement" -o "target.odt" replaces "search string" by "replacement" in the file "source.odt", highlights each replacement with a yellow (default) backgound, then writes the resulting document as "target.odt" odfhighlight "myfile.odt" "search string" -color "green" highlights each occurrence of "search string" in "myfile.odt" with a green background color, without changing the text (without "-o" option, the changes apply to "myfile.odt" ARGUMENTS AND OPTIONS
Default behaviour With the "minimal" command line, with only a filename and a string as arguments, each matching string is highlighted with a yellow background and represented with the "Standard" style. Options -e --encoding "xxxxxx" character set to use, if different from the default -r --replacement "new string" "new string" is used as a replacement for "search string" -c --color "code" an RGB color code, expressed either as the concatenation of 3 comma-separated decimal values (each one in the range 0..255, ex: "72,61,139" for a dark slate blue), or a 6-digit hexadecimal number, preceded by a "#" (ex: #00ff00 for green) or, if a colormap is available and known in your OpenOffice::OODoc installation, a symbolic color name (ex: "sky blue") -s --stylename "name" the name of the color style (default: "MyHighlight"); the user must provide a style name that is not already in use in the document -p --property "property=value" This option can be repeated; each occurrence gives an additional property for the highlight style (font name, size, foreground color, ...). For example, with the combination of -p 'fo:color=#ff0000' and -p 'fo:font-size=18pt', the highlighted text will be made of 18pt-sized, red characters. In order to master these options, you should have some knowledge of the Form Objects (FO) vocabulary that is used in the OpenDocument specification. -o --output "filename" -t --target "filename" an alternative filename to save the modified document, when the source document must remain unchanged perl v5.14.2 2010-01-11 ODFHIGHLIGHT(1p)
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