Play multimedia content with style using Entertainer


 
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Old 05-07-2008
Play multimedia content with style using Entertainer

Wed, 07 May 2008 15:00:00 GMT
Every major operating system has more than one media center solution for users who can't spend a day without watching a movie or listening to music. In Linux we're all familiar with MythTV and Freevo, two media center applications that are so appreciated they even have got their own distributions. Freevo is highly configurable, and Freevo 2 SNV builds look promising. MythTV has everything a personal video recorder needs, from scheduled recordings to weather plugins. The thing is, many people need a media center application just to watch Xvid files, listen to their favorite music, and watch family pictures on their television. If this is the case for you, give Entertainer a try.


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OODoc::Document(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      OODoc::Document(3pm)

NAME
OpenOffice::OODoc::Document - Top level component for content and layout processing SYNOPSIS
# get an ODF file handler my $oofile = odfContainer("myfile.odt"); # connect a content-focused document interface my $content = odfDocument ( container => $oofile, part => 'content' ); # connect a style-focused document interface my $styles = odfDocument ( container => $oofile, part => 'styles' ); # process any content and style element $content->appendParagraph ( text => "An additional paragraph", style => "BlueStyle" ); $styles->createStyle ( "BlueStyle", parent => 'Text body', family => 'paragraph', properties => { area => 'text', 'fo:color' => rgb2oo('blue') } ); # commit the changes using the file handler $oofile->save; DESCRIPTION
This module defines the top level Document class, which is a connector allowing any kind of content and presentation processing. It inherits from OODoc::XPath, OODoc::Text, OODoc::Styles and OODoc::Image. The most usual instruction to get access to any member of a document, with the exception if the metadata (meta.xml) should be something like: my $doc = odfDocument([options]); This constructor, if successful, returns an object that can be used (according to its "member" option) to process styles, images and text. This module is designed simply to create objects which include all the functionality of OODoc::Text, OODoc::Image, OODoc::Styles and OODoc::XPath (which should not be called directly by applications). For example my $styles = odfDocument(file => "source.odt", part => "styles"); is generally better than my styles = odfStyles(file => "source.odt"); While OODoc::Document inherits all the methods and properties of these classes, its detailed documentation in essentially provided in the following manual pages: OpenOffice::OODoc::Text -> text content OpenOffice::OODoc::Styles -> style & layout OpenOffice::OODoc::Image -> graphic objects OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath -> common features & low-level API For example, the appendParagraph() and createStyle() methods used in the synopsis above are respectively described in OpenOffice::OODoc::Text and OpenOffice::OODoc::Styles. The present manual page only describes those methods (there are very few) which combine layout and content processing. Methods Constructor : OpenOffice::OODoc::Document->new(<parameters>) Short Form: odfDocument(<parameters>) or odfConnector(<parameters>) See OpenOffice::OODoc::XPath->new (or odfXPath) Returns an OpenDocument connector, available for subsequent access to any element of a well-formed document. Knowing that the Document class is a derivative of the Text, Styles, Image, and XPath classes, ooDocument() implicitly executes the corresponding constructors. So all the options of these constuctors are available. If no "part" parameter is given, the member selected by default is "content" (see OODoc::XPath). The most generally used parts are "content" and "styles". createImageStyle(name [, options]) Creates a graphics style which is immediately usable. With no options, this method applies to the new style a "reasonable" set of characteristics which match fairly closely the default image presentation style in OpenOffice.org before any manual changes made by the user. An application can set its own options in the same way as createStyle in OODoc::Styles. The aim of this method is to minimise the amount of work involved in setting up the style, especially when the default values are close enough, and bearing in mind that an image must always be associated with a style to be displayed in a document. The code below shows a simple method of inserting an image into a document, in this case linked to a given paragraph (see createImageElement in OODoc::Image): my $anchor = $doc->getParagraph(4); my $style = $doc->createImageStyle("Photo"); my $image = $doc->createImageElement ( "Eiffel Tower", style => "Photo", attachment => $anchor, size => "4cm, 12cm", import => "eiffel_tower.jpg" ); The 'properties' option is available for customizations, according to the OpenDocument naming rules. For example, the following instruction creates a style for centered images: $doc->createImageStyle ( 'Centered Image', properties => { 'style:horizontal-pos' => 'center' } ); createTextStyle(name [, options]) Creates a text style which is immediately usable and whose default characteristics are the "Standard" style in the document, even if no options are given. If the "Standard" style does not exist, a "reasonable" style is still created (this can happen in a document created from code and not by an interactive office software). An application can still pass all the options it wants in the same way as createStyle in OODoc::Styles. removePageBreak(paragraph) Removes the page break from the given paragraph (before or after). This method actually removes the page break attribute from the corresponding paragraph style. It does not remove paragraph styles which may have been created to carry page breaks, so its effects are not technically the reverse of setPageBreak(). Generally speaking, however, this should not be a problem. See setPageBreak() about the logic of handling page breaks. setPageBreak(paragraph [, options]) Places a page break at the position of the given paragraph. By default, the page break is placed before the paragraph and no changes are made to the page style. You can place the page break after the paragraph using the option position => 'after' To use this method properly every time, you must remember that a page break is not a text element, but a style applied before or after the paragraph concerned. Putting a page break in front of or behind a paragraph actually means adding a "page break before" or "page break after" attribute to the paragraph's style. As always, a page break cannot appear in the text in keeping with the principle of separation of content and presentation. This however adds a slight complication, in that all paragraphs which use the same style will have the page break. Otherwise, if the paragraph has a named style (i.e. defined in styles.xml) and we are working in the body of the document (i.e. in content.xml), then this method will not work as it cannot access both XML members at the same time. There is however a solution (the one used by OpenOffice.org) which consists simply of creating a special style for the paragraph which takes the old paragraph style as a parent and has only a page break attribute (the old paragraph style is not modified). To do this, all you need is the option: style => style_name This option forces the creation of an automatic style with the given name (make sure none other exists with the same name) and which will only be used to carry the page break. Later on, you can of course apply other characteristics to the style using the updateStyle method in OODoc::Styles, but this is not recommended. It is better not to use page break styles for other purposes. The nature of the existing paragraph style dictates whether or not you create a page break style. If the paragraph style is a named style (i.e. defined in styles.xml and visible to the user), you must create a page break style, but if it already has an automatic style you must not. The quite rare but most complicated scenario is where the paragraph has an automatic style shared by several paragraphs. In this case you must then make copies of the styles using the methods in OODoc::Styles. A page break can allow you to change a page's style. You can do this with the option: page => page style in which you give the following page's style (i.e. the logical name of a master page. See OODoc::Styles). Remember that if the "page" option is given, the page break is forced before the paragraph (the "position" option does not work in this case). style(object [, style]) Returns the style name of a text or graphics object. If the first argument is a "master page" (see OODoc::Styles), it even returns the associated "page layout". Replaces the object's style if a style name is given as the second argument. AUTHOR
/COPYRIGHT Developer/Maintainer: Jean-Marie Gouarne <http://jean.marie.gouarne.online.fr> Contact: jmgdoc@cpan.org Copyright 2004-2008 by Genicorp, S.A. <http://www.genicorp.com> Initial English version of the reference manual by Graeme A. Hunter (graeme.hunter@zen.co.uk). License: GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1 perl v5.14.2 2008-09-16 OODoc::Document(3pm)