OpenOffice.org Basic crash course: Saving user settings
09-16-2008 11:00 AM
The ability to save user settings can come in handy if you want to make your OpenOffice.org solutions more flexible, efficient, and user-friendly. In this article, we take a look at how to save user settings in a plain text file and then retreive them from there.
I downloaded the CVS and followed the instructions at Wiki.
I typed ./autogen.sh and got:
sh: autom4te: command not found
aclocal: autom4te failed with exit status: 127
What's wrong? (1 Reply)
OOo2Dbk(1) General Commands Manual OOo2Dbk(1)NAME
OOo2Dbk - program to convert OpenOffice.org-Writer (ODT and SXW) files to DocBook XML documents.
SYNOPSIS
OOo2Dbk [options] openoffice.org-file
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the OOo2Dbk commands.
OPTIONS
This version of OOo2Dbk understands the following command line options.
-h, --help
Show summary of options.
-cFILE, --config=FILE
Use FILE as the file path for the program configuration file. Defaults to the global /etc/ooo2dbk.xml configuration file or to the
ooo2dbk.xml configuration file in the ooo2dbk executable directory.
-zFILE, --zipfile=FILE
Use FILE as the filename for the generated ZIP archive
-dFILE, --dbkfile=FILE
Use FILE as the filename for the generated DocBook XML file. This option has no effect if the -z/--zipfile option is used.
-a, --article
Produce a DocBook XML article. This is the default.
-b, --book
Produce a DocBook XML book.
-xFILE, --xslt=FILE
Use FILE as the file path for the XSLT stylesheet. Defaults to the ooo2dbk.xsl stylesheet.
-mNAME, --cmdxslt=NAME
Use command NAME as the XSLT processor. Available command names are defined in OOo2Dbk /etc/ooo2dbk.xml file. Defaults to xsltproc.
-f, --flatxml
Preserve the intermediate OpenOffice.org XML file (global.xml)
-v, --verbose
Print additional information to stdout when running conversion.
AUTHOR
OOo2Dbk was written by Indesko (http://www.indesko.com/)
This manual page was written by Mohammed Adnene Trojette <adn+deb@diwi.org>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
January 7, 2005 OOo2Dbk(1)