<html>
<head>
<meta content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"
http-equiv="Content-Type">
</head>
<body text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 17/09/2014 00:27, nicholas ferguson
wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote cite="mid:001301cfd205$d46daa60$7d48ff20$@com"
type="cite">
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:.5in">I tossed that
investigation aside thinking that that route had been poured
over by LibreOffice experts; and took another look.….<o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:.5in"><o:p> </o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:.5in">I didn’t understand
why I had to clean up this mess, with an open source product
that has been on the market, for years…. </p>
</blockquote>
Sorry, you know the Open Source warranty, don't you? "If it breaks,
you get to keep both pieces"?<br>
<br>
The reality is that the guy who originally set it up presumably lost
interest, and if no-one else has been using it, it bit-rotted.
That's a very common occurrence in ALL software, be it Open Source
or commercial - indeed, LibreOffice has just been through a massive
clean up of bit-rotted code which, iirc, deleted a *third* of the
code base!!!<br>
<br>
It wouldn't surprise me if this feature dated from the proprietary
Star Office days, and obviously got missed in the clean-up. (Which
would explain why the original guy lost interest - he would have
done it because he was told to, not because he wanted to.)<br>
<br>
As they say in the Open Source world, if a feature doesn't work for
you, "patches welcome". Sorry you got put to this pain, but it seems
obvious the functionality wasn't important to anyone else. But
thanks for fixing it for the next person :-)<br>
<br>
Cheers,<br>
Wol<br>
</body>
</html>