[Libreoffice-commits] help.git: Branch 'libreoffice-5-4' - source/text

Olivier Hallot olivier.hallot at libreoffice.org
Thu May 25 13:05:03 UTC 2017


 source/text/shared/01/05020301.xhp |    4 ++--
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

New commits:
commit 4d5d776be8e64108d39467db3227565ce1cf14e4
Author: Olivier Hallot <olivier.hallot at libreoffice.org>
Date:   Thu May 25 10:01:28 2017 -0300

    Fix <sup> tag swallowed by authoring extension
    
    Help authoring extension does not support <sup> and <sub> tags,
    a bug has been filled to fix it.
    
    This patch restore <sup> tags in file.
    
    Change-Id: I0551de6b937de2853494e8285fe7a56c2abb9d5a
    Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/38025
    Reviewed-by: Olivier Hallot <olivier.hallot at edx.srv.br>
    Tested-by: Olivier Hallot <olivier.hallot at edx.srv.br>

diff --git a/source/text/shared/01/05020301.xhp b/source/text/shared/01/05020301.xhp
index 1a948ccc9..e41227c0c 100644
--- a/source/text/shared/01/05020301.xhp
+++ b/source/text/shared/01/05020301.xhp
@@ -271,7 +271,7 @@
 <paragraph id="par_id3151168" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">To display numbers as percentages, add the percent sign (%) to the number format.</paragraph>
 
 <paragraph id="hd_id3156005" role="heading" level="3" xml-lang="en-US">Scientific Notation</paragraph>
-<paragraph id="par_id3146923" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">Scientific notation lets you write very large numbers or very small fractions in a compact form. For example, in scientific notation, 650000 is written as 6.5 x 105, and 0.000065 as 6.5 x 10-5. <comment>Translators: use the decimal delimiter of your language (period or comma) for all number format codes in Calc.</comment>In <item type="productname">%PRODUCTNAME</item>, these numbers are written as 6.5E+5 and 6.5E-5, respectively. To create a number format that displays numbers using scientific notation, enter a # or 0, and then one of the following codes E-, E+, e- or e+. If sign is omitted after E or e, it won't appear for positive value of exponent. To get engineering notation, enter 3 digits (0 or #) in the integer part: <emph>###.##E+00</emph> for instance.</paragraph>
+<paragraph id="par_id3146923" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">Scientific notation lets you write very large numbers or very small fractions in a compact form. For example, in scientific notation, 650000 is written as 6.5 x 10<sup>5</sup>, and 0.000065 as 6.5 x 10<sup>-5</sup>. <comment>Translators: use the decimal delimiter of your language (period or comma) for all number format codes in Calc.</comment>In <item type="productname">%PRODUCTNAME</item>, these numbers are written as 6.5E+5 and 6.5E-5, respectively. To create a number format that displays numbers using scientific notation, enter a # or 0, and then one of the following codes E-, E+, e- or e+. If sign is omitted after E or e, it won't appear for positive value of exponent. To get engineering notation, enter 3 digits (0 or #) in the integer part: <emph>###.##E+00</emph> for instance.</paragraph>
 
 <paragraph id="hd_id3156006" role="heading" level="3" xml-lang="en-US">Fraction Representation</paragraph>
 <paragraph id="par_id3146924" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">To represent a value as a fraction, format consists of two or three parts: integer optional part, numerator and denominator. Integer and numerator are separated by a blank or any quoted text. Numerator and denominator are separated by a slash character. Each part can consist of a combination of #, ? and 0 as placeholders.</paragraph>
@@ -2462,4 +2462,4 @@
 </section>
 </body>
 
-</helpdocument>
\ No newline at end of file
+</helpdocument>


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