Summary: | EDITING Creating new style from selected graphic, adds properties for dimensions, and thus changes the size of images that it is applied too, which is wrong | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | LibreOffice | Reporter: | Cor Nouws <cno> |
Component: | Writer | Assignee: | Not Assigned <libreoffice-bugs> |
Status: | NEW --- | QA Contact: | |
Severity: | normal | ||
Priority: | medium | CC: | cno, fdbugs |
Version: | 3.3.0 release | ||
Hardware: | Other | ||
OS: | All | ||
See Also: | https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40469 | ||
Whiteboard: | preBibisect | ||
i915 platform: | i915 features: |
Description
Cor Nouws
2013-09-18 12:17:57 UTC
As a work around, the user can - first apply the style - then open window Graphics of the graphic and click 'original dimensions'. But it's so great the LibreOffice offers styles and lovely that they are so useful :) And of course, create a new style in the window Styles and Formatting, based on Graphic, works too. Though dimensions in the window are set to 0,36 cm, practical effec is that the style respects the size of the graphic. Indeed, changing the mentioned properties in the styles.xml corrects the wrong behaviour. regression from OOo, but still :( Could you please clarify if you think this is an early regression since the fork from OOo (in which case, please add Whiteboard: preBibisect), or if it was in fact present before the fork (in which case set Version: "Inherited from OOo" and remove Keywords: regression) (In reply to Matthew Francis from comment #5) > Could you please clarify if you think this is an early regression since the > fork from OOo As I wrote when submitting the issue: " I see the problem already in 3.3.0. The style icoontje (properties above) has been made somewhere in 2009 or earlier..." So it's fair to remove 'regression' since the problem origens from OOo Work Around: create new Style for images/frames in Dialog F11 |
Use of freedesktop.org services, including Bugzilla, is subject to our Code of Conduct. How we collect and use information is described in our Privacy Policy.