Welcome to The Document Foundation Planet

This is a feed aggregator that collects what LibreOffice and Document Foundation contributors are writing in their respective blogs.

To have your blog added to this aggregator, please mail the website@global.libreoffice.org mailinglist or file a ticket in Redmine.


Friday
29 August, 2025


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Berlin, 29 August 2025 – LibreOffice 25.8.1, the first minor release of the free, volunteer-supported office suite for personal productivity in office environments, is now available at https://www.libreoffice.org/download for Windows, MacOS and Linux.

The release includes close to 100 bug and regression fixes over LibreOffice 25.8 [1] to improve the stability and robustness of the software. In particular, the release resolves the application crash issue related to the NoteBookBar UI option, and several bugs related to opening documents in Microsoft proprietary format.

LibreOffice is the only office suite with a feature set comparable to the market leader. It also offers a range of interface options to suit all user habits, from traditional to modern, and makes the most of different screen form factors by optimising the space available on the desktop to put the maximum number of features just a click or two away.

For users who don’t need the latest features and prefer a version that has undergone more testing and bug fixing, The Document Foundation maintains the LibreOffice 25.2 family, which includes several months of back-ported fixes. The current release is LibreOffice 25.2.5.

The Document Foundation does not provide technical support for users, although they can get it from volunteers on user mailing lists and the Ask LibreOffice website: https://ask.libreoffice.org

LibreOffice users, free software advocates and community members can support the Document Foundation by making a donation at https://www.libreoffice.org/donate.

[1] Fixes in RC1: https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Releases/25.8.1/RC1.


Thursday
28 August, 2025


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  • Up early, mail chew, tech planning call, sync with Naomi & Anna, more admin.

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LibreOffice handles different input and output formats, and also displays text and graphics alongside inside the GUI on computer displays. This requires LibreOffice to understand various different measurement units, and convert values from one to another.

The unit conversion can be done manually, where one should know the units, and calculate factor to convert them to each other.

For example, consider that we want to convert width from points into 1/100 mm, which is used in page setup.

We know that:

1 point = 1/72 inch
1 inch = 25.4 mm = 25400 microns
factor = 25400/(72*10) ≈ 35.27777778

Then, it is possible to write the conversion as:

static int PtTo10Mu( int nPoints )
{
return static_cast<int>((static_cast<double>(nPoints)*35.27777778)+0.5);
}

A separate function that casts integer nPoints to double, then multiplies it by the factor which has 8 decimal points, and then rounds the result by adding 0.5 and then truncates it and stores it in an integer. This approach is not always desirable. It is error-prone, and lacks enough accuracy. For big values, it can calculates values off by one.

Another approach is to use o3tl (OpenOffice.org template library) convert function. It is as simple as writing:

int nResult = o3tl::convert(nPoint, o3tl::Length::pt, o3tl::Length::mm100)

As you can see, it is much cleaner, and gives the output, properly rounded as an integer!

You need a double? No problem! You can use appropriate template to achieve that:

double fResult = o3tl::convert<double>(nPoint, o3tl::Length::pt, o3tl::Length::mm100)

These are the supported units, defined in the header include/o3tl/unit_conversion.hxx:

mm100 – 1/100th mm = 1 micron

mm10 – 1/10 mm

mm – millimeter

cm – centimeter

m – meter

km – kilometer

emu – English Metric Unit (1/360000 cm)

twip – Twentieth of a point (1/20 pt)

pt – Point (1/72 in)

pc – Pica (1/6 in)

in1000 – 1/1000 in

in100 – 1/100 in

in10 – 1/10 in

in – inch

ft – foot

mi – mile

master – PPT Master Unit (1/576 in)

px – Pixel unit (15 twip, 96 ppi)

ch – Char unit (210 twip, 14 px)

line – Line unit (312 twip)

Handling Overflows

If you are doing a conversion, it is possible that the result overflows. With o3tl::convert() you can handle it this way:

sal_Int64 width = o3tl::convert(nPoint, o3tl::Length::pt, o3tl::Length::mm100, overflow, 0);
if (overflow)
{
...
}

Final Words

Using o3tl::convert() not only simplifies the unit conversion, but it also improves the accuracy. There is a possibility to handle overflow, which is not easily possible if you do the conversion manually. Therefore, unit conversion using this function is usually the best option in LibreOffice.


Wednesday
27 August, 2025


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  • Sync with Dave, catch-up with Herman, intro call with new staff, lunch, admin, sync with Philippe, sales call, chat with Patrick & Pedro.
  • Published the next strip: on Fixed Price projects
    The Open Road to Freedom - strip#32 - Cost Plus
  • Dinner, band-practice.

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The LibreOffice Conference will start in a week from today with the Community Meeting, at the Faculty of Informatics of ELTE (Eötvös Loránd University) in Pázmány Péter stny. 1/C, 1117 Budapest. The building is just in front of the Danube on the historic Buda side, and can be easily reached either by walking or by public transportation from the city center in Pest, where you can find the majority of hotels and restaurants.

To reach the city from the airport, take Bus 100E which goes directly to downtown (Deák Ferenc tér). Buy and validate tickets directly on the bus using your bank card for the Budapest Pay&GO service. bkk.hu/en/travel-information/airport-express/

Inside the city use public transport (BKK): metro, tram, bus. Buy tickets from purple machines or use the BudapestGO mobile app (iOS, Android). bkk.hu/en/ The best deal is a 24h / 72h travel pass, which does not need validation at each trip. IMPORTANT: the travel pass is not valid for the airport bus!

Currency is Hungarian Forint (HUF). Cards are accepted almost everywhere, but also you may need some Forint cash from Correct Change, Exclusive Change, or Gold Change. Avoid Euronet ATMs, use instead ATMs at major Hungarian banks like OTP, K&H, Erste, UniCredit, Raiffeisen, or CIB.

Time zone is CEST (UTC+2). Electricity is 230V, with standard European plug.

The Survival Guide with more information will soon be available on the Conference website.


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Juan Carlos Sanz, a long time contributor to OpenOffice and LibreOffice, and a TDF Member, passed away last Friday, August 22. He has been contributing to documentation and localization in Spanish, and has been active in the forums to help LibreOffice users as much as he could.

In July 2022, Juan Carlos was interviewed by Mike Saunders for the Community Member Monday. In 2022, he also attended the LibreOffice Conference in Milan (2022) and Bucharest (2023).

 


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LibreOffice 25.8 banner

One week ago, we announced LibreOffice 25.8, our brand new major release. It’s packed with new features, and has many improvements to compatibility and performance too. So, what has happened in the week since then? Let’s check out some stats…

642,564 downloads

These are just stats for our official downloads page, of course – many Linux users will have acquired the new release via their distribution’s package repositories.

23,399 views, shares and likes on social media

Combining our Mastodon, Bluesky, X/Twitter and Facebook posts about the announcement, and all the likes, shares, views and comments, we get 23,999. Thanks to everyone who spread the word on social media! 😊

1,225 upvotes on Reddit

On release day, we posted the announcement on the /r/linux subreddit. There was lots of discussion there about the new update, including things users like and things that could still be improved.

Huge thanks to our worldwide community of volunteers, and certified developers, for all their work on this release!


Tuesday
26 August, 2025


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  • Up early, basic mail chew & catch-up. Out to see J&K&P with J. to take them to Wicksteed Park - caught up happily as we drove.
  • Fun for P. on bumpy slides, nice lunch, mini-roller, spinny things, ice-cream, and home in the late afternoon together.
  • Plugged away at some work, dinner, watched some HBO Chernobyl.

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PyPos3DLO

Today we’re talking to Olivier Dufailly, who’s working on PyPos3DLO, an app based on LibreOffice to create mechanical characters, edit and optimize Poser files, and manipulate WaveFront files:

Tell us a bit about yourself!

I live in Toulouse (France) and for around 30 years I’ve mainly worked in the space and aeronautical domain (from software to system engineering), although I was also a business manager for a few years, and the first CIO of a mid-size engineering company. But now, I’m back in my preferred domain: space systems engineering and development. It’s a so exciting environment.

On a personal side, I like and practice sports (swimming, biking, running) and 3D modeling. I remember, when I bought my first Casio graphic tracer in 1985, I immediately ported some Apple BASIC 3D curves programs to Casio BASIC!

And now, I always like to produce some airplanes models for 3D rendering (unfortunately, the former free site ShareCG.com has disappeared so I need to find a way to publish my work elsewhere). Additionally, I think that we – all of us – are responsible of our children’s planet, and open source software is sustainable and so is vital to help us in the future.

What are you working on right now?

I’ve produced a LibreOffice-based application to help 3D mechanical characters development. I’d would be proud to present it in more detail later, but for now: PoJamas aims to provide a Python library and tools for loading, processing, and producing .cr2, pz3 (crz, pzz) files compatible with the SmithMicro (e-Frontier) Poser character animation application. It includes PyPos3DLO, an app based on LibreOffice to create mechanical characters, and edit and optimize Poser files.

Why did you choose to become a member of The Document Foundation?

LibreOffice is a great project and I’d like to try to contribute to its development. It’s just the beginning, but I feel welcome in the project already.

Anything else you plan to do in the future? What does LibreOffice really need?

I have a strategic approach concerning LibreOffice and general engineering usage.

In my professional and personal domains, engineers, PhD, techs guys produce studies and data for testing and running large and complex systems. To do this, they usually use Microsoft Office with a huge amount of BASIC macros. Moreover, they also use MATLAB and try to integrate or automatize things.

They usually have a lot of “integration” problems and the result is frequently a mess: hard to use, and more or less impossible to maintain or transfer. It’s a lack of experts’ time, when they spend too much time o “silly” development instead of doing their own business.

Our main problems are testing, maintainability and costs.

Finally, I’m convinced that we should promote a new maintainable approach for engineering studies with a better integration of Python (or other, if any languages) in LibreOffice. (Financial studies may be also greatly enhanced with an easy integration between Python libraries and


Monday
25 August, 2025


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  • Sync with Miklos, design call with Tor, Kendy, Skyler & Stephan. Project planning call, admin, customer call, contract call, plugged away trying to catch up.

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LibreOffice 25.8: a Strategic Asset for Governments and Enterprises Focused on Digital Sovereignty and Privacy

Overview

In a time when geopolitical tensions, data localization laws, and compliance risks are reshaping the IT landscape, LibreOffice 25.8 (released last week) stands out as a strategic choice. It’s a fully open source, locally run productivity suite designed for organizations that require full control over their software, data, and infrastructure.

This version builds directly on priorities voiced by public administrations and large enterprises worldwide: protecting user data, reducing dependency on foreign vendors, and strengthening digital autonomy.

Why Digital Sovereignty Matters

For governments and enterprises, digital sovereignty is about more than philosophy. It’s about:

  • National security: Reducing exposure to extraterritorial surveillance and software backdoors.
  • Regulatory compliance: Meeting legal requirements like GDPR, national procurement laws, and IT localization mandates.
  • Vendor independence: Avoiding forced migrations, aggressive licensing models, or unpredictable pricing from proprietary vendors.
  • Strategic resilience: Keeping mission-critical systems operational without reliance on the cloud.

LibreOffice 25.8 is purpose-built for these goals.

Key Benefits in LibreOffice 25.8 for Institutions

Privacy-First Architecture

  • Zero telemetry: No background data collection. LibreOffice is entirely transparent and silent by design.
  • Full offline capability: Every feature works without internet access, ideal for secure, air-gapped, or mission-critical environments.
  • OpenPGP encryption: Documents can be encrypted with user-managed keys, ensuring compliance with internal security policies.

Open Standards & Interoperability

  • Native support for the Open Document Format (ODF), an ISO standard that guarantees long-term access and eliminates proprietary lock-in.
  • Improved compatibility with Microsoft Office/365 formats (.docx, .xlsx, .pptx), enabling smooth transitions and document exchange.

Flexible Deployment & Integration

  • Available for Windows, Linux, and macOS: supports heterogeneous IT environments.
  • Seamless integration with Nextcloud, ownCloud, and self-hosted collaboration platforms.
  • Scalable from a single secure workstation to full enterprise deployments with centralized configuration and policy enforcement.

Strategic Advantages for Public and Enterprise IT

  • Cost Control: No license fees. LibreOffice can cut IT spending while aligning with public procurement regulations that mandate open standards and fair competition.
  • Auditability: Fully open source. Every line of code is visible and verifiable, supporting audit requirements and reducing supply chain risks.
  • Local Empowerment: Encourages national and regional IT ecosystems by enabling local support contracts, customization, and professional services, stimulating the domestic tech sector.

Real-World Adoption

Governments and large institutions across Europe, Latin America, and Asia have adopted LibreOffice as part of digital sovereignty initiatives. Government bodies in Germany, Denmark and France, and national ministries in Italy and Brazil, have turned to LibreOffice to reclaim control over their digital infrastructure.

LibreOffice is backed by The Document Foundation, a neutral, non-profit steward with a global contributor base, not a private corporation with conflicting interests.

Conclusion

LibreOffice 25.8 is more than a productivity tool. It’s a vehicle for strategic IT independence. With no data collection, no vendor lock-in, and complete local control, it’s ideally suited for:

  • Ministries and government agencies
  • Defense and infrastructure sectors
  • Enterprises in regulated industries (finance, healthcare, legal)
  • Educational institutions managing sensitive student data

It’s time


Sunday
24 August, 2025


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  • All Saints, violin; bit out of it - home for pizza lunch with the babes. Rested.

Saturday
23 August, 2025


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  • Slugged variously, tried to catch up with a bit of work; Suffolk Doctors on Call visited with antibiotics - wow; something to chew.

Friday
22 August, 2025


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  • Slept remarkably poorly, call with Dave in the morning, and remarkably took a day off sick - rather unusual.

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Get a quick overview of some of the new features in LibreOffice 25.8, released on Wednesday. (This video is also available on PeerTube).

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Thursday
21 August, 2025


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  • Tech planning call, sync with, marketing, long and intense multi-partner call. Marketing content review call with Neil & Richard.
  • Vicious fever & shivers in the evening.

Wednesday
20 August, 2025


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  • Up extremely early, worked for a few hours, out for a run with J. painful left hip.
  • Merger/finance call, sync with Dave, Gokay & Szymon, Lunch.
  • Published the next strip: on Fixed Price projects
    The Open Road to Freedom - strip#31 - Fixed Price
  • Productivity All Hands meeting.

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The best open source office suite continues to evolve, while maintaining its focus on privacy and digital sovereignty

Berlin, 20 August 2025 – The Document Foundation announces the release of LibreOffice 25.8. This latest version of the market-leading free open source office suite maintains its focus on digital sovereignty and privacy protection. It offers individuals, organisations, and governments total control over their data and the most comprehensive productivity tools.

In a global context of growing concern about data privacy, cloud lock-in, and surveillance capitalism, LibreOffice 25.8 provides concrete solutions.

Open Source: The source code is available for inspection and is completely free from proprietary technology constraints.

Privacy and Control: LibreOffice does not collect personal data, usage metrics or diagnostic information, and complies with the data protection regulations required by public administration implementations (GDPR).

Local Execution: all features are executed locally on the user’s computer, without the need for an internet or cloud connection.

Self-Hosted Collaboration: Integration with on-premises cloud solutions, such as Nextcloud, enables teams to collaborate without sharing information with Big Tech.

LibreOffice 25.8: new performance and features

User Interface: the Welcome/What’s New dialog now offers access to the user interface picker and appearance options, allowing new users to leverage LibreOffice’s flexible UI and personalise the look and feel according to their preferences.

Performance: everything is faster, from startup to scrolling through large documents – with significant speed improvements on less powerful machines.

  • In benchmark tests, Writer and Calc open files up to 30% faster.
  • Optimised memory management allows for smoother operation on virtual desktops and thin clients.

Better Interoperability with Microsoft Office files, with more accurate handling of DOCX, XLSX and PPTX files and fewer formatting issues, thanks to changes such as:

  • a complete overhaul of word hyphenation and spacing
  • font management in Impress that is compatible with PowerPoint files
  • the addition of new functions in Calc: CHOOSECOLS, CHOOSEROWS, DROP, EXPAND, HSTACK, TAKE, TEXTAFTER, TEXTBEFORE, TEXTSPLIT, TOCOL, TOROW, VSTACK, WRAPCOLS and WRAPROWS.

There are, of course, other important new features, such as the ability to export to the PDF 2.0 format, and several new ScriptForge library services. The complete list is available here: wiki.documentfoundation.org/ReleaseNotes/25.8.

In terms of operating system support changes, LibreOffice 25.8 will no longer run on Windows 7 or 8/8.1 versions. It is also the last version to run on macOS 10.15. Support for x86 (32-bit) Windows versions is deprecated.

LibreOffice 25.8 for Businesses

The Document Foundation collaborates with a global network of certified partners who offer enterprise-grade support and maintenance, customised features and integrations, and assistance with user migration and training. A full list of partners can be found here: www.libreoffice.org/get-help/professional-support/.

Positioning of LibreOffice 25.8

LibreOffice 25.8 is completely free and offers a viable alternative to proprietary office suites for individual users, schools, businesses, and public institutions. It contains no advertising, data tracking, or subscriptions.

It is ideal for students and teachers who


Tuesday
19 August, 2025


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  • Up early, breakfast, bid a fond farewell to the American Meeks' - into planning call, lunch, sync with Laser.
  • Monthly Management meeting, customer sync, admin catch-up, sync with Lily, dinner.

Monday
18 August, 2025


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  • Up earlyish, bit of work here & there - Tom & Beckie arrived midday with S&L, lovely to see them.
  • Out into Cambridge, picnic at Downing College, wandered around town looking at things, punting in the sun, met up with E. after her theory test victory. Ice-cream, walked back via Parkers Piece amusements.
  • Home, F&C dinner together, chatted and played together until late.

Sunday
17 August, 2025


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  • Up earlyish, All Saints with N. & M. - Sue spoke well. Home for lunch, chatted with babes, rested, watched The Assassin.

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Screenshot of Stable Diffusion extension for LibreOffice

LibreOffice does not include artificial intelligence (AI) out-of-the-box. But many users want AI features in the suite – so we encourage developers to make them available as optional extensions. And that’s what Igor Támara did, creating the “Stable Diffusion for LibreOffice” extension for AI-generated images powered by AI Horde (a volunteer crowd-sourced distributed cluster of image generation workers).

We talked to Igor about the extension – here’s what he had to say:

What does the extension do?

You write some text describing an image, and get an AI image generated from the given text. You can tweak parameters, choose a model and use the best result on written documents, presentations or the place you prefer. The images are generated on volunteer GPUs through AI Horde.

When did you start working on it?

Two weeks ago, starting from a Gimp plugin as a base. I’m brand new to the LibreOffice project, and started it as a macro to get this functionality in the software. One week later I put it on GitHub.

Later on I got help from friendly people on the forum to turn it into an extension. I also joined the the chat and filled some requests in the bug tracker.

What are the current limitations, and what’s coming next?

Be aware that the text you provide is sent to AI Horde and seen by the machines that create the image, so do not send sensitive data. Also, you can get better results if you send the description of the desired image in English. You are encouraged to try different languages to see the results.

You need internet connection to use it. If you wanted to create images locally on your machine, it would take time to configure your environment with local AI models, with gigabytes of memory dedicated to this purpose, and maybe processing for hours to get something useful.

Sometimes the text can be marked as NSFW (“not safe for work”) – in which case you end up with black and white text saying so.

For now, the extension works in Writer and Impress; when invoked from other LibreOffice components, it opens a new text document and inserts the image along with the provided text.

The roadmap includes:

  • Translating the plugin to other languages
  • An option to pre-translate the text to English
  • Better integration with LibreOffice Calc and Draw
  • Earn kudos, rating the images to have more priority when requesting an image

Screenshot of Stable Diffusion extension for LibreOffice

How can others help to improve it?

Report any problems you find, and help to translate into your language. Please do so by filling an issue with your intention saying which language.

If you have a GPU (and good graphics hardware in general), you can volunteer as a worker joining the horde, to add to the computing power – and you can earn kudos to have higher priority when you need it.

If you work with a friendly company that wants to make use of the existing hardware, you can join the horde too


Saturday
16 August, 2025


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  • Breakfast, dis-connected washing machine, repaired toilet-seat, plunged sink, lunch - out to look for cars for babes with J.
  • Home, connected up new washing machine; supervised E's EPQ - sanding, varnishing etc. Poked at some coding.

Friday
15 August, 2025


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  • Up earlyish, packed the house, ate whatever was left-over for breakfast, bid a fond farewell to everyone. H. off to be a bridesmaid, drove home.
  • Lunch with Leeanne, washing machine finally giving up the ghost; ordered a new one. Poked at mail, shopping with J. sync with Miklos.

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In the digital world, document formats are essential. Proprietary formats such as Microsoft Word’s DOCX or Excel’s XLSX dominate the workplace, but at the same time they lock users into a specific vendor and its business strategies, which tend to exploit users to the maximum in every way. The Open Document Format (ODF) offers an open, standard alternative that protects users and their privacy, promotes interoperability, long-term access and data ownership.

Migrating documents from proprietary formats to ODF is the solution, and although vendors who rely on proprietary formats – not only Microsoft, but also its freeware clones such as OnlyOffice or WPS Office – do everything they can to prevent it, it is very easy and represents a fundamental step forward for users in terms of privacy and digital sovereignty (i.e., ownership of their own content).

This guide breaks down the migration process to make the transition smooth, efficient and sustainable, both at the individual level (where problems are virtually non-existent) and at the enterprise level, where problems exist due to the lock-in strategies of proprietary formats.

Step 1: Understand ODF and its advantages

  • No dependence on a single vendor: freedom to use any compatible software
  • Better long-term accessibility, robustness and stability of storage
  • Transparency and security, thanks to full compliance with open specifications
  • Better interoperability between platforms and tools

Step 2: Document inventory to define conversion priorities and estimate the effort required for migration

  • Identification of file types (DOCX, XLSX, PPTX) and their number
  • Analysis of documents to distinguish between active (used periodically) documents, those that can be archived and obsolete documents
  • Analysis of documents with complex formatting or embedded multimedia content

Step 3: plan the migration workflow

  • Convert documents in bulk or gradually as needed?
  • Pilot phase with a small group of users to identify any issues with the documents before the mass conversion
  • User training on the migration and creation of a support service for conversions and backup management

Step 4: Converting documents to ODF format

  • Use the LibreOffice export function (‘Save As’)
  • Use batch conversion tools for large volumes (LibreOffice command line scripts)
  • Validate converted files to ensure formatting and data integrity
  • Back up original files until migration is successfully completed

Step 5: Monitoring the migration

  • Updating internal policies to make ODF the default format for document creation and sharing, and to prevent a return to proprietary formats
  • Monitoring user feedback and trends in document creation, and resolving issues in a timely manner
  • Integrating ODF support into enterprise software platforms, and using automatic conversions where possible

Conclusion

Migrating from proprietary formats to ODF is a strategic move, both individually and for businesses, towards openness, content control and document protection for the future. In a business environment, it requires careful planning and user involvement, but the benefits in terms of flexibility, interoperability and cost savings are well worth the effort.


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This post is part of a series to describe how Writer now gets a feature to handle tables that are both floating and span over multiple pages.

This work is primarily for Collabora Online, but is useful on the desktop as well. See the 11th post for the previous part.

Motivation

Previous posts described the hardest part of multi-page floating tables: making sure that text can wrap around them and they can split across pages. In this part, we'll look at a conflicting requirement. On one hand, headings want their text to not split across pages (and shapes anchored into paragraphs are considered part of the paragraph, too). On the other hand, it should be OK to have a floating table at the bottom of a page and the following heading to go to the next page.

It turns out, Writer gave "keep together" a priority, while Word gave "floating tables are OK to split to a previous page" a priority.

Note that if you have a shape (e.g. a triangle) and not a floating table, then both Word and Writer prevents the move of that shape to a previous page (if the shape is anchored in a heading); this difference was there just for floating tables.

Results so far

Here is how the tdf#167222 bugdoc looks like now in Writer:

Floating table, followed by heading: new Writer render

And here is how it used to look like:

Floating table, followed by heading: old Writer render

And here is the reference rendering:

Floating table, followed by heading: reference render

This means that we leave layout for shapes unchanged in general: shapes anchored in headings are still considered to be part of headings and don't split. But for floating tables, we now allow them to split and use space at a previous page if they fit there.

How is this implemented?

If you would like to know a bit more about how this works, continue reading... :-)

As usual, the high-level problem was addressed by a series of small changes:

Want to start using this?

You can get a development edition of Collabora Online 25.04 and try it out yourself right now: try the development edition. Collabora intends to continue supporting and contributing to LibreOffice, the code is merged so we expect all of this work will be available in TDF's next release too (26.2).


Thursday
14 August, 2025


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  • Out walking with Richard, Chris, M & J through Chatsworth Country Park - lovely time, lunch by a lake, ice-cream. Headed back to Beeley.
  • Home, hot-tub, out shopping with N, babes cooked a pasta tea, video round-up, learned Bridge with Anne & the babes until late.

Wednesday
13 August, 2025


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  • Out to see the National Stone Centre, which had a lot of stone. A volunteer guide showed us the millennium (dry-stone) wall, played wall building with babs while having lunch and admired quarries.
  • The team published the next TORF strip: Time & Materials
    The Open Road to Freedom - strip#30 - Time and Materials
  • Back, slugged variously; Richard & Sharon made a fine salmon dinner; celebrated Mum's birthday with toasts, speeches, cake, songs, dancing, and more.

Monday
11 August, 2025


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General Activities

  1. LibreOffice 25.2.5 was announced on July 17
  2. Olivier Hallot (TDF) updated help for CSV import, explained Property Mapping in help for Charts and improved help for Calc’s FILTERXML function and AutoFilter
  3. Gábor Kelemen (Collabora) did many code cleanups
  4. Tomaž Vajngerl (Collabora) made internal hyperlinks in a table of contents accessible when exported to PDF/UA
  5. Pranam Lashkari, Szymon Kłos and Hubert Figuière (Collabora) worked on LOKit used by Collabora Online
  6. Parth Raiyani (Collabora) did reorganisations in some dialogs
  7. Miklós Vajna (Collabora) polished the support for floating tables in Writer, fixed some crashes and continued improving the handling of tracked changes that depend on each other
  8. Xisco Faulí (TDF) added Albanian and Moldovan locale, fixed short weekdays in Romanian locale, improved the translation checker script, added some new automated tests, upgraded many dependencies and did many code cleanups and optimisations
  9. Michael Stahl (Collabora) fixed an issue with expansion of list level numbering formats with repeated levels and fixed a column width issue in RTF tables
  10. Mike Kaganski (Collabora) implemented Markdown export, fixed not being able to apply colour to Chart walls via Sidebar, fixed an issue with paragraph numbering in RTF files, helped Miklós with floating table polishing, fixed an issue with date conversion in Base, made URL handling more robust in Extension updating code, fixed and issue with spacing in lists in RTF files, fixed RTF export issues causing loss of bullet fonts and “No character border” explicit formatting and fixed some crashes. He also did many code cleanups and optimisations
  11. Caolán McNamara (Collabora) fixed many issues found by static analysers and did code cleanups and optimisations
  12. Stephan Bergmann (Collabora) worked on the WASM build. He also adapted the code to compiler changes and did code cleanups
  13. Noel Grandin (Collabora) made Skia rendering backend mandatory on Windows and greatly improved the import time of CSV data with trailing newline characters. He also did many code cleanups and optimisations, especially in the area of transparency handling
  14. Justin Luth (Collabora) made it so failed command line operations return exit status 1, allowing for automated bisecting of command line issues among other things, fixed an issue with spellchecking and the option “Check uppercase words” and fixed a style continuity issue with page breaks in DOCX files
  15. Michael Weghorn (TDF) continued cleaning up and reorganising accessibility-related code, made the orientation radio buttons in Envelope dialog accessible, fixed an issue with unwanted focus accessibility events being fired in Borders tab page of Writer’s Paragraph dialog, made the border preset selection be clearly indicated when focused, implemented support for native colour pickers in GTK and Qt UIs and did cleanups and reorganisations in Android, vcl and report design code. He also worked on using native widgets in Qt UIs
  16. Balázs Varga (Collabora) implemented support for Microsoft Media Foundation APIs on Windows to for playback of common codecs, fixed Calc’s MATCH function returning an incorrect result with inline arrays and fixed an issue

Tuesday
29 July, 2025


face

LibreOffice 25.8 will be released as final on August, 20, 2025 (check the Release Plan). LibreOffice 25.8 Release Candidate 2 (RC2) brings us closer to the final version, which will be preceded by Release Candidate 3 (RC3). Since the previous release, LibreOffice 25.8 RC1, 70 commits have been submitted to the code repository and 34 issues got fixed. Check the release notes to find the new features included in this version of LibreOffice.

LibreOffice 25.8 RC2 can be downloaded for Linux, macOS and Windows, and it will replace the standard installation.

In case you find any problem in this pre-release, please report it in Bugzilla (you just need a legit email account in order to create a new account).

For help, you can contact the QA Team directly in the QA IRC channel or via Matrix.

LibreOffice is a volunteer-driven community project, so please help us to test, we appreciate your contribution! Happy testing!!!

Download it now!

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