Summary: | Endnotes -- export endnotes, "send endnotes to clipboard", "select all endnotes"... | ||
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Product: | LibreOffice | Reporter: | peter josvai <jepe> |
Component: | Writer | Assignee: | Not Assigned <libreoffice-bugs> |
Status: | RESOLVED DUPLICATE | ||
Severity: | enhancement | CC: | dgp-mail |
Priority: | medium | ||
Version: | unspecified | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | All | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Crash report or crash signature: | Regression By: | ||
Bug Depends on: | |||
Bug Blocks: | 103164 |
Description
peter josvai
2023-09-06 06:52:39 UTC
Peter, thank you for your suggestion. Could you please specify "export"? => NEEDINFO hi, Dieter! By "export" I mean "create an ODT / HTML / TXT pasteable document of" the endnotes... As if saying: "Copy endnotes", which you could then paste... Creating a document of the endnotes would be almost the same thing. Just like in the case of "send outline to clipboard"... it can be pasted into an ODT document... FOR EXAMPLE: Imagine "The brown fox* was pretty quick at grabbing* the chickens." and imagine numbers instead of the * ... and the consequent entries in the endnote section: 1. fox: that animal we all know 2. to grab: take, catch, snatch Now, right click in the endnote section / or go "File / Send / "Send endnote to clipboard"... and the endnotes could be pasted in a new document : 1. fox: that animal we all know 2. to grab: take, catch, snatch /\/\/\/\/\/\/\ explanation: It is next to impossible to get the endnotes "out" of a text.. unless you're willing to deal with roman numerals... AND copy-pasting into an HTML editor like tinymce... PS: "Extracting the endnotes" out of a document is NOT that difficult in the end... One: "brute force" way is to print the file to PDF, starting at the first endnote page... then copy paste... Two: copy pasting it into tinymce actually gives you pretty good results... That brown fox example will produce the following: // HTML CODE: <div id="sdendnote1"> <p class="sdendnote-western"><a class="sdendnotesym" href="#sdendnote1anc" name="sdendnote1sym">i</a>fox: that animal we all know</p> </div> <div id="sdendnote2"> <p class="sdendnote-western"><a class="sdendnotesym" href="#sdendnote2anc" name="sdendnote2sym">ii</a>to grab: take, catch, snatch</p> </div> // HTML CODE end The div ids make it easily parseable... /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ PS: But why is it necessary at all to get the endnotes "out" of a book? :) Because (for various reasons) endnotes of a paper book should be published online... not printed in the book itself... Even the endnotes of an ebook can be way better accessed and browsed if they are published online... in a web page... as HTML5 .. Thank you for further explanations. Now it's clear to me. But it sounds to me like a duplicate or at least a variant of bug 99096. Might be more helpful to add a comment there. Feeld free to change it back to UNCONFIRMED with a short resoning, if you disagree. *** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of bug 99096 *** |