![]() Hide/Show Grid: click menu View > Grid and Helplines > uncheck Grid > background grid is now gone > check to show it again. ![]() Hide/Show Non-Printing Characters: click menu View > uncheck Formatting Marks > all non-printing characters (such as ¶) are now gone.Hide/Show Text Boundaries: click menu View > uncheck Text Boundaries > four L-shaped lines on each page now gone (also Section's border lines) > check to show them again.Hide/Show Tables: click menu View > uncheck Table Boundaries > all tables now lost their border lines > check to show them again.Hide/Show Pictures: click menu View > uncheck Images and Charts > all pictures hidden within empty frames > check to show them again.This editor works in both Normal and Web views. You can, for example, create a simple website with go forward and go back buttons to navigate between pages. The created form document can then be exported as HTML (web page), ODT, PDF, and the buttons will be clickable there. With this editor, Writer can visually design user interface form (involving button, combo box, etc.) in a document with certain functions to receive inputs and process them. Click Design Mode on Form Controls dialog (index finger with an OK) to enable form creation, click it again to test clicking buttons.Go to View > Toolbars > enable Form Design > a new toolbar appears.Go to View > Toolbars > enable Form Controls > a floating dialog of buttons appears.This is a comparison of both Views with text (text taken from my old writing Support ODF). ![]() This is comparison between Normal and Web views with empty document. The resulting HTML file is a web page formatted as you edit which the code generated automatically by LibreOffice Writer. With web view you can type text, format them as you please, include pictures and tables, etc. How about Web View? As we already learned on previous part, LibreOffice Writer is a WYSIWYG editor so if you want to create web in visual way without coding, there is Web View for you. If we change it to Web view, it loses paper boundaries and looks far wider. The view we usually see is the Normal one. Writer provides two view modes, Normal and Web, as depicted below. ![]() Subscribe to UbuntuBuzz Telegram Channel to get article updates directly.ġ. ![]()
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