OASIS Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) TC

Re: [office] Re: [office-accessibility] Re: [office] Fw:[office-accessibility] Inclusion of tables

  • 1.  Re: [office] Re: [office-accessibility] Re: [office] Fw:[office-accessibility] Inclusion of tables

    Posted 02-24-2006 16:06
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    Subject: Re: [office] Re: [office-accessibility] Re: [office] Fw:[office-accessibility] Inclusion of tables


    On Feb 24, 2006, at 7:21 AM, Richard Schwerdtfeger wrote:
    > > Tables should behave as if they were part of the slide.
    
    Bruce D'Arcus replied:
    > Yes!
    > 
    > Re: the Keynote question earlier, no, it doesn't use ODF, but I was 
    > responding to the notion that tables are not a standard feature of 
    > presentation applications generally.
    
    Let me confirm that.  Two days ago I was editing a set of slides
    where one of the MOST IMPORTANT slides in the presentation was
    a traditional table (a 3-column table, with a heading row and rows of
    data underneath it).  Tables are valuable in presentations for the
    same reason that they are valuable in documents -- for some
    information, a table is the clearest way to present it.
    Tables are great when you have structured data.
    
    In OpenOffice.org 2, it's easy to get a table embedded in
    a presentation.  Just go to the "layouts" list, and
    click on the "spreadsheet" icon to make the
    main body of the slide a spreadsheet (which then becomes
    an embedded object).  Then you can edit away.  By default
    the borders don't show, but that is trivially fixed
    (format->cells->borders).
    
    If there's a better method to support tables in presentations,
    PARTICULARLY if there's a better way to improve
    accessibility, then that's great--sounds like a worthy thing
    to discuss. And if this is an OpenOffice.org 2-unique extension,
    it sounds like something that needs standardizing (I suspect
    it's NOT unique... I suspect it's just using ordinary embedding).
    
    But I _do_ want to remove any misunderstandings:
    1. Yes, it IS important to support tables inside presentations.
    2. Yes, there's at least one ODF-compliant application that
        DOES support tables inside presentations (OpenOffice.org 2);
        maybe people want a "better" approach, but you CAN do it today.
    
    --- David A. Wheeler
    


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