Full description not available
G**.
Not about using Open Office
I was very disappointed with this book. I thought it would be mostly about using Open Office's programs. Instead it is all about coding and if-then commands and programming within Open Office. I would not recommend this book if you are a person wanting to learn how to use Open Office and not program a computer program.
D**R
NOT WHAT I NEEDED
BOOK IS NOT WHAT I THOUGHT IS WAS, IT WAS RETURNED
A**A
Learn the Basic language.
Great book to learn the Basic language. The author also includes difference between a Basic and VBA. It is a good book.
D**T
Yes, it's an introduction
This book is neither dense nor deep. It will suffice to get one started writing scripts/programs for OO/LO/Neo. Note that it is nine years old, but the language hasn't changed a lot. If you are not already a developer with some experience, I would suggest first doing something in M$ Visual Basic, preferably version 6. I would not suggest this if there were sufficient resources available on the web. Poor documentation haunts many open source projects.The book is set in 15 point type, with much white space. So much room for scribbling notes, and no need to switch between your computer and reading glasses. The first half is a language reference; the syntax reference is superfluous for a seasoned developer, and the function reference may be all that a developer needs to read. Then there is a short section on how to interact with the program in general. Then there are chapters on Writer, Calc, and Draw, followed by five pages on DB connectivity (not Base). Then there are chapters on creating dialogs and forms, and a few short appendices. Lacking is an object model diagram. There are code examples but no tutorials.I wish there was something better than this book, but unless you find that, you may benefit from this book. I'm glad I bought it.
S**A
NOT AN INTRODUCTION FOR USE OF SOFTWARE!!!!
This book shouldn't even be on Amazon. Who cares. I did not read any reviews before I purchased this book. (I usually do) I wanted an introduction on how to use this program not how to build one myself!!! I immediately put this book into my Goodwill pile
M**R
A passable programming book, but not a "How to use Open Office" book
This is not a book about using the programs contained in the Open Office suite. It is, instead, a manual for using Open Office Basic, one of the macro programs available when you download the free Open Office software. If you aren't familiar with macro programming, or if you haven't any experience at all in programming, this book--as the other reviewers attest--will do nothing but confuse you. If you want help with the word processing, spreadsheets, databases, or the presentation program contained within Open Office, your best bet, really, is to use the help files that come with the suite. They are as good as any I've ever seen, and it's easy to copy and paste the examples from their help files into your macro modules and make small modifications to them. Also, Wikipedia has a lot of help files for Open Office, which is not surprising since the community of folks who created Wikipedia are the same folks, it seems, who created the Open Office Suite software.Open Office Basic isn't the only macro programming or scripting language available to you in Open Office. Java, for one, takes only a simple download from the Apache website to be added to the suite (see the help file). If you already know Visual Basic for Applications or you have some other experience in any kind of software programming, you won't be confused by what this book covers; however, you will find many things written in the book to be inaccurate. The sample "load dialog" example given in the book, for instance, doesn't work, but the example I copied from the help file ran on the first try. The solution for making use of what you can in the book is to always compare the book's examples with the macro and programming chapter in the Open Office help file. Why bother with the book then? Good question. The book's copyright is 2012, and I believe there have been many releases of the software since that date, accounting, no doubt, for the discrepancies.It isn't an expensive book, and I, unfortunately, am of the generation that wants to hold a book in my hands while I'm learning a new program. Maybe you're lucky and you don't need the tactile reassurance. If so, don't waste your money on this book. It is very, very bare bones. However, it is nice to have easy and quick access to variable naming rules and scoping information and other common programming issues without having to wade through the help files to find it.One last thing, you probably should be comfortable with object oriented programming in order to understand this book.And one more last, last thing. I find using the macro recorder the best way to see how the macro language is structured. If I had it to do over, I'd probably use the recorded and the help file and bypass this book.Open Office is a great program which I have used for several years without problems and without missing the expensive Microsoft Office alternative. I hope I might have cleared up some of the confusion the other reviewers have had about this book. It's poorly bound, and I'm sure the pages will be falling out of it in short order. Well, that's modern life I suppose. It's essentially a Kindle book printed in Kentucky.
W**L
SKIP THIS ONE, BABY!
I was expecting a how-to manual on using Open Office, a very exciting free download program. What I got was a techno-babble bunch of hooey gibberish on (?) system functionality, subsets, whatever... I don't remember. It was not in the least BIT helpful.
A**R
I suppose it is useful but not for my needs
I didn't realize this particular book was for computer programming Basic, not basics of Open Office. I suppose it is useful but not for my needs.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 days ago