Renaissance:ODFToolkit
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Using the ODFTOOLKIT
- go to the OdfToolkit site and download the ODFDOM Java API
- follow the instructions in the wiki and install apps that are required
- download Netbeans, open the ODFDOM project and start coding :-)
Loading an ODF file and processing meta.xml
- this is just a really dirty version I hacked
- no XML parsing required so far, just using a regular expression
- it loads an ODT file and displays entries in meta:document-statistic that I considered interesting
- go on and improve!
package loadodf;
import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
import org.openoffice.odf.doc.OdfDocument;
/**
*
* @author Andreas Bartel
* @version 0.1
*/
public class Main
{
/**
* @param args the command line arguments
*/
public static void main(String[] args)
{
// TODO code application logic here
OdfDocument odfDoc;
String s = null;
String regex = "\"\\d*\"";
Pattern p = Pattern.compile(regex);
try
{
System.out.println("Loading ...");
// The input of an ODF document is hard coded so far
odfDoc = OdfDocument.loadDocument("d:\\scenarios.odt");
System.out.println("Done!");
BufferedReader meta = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(odfDoc.getMetaStream()));
while ((s = meta.readLine()) != null)
{
if (s.contains("meta:document-statistic"))
{
int i = s.indexOf("meta:table-count");
int j = s.indexOf("</office:meta");
String sub = s.substring(i, j-1);
Matcher m = p.matcher(sub);
while(m.find())
{
String n = sub.substring(m.start(), m.end());
System.out.println(n);
}
}
}
}
catch (Exception e)
{
System.err.println(e);
}
}
}