Choosing options for loading and saving documents

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You can set the Load/Save options to suit the way you work.

Load/Save options.

General Load/Save options

  1. If the Options dialog is not already open, click Tools > Options. Click the + sign to the left of Load/Save.
  2. Choose Load/Save > General.

Most of the choices on the Options - Load/Save - General dialog are familiar to users of other office suites. Some items of interest are described below.

Choosing Load and Save options.

Load user-specific settings with the document

When you save a document, certain settings are saved with it. For example, your choice (in the options for OOo Writer) of how to update links is affected by the Load user-specific settings option. Some settings (printer name, data source linked to the document) are always loaded with a document, whether or not this checkbox is selected.

If you select this option, these document settings are overruled by the user-specific settings of the person who opens it. If you deselect this option, users' personal settings do not overrule the settings in the document.

Load printer settings with the document

If this option is not selected, the printer settings that are stored with the document are ignored when you print it using the Print File Directly icon. The default printer in your system will be used instead.

Edit document properties before saving

When you select this option, the Document Properties dialog pops up to prompt you to enter relevant information the first time you save a new document (or whenever you use Save As).

Save AutoRecovery information every

Note that AutoRecovery in OpenOffice.org overwrites the original file. If you have also chosen Always create backup copy, the original file then overwrites the backup copy. If you have this set, recovering your document after a system crash will be easier; but recovering an earlier version of the document may be harder. Note also that, due to a bug in the later versions of OpenOffice, AutoRecovery in OpenOffice is not the equivalent of AutoSave option that you may recall from other word-processing applications. Instead, AutoRecovery only tries to re-open (hence the term "Recovery" in the name) the last document that was open at the time of a crash. It only has the copy of the document that you have manually saved to recover. Therefore, it is NOT AutoSave as you may expect. It does not matter how short the intervals are set to. If for example you set the saving intervals to 1 minutes, the result will still be the loss of your last two hours of work if your system crashes when the last time you have manually saved your document was two hours ago. Until the bug is fix, here is how to manually recover after a crash:

Set up your AutoRecovery option as you like. When your application is crashed, before reopening it, go to the following folder:

C:\Documents and Settings\[username]\Application Data\OpenOffice.org\3\user\backup

There, you will find the file that is saved during the interval set by the user with the same name followed by "_0.odt". Copy it and paste it to the location you have your original document during which the crash occurred. That document will be your recovered document.

Size optimization for XML format (no pretty printing)

OpenOffice.org documents are XML files. When you select this option, OOo writes the XML data without indents and line breaks. If you want to be able to read the XML files in a text editor in a structured form, deselect this option.

Default file format

If you routinely share documents with users of Microsoft Word, you might want to change the Always save as attribute for text documents in the Standard file format section to one of the Word document types.

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