Difference between revisions of "Documentation/OOoAuthors User Manual/Getting Started/Using the Quickstarter under Linux"

From Apache OpenOffice Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{StartingoooTOC|StartingOOo=block|PrevNext=block|Prev=Documentation/OOoAuthors User Manual/Getting Started/Using the Quickstarter under Windows|Next=Documentation/OOoAuthors User Manual/Getting Started/Starting from the command line}}
+
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Using the Quickstarter under Linux}}
=Using the Quickstarter under Linux=
+
{{Documentation/StartingoooTOC
Some installations of OpenOffice.org under Linux have a Quickstarter that looks and acts like the one described above for Windows (the checkbox on the Memory page is labeled '''Enable systray quickstarter'''). The Linux Quickstarter is disabled in other installations, but it will be operational in future releases.
+
|ShowPrevNext=block
 +
|PrevPage=Documentation/OOoAuthors User Manual/Getting Started/Using the Quickstarter under Windows
 +
|NextPage=Documentation/OOoAuthors User Manual/Getting Started/Starting from the command line
 +
}}
 +
Some installations of OpenOffice.org under Linux have a Quickstarter that looks and acts like the one described above for Windows (the checkbox on the Memory page is labeled '''Enable systray quickstarter''').
  
=Preloading OOo under Linux/KDE=
+
==Preloading OOo under Linux/KDE==
  
 
In Linux/KDE, you can use KDocker to have OOo loaded and ready for use at startup. KDocker is not part of OOo; it is a generic "systray app docker" that is helpful if you open OOo often.
 
In Linux/KDE, you can use KDocker to have OOo loaded and ready for use at startup. KDocker is not part of OOo; it is a generic "systray app docker" that is helpful if you open OOo often.
Line 9: Line 13:
  
 
{{CCBY}}
 
{{CCBY}}
[[Category: Documentation]]
+
[[Category:Getting Started (Documentation)]]

Latest revision as of 06:48, 23 April 2008


Some installations of OpenOffice.org under Linux have a Quickstarter that looks and acts like the one described above for Windows (the checkbox on the Memory page is labeled Enable systray quickstarter).

Preloading OOo under Linux/KDE

In Linux/KDE, you can use KDocker to have OOo loaded and ready for use at startup. KDocker is not part of OOo; it is a generic "systray app docker" that is helpful if you open OOo often.


Content on this page is licensed under the Creative Common Attribution 3.0 license (CC-BY).
Personal tools