-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 jdd wrote:
Pueblo Native wrote:
jdd wrote:
think at what make these apps different. I did some years ago and found only one: the ability to have a text span several boxes
and this can be achieved in OpenOffice .org.
It's not obvious and I don't remember the recipe, but it can be done...
My original idea was that the biggest difference between these products was how they treated text. In a word processor, for instance, most of the time text was text. In a DTP product, on the other hand, text is a design element, just like photos and other graphics. That was my original concept, and I think that's pretty much gotten smashed.
A publisher program is able to giv a large page with différent objects in it, like a news paper.
Nearly any modern word processor can do so, that is have frames around a page with text, photos, titles, drawings...
But on a news paper, on can see the beginning of an article on the front page and the following on an other page or on an other column of the same page
OpenOffice is able to do so, thouhg not woth ease and when I tryed it (at least two years ago), this feature was biggy - I hope this is fixed now.
Notice than I use some old version of publiser by microsoft and it was a very good application, verye asy to use (I used it in classroom with pupils), much easier than PageMaker or Ventura (you see, I'm an old timer :-) I do not use such progamms for at least 3 years now, so I don'"t know what happen
jdd
There is bit more to it that .. DTP publishers also output marks used to align copy to professional printing presses and had support for some of the formats used. A volume printer is somewhat different beast to a desktop laser. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with SUSE - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFGWqB6asN0sSnLmgIRAvHRAJ4pGIx6Z8zM7dsFTiWQPvBA9z/5kQCdH2jf f1hTazK1zjBp+1i6262HU8U= =oiMu -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org