![]() One annoyance to note is that if you get soffice to load a file by doing: $ soffice $ You’ll see there are different switches which allow you to start a text document, a spreadsheet etc. Now you can do stuff like: $ soffice -help ![]() $ ln -s /Applications/\ 2.0.app/Contents//program/soffice. by symlinking into ~/bin or /usr/bin: $ cd ~/bin I’ve got the standard X port of OpenOffice 2.0 installed, so if you have something different you may need to change the path to soffice given below (to find soffice on your machine try from the command line $ locate soffice):įirst let’s make the script that starts openoffice available in a convenient way e.g. This is a simple hack to enable you to start OpenOffice and, more importantly, open documents with it from the command line.
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