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Hi :)
How did Lotus WordPro organise it?  Did they have the tabs vertically down the 
side?  Presumably that was pre-widescreen so it would have been less of an 
issue.
Regards from
Tom :)




________________________________
From: Roland Hughes <roland@logikalsolutions.com>
To: users@libreoffice.org
Sent: Sat, 28 May, 2011 17:15:47
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Re: tabs in LibreOffice - like you can do for 
MS-Word?

Until you implement tabbed document divisions exactly as existed in
Lotus WordPro all this discussion of tabs is like Microsoft talking
about how good their security is...of no benefit to anyone because it is
a joke.

On Sat, 2011-05-28 at 13:22 +0200, Johnny Rosenberg wrote:

2011/5/28 webmaster for Kracked Press Productions 
<webmaster@krackedpress.com>:
On 05/27/2011 06:27 PM, plino wrote:
Are you aware that, at least
in Win. that you can move between documents using Alt+tab? I find that
much
faster than trying to use a mouse. If you have a bunch of tasks running
it's
not so handy, but normally you are only switching between a few windows
and
it is very quick.
Are you aware that if you press Ctrl+Tab you can do the same between
documents (or tabs) within the same program? :)

Sorry, but I use Ubuntu as my main system.
I use Vista on my dual boot laptop only when I have no other choice.
A bit off topic:
Then your options are even better. Ctrl+Tab (Ctrl+⇥) works in Ubuntu
(and probably in all the other GNU/Linux-distributions as well), but
if you installed the Compiz-Fusion settings manager, you have so many
more options.
Of course I tweaked everything in my system, so I don't really
remember how it worked before all those tweaks, but I am 100% sure
that Ctrl+⇥ works by default. Maybe also Mod4+⇥ (I think the Mod4 key
is associated to the Win-key by default), or maybe I tweaked that one
myself…

And I am pretty sure you can switch between desktops with Ctrl+Alt+→
and Ctrl+Alt+←, but as I said, explore the Compiz-Fusion settings
since there is so much more you can do there. Compiz-Fusion is
installed by default in Ubuntu these days, but for some strange reason
the settings manager is not…! You can easily install it with Synaptic
or the Ubuntu software center though, just search for
”compizconfig-settings-manager” in there. Or install it from a
terminal:

sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager

The settings manager will end up at System → Preferences, so go there
and have some fun…!


Regards

Johnny Rosenberg
ジョニー・ローゼンバーグ


-- 
Roland Hughes, President
Logikal Solutions
(630)-205-1593

http://www.theminimumyouneedtoknow.com
http://www.infiniteexposure.net

No U.S. troops have ever lost their lives defending our ethanol
reserves.

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