Hi Brian
Thanks for your help, our studies on other cultures at school was very 
vague, and as of yet, never needed to understand another calendar..
It could possibly be a red herring like you say, i just put 2 and 2 
together, and came up with 5, maybe i should have used a spreadsheet :D
Im running LO 3.4.4 on my works imac, and checking its a USA interface, 
UK Locale & Currency setting...
Just loaded up the document, and just checking the first sheet, the 
formulas seem to have been saved, and work ok, ill just keep an eye on 
it, and see what else happens.
Thanks again,
Phil
On 07/07/2014 02:00, Brian Barker wrote:
At 00:05 07/07/2014 +0100, Philip Ward wrote:
On 06/07/2014 17:01, Brian Barker wrote:
At 13:12 06/07/2014 +0100, Philip Ward wrote:
... and now i went in to alter the format of the cell ie Date 
details "NNNND MMMM YYYY"  giving me "Monday 6 October 2014" but 
now want to shorten the date down to "mon 6 oct 2014", but its now 
telling me options for jewish?? ie " [~jewish]NNNND MMMM YYYY" i 
know i can alter the details, but does anyone have any ideas as to 
why my cells change from what they should be? or why i now have 
jewish in there as well?
Yes and no. There are a few things worth knowing.
o The definition of ODF says that the format code is "a sequence of 
characters with an implementation-defined meaning", so clearly it 
can be different in different standards-respecting applications. So 
formats such as "NNNND MMMM YYYY" are not saved as such in ODF 
document files. Instead, it seems that three things are saved: the 
date in ISO standard form (2014-10-06), the actual text as displayed 
(Monday 6 October 2014), and a description in different terms of 
your chosen format - such things as:
<number:day-of-week number:style="long" />
<number:text />
<number:day />
<number:text />
<number:month number:style="long" number:textual="true" />
<number:text />
<number:year number:style="long" />
When you reopen a document, the necessary formats must be 
reconstituted from this information in the file.
o Dates in particular are reconstituted with reference to the 
current locale. If, for example, I enter today's date (6 July) in my 
UK locale, it is displayed naturally as 06/07/14. If I save that in 
a document and reopen it in a US locale, the format is automatically 
reconstituted differently, with the same cell being displayed 
instead as 07/06/14.
o It seems that some formats that have been used or appeared 
automatically but perhaps are no longer needed are nevertheless 
saved in the document.
So I think some of this could be explained by this document having 
been opened and resaved on a system with locale set to Hebrew.
I understand that the NNNDDD etc are not stored with in the format, 
but just wondered where the jewish annotations came into effect?
If I understand you correctly, these are just appearing as possible 
formats in the Format Cells dialogue. If so, I don't think you should 
be too worried about them. I don't claim to understand all the aspects 
of locale settings, which exist separately for operating systems 
(including individual user settings) as well as for applications, such 
as LibreOffice. If Calc thinks you might be helped by these offerings 
but you don't need them, there is no problem I can see
the top reference in the list of pre-set annotations mentioned above 
is [~jewish]NNNND MMMM YYYY, and in the format box it is "Friday 22 
Tevet 5760" ...
That corresponds to Gregorian 31 December 1999, which is the date used 
for all format examples in the Format Cells dialogue.
... and in the preview box it is "Monday 9 Tammuz 5774", i don't even 
know if that's correct?
That's Monday 7 July 2014 in the Gregorian calendar, i.e. today.
... or if the Jewish calendar works on a different format?
Well, yes: it has a different origin, of course - a point in 3761 BC 
by the Gregorian calendar - as well as different month names, which 
don't correspond with Gregorian months since they are generally 
shorter and need additional "intercalary" months every two or three 
years to keep the calendar in step with the solar year.
I have also as a test just copied the cell into a new spreadsheet, 
and it took over the jewish annotation?
By default, pasting carries over formats as well as values. You can 
suppress this using Paste Special... .
I was just looking for insights as to whether anyone else has had the 
problem? i just don't want to go much further, and lose the lot, ...
The question of available formats doesn't affect your use of the 
spreadsheet, does it? I suspect it is a red herring and may have no 
connection with the other corruption you mentioned (about which I have 
no comment).
Brian Barker
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