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At 16:06 07/04/2015 +0200, Honly Wonly wrote:
Am 23.03.2015 um 18:28 schrieb Brian Barker:
At 17:01 23/03/2015 +0100, Honly Wonly wrote:
Am 16.03.2015 um 18:07 schrieb Andreas Säger:
Am 16.03.2015 um 15:57 schrieb Honly Wonly:
Creating LO documents directly would be nice and might have the advantage to be able to specify some formatting --- which I might need to do sooner or later.

Formatting is a matter of style, cell styles in this case. Linked import ranges filled with database data can be prepared with cell styles (I use document templates for this type of database reports). The formatting expands/shrinks with the imported data range.

How would I do something like this with CSVs? I guess I'd need some sort of "overlay spreadsheet" which defines the formatting and is then being filled with the data from a CSV file. The fields in the CSV remain the same while the number of rows will vary

As suggested above, if you already had suitable styling configured as cell styles, it would be very simple to apply these styles to the data after it was positioned. Alternatively, if you have a document with space for the data already formatted - which would indeed sensibly be created from a template - you could add the data without upsetting the formatting.

The trick here is to use Edit | Paste Special... (or Ctrl+Shift+V) instead of ordinary Paste. If you paste from elsewhere in the same or another spreadsheet document, ensure that "Paste all" and Formats are both *not* ticked in the Paste Special dialogue; if you paste from another source, select "Unformatted text" in the Paste Special dialogue.

The data is in a CSV file.

As you already indicated.

Opening the CSV creates a new spreadsheet.

Not necessarily: you can import a CSV file as a new sheet in an existing spreadsheet - and you can very simply copy and paste from there to wherever you want it.

I don't want to apply formatting ...

The previous suggestion - pasting as "Unformatted text" into a previously formatted sheet, probably derived from a template - avoids this. You will need to indicate what formatting you want at some point, of course, and you can easily do this by creating a template.

... or copy and paste anything manually. The formatting should be applied automatically, for example based on the name of the CSV file, using a regexp, when the CSV file is opened.

Then you may well need not Calc but SuperCalc. You could volunteer to help create it at www.iwanttohelpwritesupercalc.org . With luck it may be developed to read your mind as well.

Or you could employ an assistant.

Brian Barker

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