Well I've never used Star Office and I don't know if it has an Excel compatible output format. But as it has the possibility to output a flat tab-delimited file, you can use DBD::CSV to read that. CountZero "If you have four groups working on a compiler, you'll get a 4-pass compiler." - Conway's Law
| [reply] |
Yes, indeed! It has 'specially' Excel output format.
Besides, I would suggest a special font that might look exactly like a handwritten text (quite big and in italics). It is visually evident that it is not handwritten, but when you asociate the heartly content of the letter with that font you end thinking in the human handwritting.
You could also help that impression if you choose a normal paper context (that is, no dark background with a clear foreground).
Choose photographs with big faces in it and little background.
Use wooden combination of colours that are more more home suggesting themes. At least, colours from the nature!
A nice frame for the photograph also suggest some craftmade thing!
You could even scan the signature!
Enjoy your ilusion!
| [reply] |
I've been using Spreadsheet::ParseExcel with OpenOffice on my Linux box with great results. In Open/StarOffice, save the spreadsheet as Excel, then fire up Spreadsheet::ParseExcel and have fun. The version of Excel that you save as doesn't seem to matter, be it Excel5, 95, or 97/2000/xp unless you have cells that have > ~ 254 characters of text, in which case saving it as Excel5 will truncate the contents of those cells.
When I started doing this I was rather amused to be writing Excel spreadsheets on a Linux box using perl to be read/edited using OpenOffice with the results being read using perl-- the only thing Microsoft was the format. That said, it would be nice to have a Spreadsheet::ParseOpenOffice and Spreadsheet::WriteOpenOffice module... | [reply] |