mirko's blog |
With release 2.2.1, and thanks to the contribution by Ingo Rockel, JODConverter now includes a Maven 2.0 plugin. This means that you can now integrate document conversions directly into your project build process. For example, you could write some project documentation in OpenDocument format, and have it automatically converted to PDF and other formats for publication on your Maven-generated website. |
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Six months after JODConverter 2.2.0, here comes version 2.2.1. This is a maintenance release only, with no major new features. (Well there is one actually: the new Maven 2 plugin. But since it is not yet available in the Maven central repository, it will be officially announced separately in a few days' time.) So let's see what has changed then. |
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OpenOffice.org 2.3 should be released in a week or so and I had a quick look at its release candidate 2. Here are the new features that should be most interesting for JODConverter users
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It's new! It's here! It's the best JODConverter release available. New Features
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Linux.com has a short article by Dmitri Popov about JODConverter: Extending OpenOffice.org: Turning OpenOffice.org into a document conversion tool. Great to see JODConverter's popularity grow! |
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Are you using JODConverter only as a command line tool? Would you like a simpler alternative that offers similar functionality? Possibly using a scripting language so it's more lightweight and also easier to customise? PyODConverter is a 4.4kb Python script that does exactly that. |
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A new stable OpenOffice.org version has been released a few days ago (29 March). I ran the JODConverter 2.1.1 test suite against the new OpenOffice.org 2.2 and as expected there are no incompatibilities - all tests are successful. |
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JODConverter 2.1.1 is now available for download from SourceForge.net. The main focus for this release is... that the project name has changed! JOOConverter, for Java OpenOffice.org Converter, becomes JODConverter, for Java OpenDocument Converter. |
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Since most of our Java projects use Maven 2 as their build tool, and some of them, like our open source JODConverter, rely on the Java/Uno libraries for OpenOffice.org integration, I though it would be nice to have those libraries available in the central Maven repository. |
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