LibreOffice project and community recap: July 2024

LibreOffice project and community recap banner

Here’s our summary of updates, events and activities in the LibreOffice project in the last four weeks – click the links to learn more…

  • On the 11th, we announced LibreOffice 24.2.5, the fifth minor update to the latest major release. This includes 70 bug and compatibility fixes, and all users are recommended to update. (The previous branch, LibreOffice 7.6, is no longer maintained.)

LibreOffice 24.2 banner

Annual Report 2023 banner

LibreOffice P2P collaboration mockup

  • And finally, the QA team announced LibreOffice 24.8 RC1 – the first Release Candidate for what will become the final version in late August. Please help us to test it!

LibreOffice 24.8 RC1 banner

Keep in touch – follow us on Mastodon, X (formerly Twitter), Bluesky, Reddit and Facebook. Like what we do? Support our community with a donation – or join our community and help to make LibreOffice even better!

Native Language Projects – TDF’s Annual Report 2023

TDF Annual Report banner

By helping to translate and market LibreOffice around the world, native language projects bring enthusiasm and passion to the global community. Here’s what they did in 2023…

(This is part of The Document Foundation’s Annual Report for 2023 – we’ll post the full version here soon.)

Armenian

During the year, Tigran Zargaryan worked on a translation of LibreOffice into Armenian, and in January 2024 he announced the results of his work:

“With great pleasure, I’m informing that the Armenian localisation of LibreOffice is complete, and this is an especially significant event for Armenian community members worldwide, who are using various office suites in their daily work and – due to lack of Armenian user interface translations – are facing language difficulties.”

He added:

“I hope that the presence of the Armenian language interface translation will be of great support especially in schools, educational institutions and state organisations. In general, many state-based entities are financed by tax payers, and the presence of such a suite will ease their life, as they will legally be able to use office products without copyright infringement, and for them a totally new world of Free/Open Source Software (FOSS) philosophy will be introduced.”

LibreOffice user interface in Armenian


Bangla/Bengali

There were two events in Bangladesh: the Open Tech Talk at UITS in Dhaka, and Software Freedom Day 2023 Bangladesh event in MBSTU, Tangail. Meanwhile, community members assisted users in their native language Telegram groups.


Bulgarian

Bulgarian speakers continued to maintain their translation of LibreOffice’s user interface at 100%, and the Help content at 95%.


Czech

Throughout 2023, the Czech community maintained its translation of LibreOffice’s user interface, keeping it at 100% complete, and the Help content at around 95%. They presented LibreOffice at a booth at the LinuxDays event in Prague in October, and published user guides in the Czech language in the LibreOffice Bookshelf (including their migration to HTML format). These included the Draw Guide 7.4, Base Guide 7.3, Calc Guide 7.4 and Impress Guide 7.5.

In addition, community members added support for Czech decimals to the Numbertext library, supported end users on the Czech “Ask LibreOffice” site, and maintained social media accounts on X (Twitter), Facebook and Instagram.

LinuxDays event in Prague


Dutch

Throughout 2023, the Dutch-speaking community helped to support LibreOffice users by answering questions on the “Ask LibreOffice” website and mailing lists.

They set up a stand at the NLLGG in November – a conference of the Dutch Linux community. There, LibreOffice users could obtain information and ask questions about the software, whether or not in conjunction with a Linux-based operating system.

Community members also worked on maintaining the Dutch LibreOffice website, and translated and published handbooks: the Writer Guide for LibreOffice 7.5 (translated and published in February); the Math Guide for LibreOffice 7.5 (translated and published in June) the Draw Guide for LibreOffice 7.5 (translated and published in August); and he Impress Guide for LibreOffice 7.6 (translated and published in November).

Translators, using TDF’s Weblate instance, managed to keep up with changes in LibreOffice’s user interface, maintaining the 100% translated status. They added:

“Translating the Help content is a lot of work for a small group of volunteers. Although the Help keeps growing, we were able to maintain it at 100% translated.”


Esperanto

By the end of the year, the Esperanto translators had achieved the following levels of completion: user interface 99%, LibreOffice Online 100%, Impress Remote 100%, LibreOffice Help 37%, and the website 100%.


Finnish

The Finnish-speaking community worked primarily on translating LibreOffice’s user interface, and to a lesser extent, the Help content.


French

In 2023, French contributors maintained translations on Weblate at almost 100% for all versions of LibreOffice, and progressed with translations of Calc functions on TDF’s wiki. They took part in two events, Capitole du Libre (Toulouse) and Open Source Experience (Paris), and held several online meetings with other community members. Finally, they made contributions to code, QA, marketing, documentation and Ask LibreOffice.


German

In Weblate, the translation of LibreOffice’s user interface reached 99% completeness, and the Help content 96%. There was user support by answering questions via Ask LibreOffice and mailing lists, while community members worked on translating release notes for new major LibreOffice releases, publishing videos, and working on translations of handbooks.


Indonesian

The Indonesian community organised a two-day “LibreOffice Conference Asia 2023” event in Surakarta, and posted a summary on this blog.

Regarding community activities, members worked on engaging and encouraging new contributors to work on videos showcasing the new features in LibreOffice.

LibreOffice Conference Asia 2023


Italian

Thanks to the efforts of the Italian community, the translation of LibreOffice’s user interface and online Help content reached 100%. Together with other communities, they started a pilot project to translate the Getting Started Guide via Weblate. In addition, they organised several activities and events during Linux Day 2023.


Japanese

In terms of events, the Japanese community organised its local annual conference, LibreOffice Kaigi 2023 Online. There were three online study parties in which users shared knowledge and interacted with one another, along with 49 online hackfests, where participants worked together to make progress on tasks and transfer skills. There were also 10 “LibreOffice day” events – in-person events in Awaji, Osaka City. They were held jointly with Open Awaji, a group themed around open data and a movement towards open cities.

Japanese community members attended five open source conferences and had booths (in Tokyo, Nagoya, Hiroshima, Fukuoka and again in Tokyo). There was the Kansai Open Forum 2023, an event for open source and IT communities in the Kansai region that has been held annually since 2002. Additionally, Japanese community members participated in the LibreOffice Conference Asia 2023 and COSCUP (a comprehensive open source event in Taiwan).

Apart from events, community members worked on “how-to” videos and uploaded them to YouTube, and worked on translations of LibreOffice’s user interface into Japanese (93% complete) and the Help content (49% complete). They translated complete handbooks (the Writer Guide 7.5 and Calc Guide 7.5) and one community member, Meguro-san, translated using TexTra, a machine translation service provided by NICT, a Japanese government research institute.

There was also work on Ask LibreOffice, with 85 questions or comments added, and on the blog (19 articles posted). In terms of social media activity, the Japanese X (Twitter) account had 2,941 followers, 63 posts, 58,000 impressions and an engagement rate of 5.9%. The Facebook page had 22 posts and 625 followers.


Kazakh

In 2023, work continued on the Kazakh translation of LibreOffice’s user interface.


Korean

Work continued on translation of LibreOffice’s user interface, and the community promoted LibreOffice at the Ubuntu Korea 2023 event.


Morisyen

Locale data was added for Morisyen, the creole language used in the Republic of Mauritius (Islands of Mauritius, Rodrigues, Agalega and Archipelago of Chagos including Diego Garcia). The document language in LibreOffice can therefore be defined as such. There was input by Jean-Yves Dick and Ragini Kistnasamy from Ledikasyon pu Travayer (LPT) association, and Eike Rathke from the LibreOffice community.

Then there was work on an extension: the implementation of a unified spell-checker for use when writing in Morisyen. The extension includes 26,000 words and an AFF file, both works-in-progress.


Nepali

Suraj Bhattarai, LibreOffice’s liaison in the Nepali community, mentored around 60 students from different universities and he connected a few more open-source communities in Nepal. They were able to localize around 10,000 strings in two weeks.

Suraj, along with the Kathmandu University Open Source club, organised a localisation camp during Software Freedom Day, and more than 53 students joined. They also organised an online course on called “localisation 101”, in which 11 students joined for two months, every Sunday from 21:00 – 22:00 Nepal time. Suraj shared with participants the concepts of localisation, internationalisation and the importance of style guides, terminologies, glossary, tools used, computer-aided translation and Weblate.

LibreOffice Nepali localisation sprint


Persian (Farsi)

Community members reported various issues with RTL/CTL (right-to-left and complex text layout languages) on TDF’s Bugzilla instance, and worked with TDF’s RTL/CTL developer to test and verify fixes. They considered many fixed issues with justified Persian text, and received very good feedback.

Fixing rendering issues remain the most important goal. In terms of localization, most of the work on translating LibreOffice’s user interface was from three contributors. Another worked on an AI assistant extension that works with ChatGPT. Finally, there were various posts on local websites and the Persian Telegram group, along with supports to end users.


Spanish

The highlight of 2023 was the Latin America LibreOffice Conference, held in the Ciudad de México, Mexico. Community members also participated in the esLibre 2023 conference (an annual free software and hardware event), with two talks and three workshops.

Work continued on the translation of LibreOffice’s user interface (99%) and Help content (87%), while 20 articles were published on the Spanish blog. Then the Spanish version of Getting Started Guide 7.3 was published in Open Document and PDF formats, while two previous guides were published as HTML.

Community members provided user support in the Telegram channel (bridged with Mastodon), which has over 1,400 subscribers, while support for users writing Python macros continued on Mastodon. There was also a new iteration of the university program “Servicio Social para la Documentación de LibreOffice en español”. Participants published three magazines and collaborated on LibreOffice’s user interface translations.

LibreOffice Latin America Conference 2023


Taiwanese

Work continued on translation of LibreOffice’s user interface, which was maintained at 99% complete.


Ukrainian

Throughout the year, the Ukrainian team translated over 1,600 strings in LibreOffice’s “UI-Master” project, reaching overall 99% completeness. They also reached 51% completeness in the “Help-Master” project.


Thank you to everyone

We at The Document Foundation would like to say a huge thank you to everyone who in the native language communities. Your work makes LibreOffice accessible to hundreds of millions of people around the world, and your passion is wonderful. Thank you!

Like what we do? Support the LibreOffice project and The Document Foundation – get involved and help our volunteers, or make a donation. Thank you!

LibreOffice project and community recap: June 2024

LibreOffice project and community recap banner

Here’s our summary of updates, events and activities in the LibreOffice project in the last four weeks – click the links to learn more…

LibreOffice invitation template

Donate button

LibreOffice stickers

LibreOffice Conference 2023 group photo

LibreOffice Impress Guide 24.2 cover

Keep in touch – follow us on Mastodon, X (formerly Twitter), Bluesky, Reddit and Facebook. Like what we do? Support our community with a donation – or join our community and help to make LibreOffice even better!

Winners in the Month of LibreOffice, May 2024 – Get your free sticker pack!

Month of LibreOffice stickers

At the beginning of May, we began a new Month of LibreOffice campaign, celebrating community contributions all across the project. We do these every six months – so how many people got sticker packs this time? Check it out…

Awesome work, everyone! Hundreds of people, all across the globe, have helped out in our projects and communities. We’re hugely thankful for your contributions – and, of course, everyone who’s listed on the wiki page can get a sticker pack, with the stickers shown above.

How to claim

If you see your name (or username) on this page, get in touch! Email mike.saunders@documentfoundation.org with:

  • your name (or username) from the wiki page
  • along with your postal address

and we’ll send you a bunch of stickers for your PC, laptop and other kit. (Note: your address will only be used to post the stickers, and will be deleted immediately afterwards.) If you contributed to the project in May but you’re not on the wiki page, please let us know what you did, so that we can add you!

There is one more thing…

And we have an extra bonus: ten contributors have also been selected at random to get an extra piece of merchandise – a LibreOffice hoodie, T-shirt, rucksack or snazzy glass mug. Here are the winners (names or usernames) – we’ll get in touch personally with the details:

  • Abduqadir Abliz
  • p.wibberley
  • Huanyu Liu
  • @johkra@mastodon.social
  • Rafał Dobrakowski
  • ms777
  • Zainab Abbasi
  • Andy Flagg
  • @jake4480@c.im
  • Yoshida Saburo

Congratulations to all the winners, and a big thanks once again to everyone who took part – your contributions keep the LibreOffice project strong. We plan to have another Month of LibreOffice in November, but everyone is welcome to see what they can do for LibreOffice at any time!

Community Member Monday: Isabelle Dutailly

Today we’re talking to Isabelle Dutailly, who’s creating and updating templates for LibreOffice…

Tell us a bit about yourself!

I live in Paris, France, not that it really matters, and I am a writer. My favourite tool to write with is absolutely LibreOffice Writer. I also used to training adults on office software. So I think I can say why Writer is the best word processing software I know.

And I am a knitter which led me to make some tools for knitters with Calc. That was surprisingly easy, knowing my absolute lack of abilities in maths. These tools are online and free to download. I designed and made this little guy:

Isabelle Dutailly's knitted avatar

My computer runs Linux (Mageia) and only with free software, not because they are free of charge (and considering how much money and time I put on them, they certainly are not 😊) but because they give me freedom. I did things with LibreOffice that I never did with a proprietary office suite.

For example, in 2017, because I needed (and still need) to organize the colours I use, I looked at the code (which was not difficult but I am not a developer, just a writer) and I wrote a tutorial for me and for my website. What was rewarding was to learn that the extension PaletteMaker, which I use and recommend, was made using this tutorial. I will never even think about doing the same using proprietary software. The empowerment free software gives us is huge.

What else? I write tutorials on LibreOffice on my website and I also write some articles on LibreOffice (and other subjects) on the French website LinuxFr.org.

What are you working on in the LibreOffice project right now?

I often hear that LibreOffice lacks templates or that they are ugly. Which is not necessarily false. Also some templates are pretty old and do not give justice to the qualities and features of the software.

Not having good templates is bad for LibreOffice. It gives the office suite a bad image: “It’s ugly, you can’t do this or that etc.”. This is detrimental to a tool as powerful and well-designed as LibreOffice. I do think that one of the best ways to communicate on LibreOffice (or any other free software) consists in talking on their qualities and features. One good way, beside making tutorials, is having templates that use and show these features.

So I make templates. The last I did were some fun things like invitation for parties and so on: somebody asked me if there were nice templates for a birthday party. I saw this was something that the Extensions repository really lacked. Well, I did some.

Invitation template for LibreOffice.

And sometimes I answer on the French mailing-list for users of LibreOffice.

Why did you choose to join the project, and how was the experience?

LibreOffice is a very good application. It has wonderful features that are not promoted enough. And yes, as I said, LibreOffice gives the opportunity to learn more and more things, which I find awesome. Even when it may have some annoying bugs sometimes (the risk of choosing the very latest release of LibreOffice Community).

Anything else you plan to do in the future? What does LibreOffice really need?

In the past, I was a bit active on the wiki. I may work on it again.

LibreOffice probably needs to be better promoted, not only as a free office suite but on its features and per se, without any comparison with any other same kind of software. The choice and the customization of the interface for example. It is unique and far from being just a gadget. Having a tool exactly made for one’s needs is more than great. It is like having made-to-measure clothes or shoes instead of ready-to-wear. And there are many other features than can be better promoted I think.

Also I think that the websites of The Document Foundation should be available in more languages. For example the blog. They do not need to be identical; that is the case for the blog of my Linux distribution Mageia for example. The announcements of releases are translated into various languages. But some posts might only be in one language. Also the Extensions repository should be readable in various languages. Not all end-users are familiar with English.

And, maybe, LibreOffice could have a page “Contribute and Promote” like the vector graphics editor Inkscape has.

Many thanks to Isabelle for all her contributions! Everyone is welcome to discover what they can do for LibreOffice – and learn new things along the way 😊

LibreOffice project and community recap: May 2024

LibreOffice project and community recap banner

Here’s our summary of updates, events and activities in the LibreOffice project in the last four weeks – click the links to learn more…

Month of LibreOffice

Donate banner

GSoC logo

LibreOffice Conference 2024

Budapest

TDF Annual Report 2023 banner

Keep in touch – follow us on Mastodon, X (formerly Twitter), Bluesky, Reddit and Facebook. Like what we do? Support our community with a donation – or join our community and help to make LibreOffice even better!