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The market?  Well, every year I have to search the sites for a good 
printable calendar I can post on my refrigerator and write in any 
appointments that come up.  Then it is easy to see what is going on on 
my "world" without needing to look at my computer.  I usually post two 
months, this one and next, there.  Then near the end of the month I 
take, say, February's calendar and type in everything listed there and 
print it out so it looks neater.
There are still a lot of people and places where printed calendars are 
needed/wanted.  So here is a LibreOffice themed one [A4 in your case, 
Letter in mine] to be used.  How many people have a "family calendar" 
where people write in "events" so everyone knows where the kids need to 
be at "this event on this date"?   I have a date book, but when I get 
home I will write down the meetings/appointments/etc. onto my printed 
calendar on my refrigerator, if the month for the "event" is posted 
there.  For me it is easier to quickly look at my refrigerator for what 
is going on and when than search through a weekly appointment book.
It is also a tool that shows the "LibreOffice" name places where it 
would not be normally "shown".  How many people have a calendar on their 
office "wall" to mark off the days and write down that there is going to 
be a meeting on "such and such" day?  I sure did.  Your coworkers might 
see the name listed there and ask about it.  There are other places 
where people use printed calendars posted on a wall or other place.  I 
use my refrigerator.  Others might use a door or wall in their home or 
office.
Look at the calendar market.  It is big.  I was thinking that later 
someone could make a full "photo style" wall calendar where the modules, 
and other info about LO, could be where the top photo would be.  We deal 
with Lulu.com for our books, and they have a calendar service as well.  
One of our members created a calendar with the "module info" along the 
side of the calendar instead on the top making it a single page.  If she 
took those graphics and placed them in a "Lulu.com calendar template" 
for each month, then she would have made a photo style wall calendar.  
We have no control over the style of the calendar itself, except some 
limited ways to enter information in some of the day "cells", say for 
holidays or events.  I have a friend who was given a Lulu.com made 
calendar [from her daughters] with photos of her family for each month.  
It looked nice.
--------

As for the "pressing return and goto new line without creating a new line", I do not know what you mean.
Where are you doing this?  I do not remember seeing this happen when I 
was doing my editing.


On 01/19/2014 08:21 AM, James Wilde wrote:
I've only looked at the A4 one.

Good job, looks fine.  Just for the record, what is your intended market
going to do with this?  It won't alert them to an impending event.
Somehow you've made it so that if I press 'Return' I go to a new line
without it's creating a new line, and destroying the document which is good.

//James

On 2014-01-18 16:37, Kracked_P_P---webmaster wrote:
I finally had some time to upload the A4 and Letter size 2014
LibreOffice themed calendars to the Template Center.  They are in two
different "entries".

LibreOffice-2014-Calendar--a4-landscape--white-banner-green4-weekends--monday-first.odt

LibreOffice-2014-Calendar--letter-landscape--white-banner-green4-weekends--with-USA-Holidays.odt



Now I wait for approval.

These two calendars are also at:

https://owncloud.documentfoundation.org/Common/QA/Calendars#

I do want input and comments for these calendars.  That is the only
way I can make them better.

The A4 calendar has Monday as the first day of the week, while the
Letter/USA one uses our standard Sunday as the first day of the week.

I used a white background LibreOffice banner found in the wiki pages.

I used LO green #4 for the weekend background shading.

The original template was a .doc file that needed a lot of editing to
make it a LO themed calendar, plus the movement of all of the days
"left" for the "Monday first" calendar.  I increased the size of the
printed calendar to maximize the size of the day/cells but due to a
"quirk", I had to leave a wider bottom margin.  If I enlarge the
height of the day/cells any more [for the most part], it seems that
Writer wants to place the last line of days onto the next page.  Yes,
as someone pointed out, I did not use "proper styles" options, but
since I started with a .doc file, and I am not "good" at making/using
styles, I did not do the larger amount of editing required to add a
"proper" style to every cell that was either a weekday [white
background], weekend day [LO green #4], or a blank cell [15% gray].

Yes, I would not have this problem if I used Calc, but the original
template was a .doc file, so Writer it was.

Maybe, sometime in the future, I will create a Calc based 2015 calendar.

The reason I like Writer based calendars is the simple fact that when
I export it to PDF I have the entire year in the file.  I have not
seen a way to do that with having 12 monthly sheets in Calc.


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