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Another benefit of master documents is that it forces all styles of the same name to appear the same. For example, suppose I have written five documents, all having a style called "BodySingle." But, in one document, my "BodySingle" style uses a Consolas font (good for on screen editing). In another, I have set the "BodySingle" font to "Iowan Old Style," a personal favorite of mine.

Now, let's say I combine these documents into a master document for final output. The styles of the master document will control over the styles of the individual files. So, in my master document, I set my "BodySingle" font to Linux Libertine G with a host of expert effects (old style numbers, historic or discretionary ligatures, etc.) This is great for printing a final document (to either a printer or PDF file), but not so effective for onscreen editing. So, I can change the final output by editing only the styles of the master document without having to edit the styles in each individual document.

Virgil


-----Original Message----- From: Gabriel Risterucci
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 2:19 PM
Cc: users@global.libreoffice.org
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] with styles, is not master document functionality unnecessary+

2013/12/18 e-letter <inpost@gmail.com>

Readers,

Suppose a collection of documents each about 100kb size. What is the
benefit of using master document function (presumably a gratuitous
copy of m$), when styles function is available in LO? Surely it would
be more stable and easier to manage if these files were imported into
one new document?


Master document are not only about sharing styles (in fact, I never saw
them in this light), it's about splitting your work in easily manageable
smaller files. I don't even know why having styles would concern having the
possibility to create a master document.
When you're working on a reasonnably large project, it's simply easier to
split it. For example, having each chapter in it's own file, instead of
loading one huge file​​. It's more stable and easier to navigate.
Ahem, still don't get why you're mixing the presence of styles and master
document. The only link I can think of is that a master document's style
override the sub-documents, but even then... maybe you can clarify what you
meant?

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