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by cxr
83 days ago
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> I am not sure what you claim about web formats.¶ If you try to print any non-trivial Web page with any of the existing Web browsers[…] For instance, Firefox and Chrome[…] ... why do you think this matters? Like, at all? We're talking about LibreOffice. > Nothing could be less true for anything that is used on the Web. This is, uh, crazy. In the first place, PDF is used on the Web, and it's both better suited for print-perfect sources and it's more portable. In the second place, believing that there's some magic inside ODF (or some other office suite's native format) that can't be represented in XML, JSON, or some other plain-text format is delusional. |
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If none of the existing Web browsers can render a Web page in a predictable way in all circumstances, that clearly disqualifies all "Web formats". If the most complex programs like the Web browsers cannot always render correctly a Web page, then who can?
> There is nothing in ODF that's inherently unrepresentable in JSON or pure XML.
Since ODF is XML, that is a tautology.
I do not doubt that it is likely that ODF is more complicated than really necessary, and that something better could be designed.
However anyone who criticizes it should define an alternative better format and describe its advantages.
Pointing to some of the existing markup text formats is not this, because those lack a great number of features that are absolutely necessary for any document file format, so they are not comparable at all.
Saying that a markup text format can be suitable as a document format resembles the claim of the Americans that ASCII should be good enough for the speakers of non-English languages.