Summary: | Heads of arrows that were converted to contours become double head after saving as PPTX | ||
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Product: | LibreOffice | Reporter: | Roland Baudin <roland65> |
Component: | Impress | Assignee: | Not Assigned <libreoffice-bugs> |
Status: | NEW --- | ||
Severity: | normal | CC: | stephane.guillou |
Priority: | medium | Keywords: | bibisectRequest, filter:pptx |
Version: | 5.3.0.3 release | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | All | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Crash report or crash signature: | Regression By: | ||
Bug Depends on: | |||
Bug Blocks: | 148534 | ||
Attachments: |
Test presentation with some arrows
Converted presentation Screenshot of test.pptx opened in PowerPoint 2016 |
Description
Roland Baudin
2024-04-23 13:01:27 UTC
Created attachment 193821 [details]
Test presentation with some arrows
Created attachment 193822 [details]
Converted presentation
Created attachment 193823 [details]
Screenshot of test.pptx opened in PowerPoint 2016
I forgot the LO version and system: Version: 24.2.2.2 (X86_64) / LibreOffice Community Build ID: d56cc158d8a96260b836f100ef4b4ef25d6f1a01 CPU threads: 48; OS: Linux 6.5; UI render: default; VCL: gtk3 Locale: fr-FR (fr_FR.UTF-8); UI: en-US Calc: CL threaded System: Ubuntu 22.04.4 LTS 64 bits (In reply to Roland Baudin from comment #0) > 4. Open the test.pptx file in PowerPoint and check that the arrow has a > double head No need to open in PowerPoint: reloading the file in LO shows the issue. I can reproduce in: Version: 24.8.0.0.alpha0+ (X86_64) / LibreOffice Community Build ID: 92815f3a464b447898ecf52492247335228e4a72 CPU threads: 8; OS: Linux 6.5; UI render: default; VCL: gtk3 Locale: en-AU (en_AU.UTF-8); UI: en-US Calc: CL threaded as well as in 5.3.0.3. In ODP, entering the group and looking at the line properties shows that it does use "End style = Arrow", with a width of 0. Once saved as PPTX, it shows the "extra" arrowhead on the line on canvas even though the dialog shows "End style = -none-" and a greyed-out width of 0.21 cm. Back in 5.2.0.4, saving as PPTX would result in the arrows turned back into single line objects. A bibisect could be interesting. |