Chapter 6. Publishing with Fedora and RHEL
In This Chapter
Using
OpenOffice.org
Using commercial word processors
Creating documents with Groff and LaTeX
Creating DocBook documents
Printing documents with Linux
Displaying documents with Ghostscript and Acrobat
Working with graphics
Using scanners driven by SANE
To survive as a desktop system, an operating system must be able to perform at least one task well: produce documents. It's no accident that, after Windows, Microsoft Word (which is bundled into Microsoft Office) is the foundation of Microsoft's success on the desktop. Fedora and RHEL include tools for producing documents, manipulating images, scanning, and printing. Almost everything you would expect a publishing system to do, you can do with Fedora and RHEL.
OpenOffice.org
is a powerful open-source office suite available as part of the Fedora and RHEL distributions. Based on the Sun Microsystems StarOffice productivity suite, OpenOffice.org
includes a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation manager, and other personal productivity tools. In many cases, OpenOffice.org
can act as a drop-in replacement for Microsoft Office, in both its features and its ability to support files in Word, Excel, PowerPoint and other Microsoft formats.
The first document and graphics tools for Linux were mostly built on older, text-based tools. Recently, more sophisticated tools for writing, formatting pages, and integrating graphics have been added. Despite their age, many of the older publishing tools ...
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