LibreOfficeKit ************** LibreOfficeKit can be used for accessing LibreOffice functionality through C/C++, without any need to use UNO. For now it only offers document conversion (in addition to an experimental tiled rendering API). Integrating LOK into other software ----------------------------------- LOK functionality can be accessed by including LibreOfficeKit.h[xx] in your program. LOK initialisation (lok_init) requires the inclusion of LibreOfficeKitInit.h in your program. Should you be using the C++ LibreOfficeKit.hxx header you must first include LibreOfficeKitInit.h followed by LibreOfficeKit.hxx in any files where you need to use lok_cpp_init. (LibreOfficeKit.hxx is a simple and fully inlined C++ wrapper for the same functionality as in LibreOfficeKit.h.) An example program (currently using the older shim.c/static library integration) can be seen on: https://github.com/ojwb/lloconv Tiled Rendering --------------- To use LOK Tiled Rendering you will need the following before the LOK includes: #define LOK_USE_UNSTABLE_API (This must be define before ANY LOK header, i.e. including the Init header.) Currently only bitmap-buffer rendering is supported, with a 32-bit BGRA colourspace (further alternatives could feasibly be implemented as needed). Scanlines are ordered top-down (whereas LibreOffice will internally default to bottom-up). Tiled Editing ------------- On top of the tiled rendering API, a set of new methods have been added to the lok::Document class to allow basic editing, too. Communication between the LOK client and LibreOffice is a two-way channel. The client can initiate an action by calling the above mentioned methods. The most important methods for the client -> LibreOffice communication are: - initializeForRendering(), expected to be called right after lok::Office::documentLoad() returned a lok::Document*. - postKeyEvent(), expected to be called when the user provides input on the (soft-)keyboard. - postMouseEvent(), expected to be called when the user generated a touch or mouse event. In general, all coordinates are always in absolute twips (20th of a point, or: 1" = 1440 twips). See lok::Document in LibreOfficeKit.hxx for a full list of methods and their documentation. The other way around (LibreOffice -> LOK client) is implemented using a callback. A LOK client can register a callback using the registerCallback() method. Whenever editing requires some action on the client side, a callback event is emitted. The callback types are described using the LibreOfficeKitCallbackType enumeration in LibreOfficeKitEnums.h, the callback function signature itself is provided by the LibreOfficeKitCallback typedef in LibreOfficeKitTypes.h. The most important callback types: - LOK_CALLBACK_INVALIDATE_TILES: drop all tiles cached on client-side that intersect with the provided rectangle - LOK_CALLBACK_INVALIDATE_VISIBLE_CURSOR: need to set the position and/or the size of the cursor - LOK_CALLBACK_TEXT_SELECTION: need to adjust the selection overlay provided by the client as the set of rectangles describing the selection overlay changed There are currently two known LOK clients supporting tiled editing: - gtktiledviewer (see below), which allows testing the LOK core implementation on (desktop) Linux - (LibreOffice on) Android Core has next to no idea what is the LOK client, so for effective development, it's recommended that the core part is developed against gtktiledviewer, and once a feature works there, then implement the Android part, with its slower development iteration (slow uploading to the device, the need to link all object files into a single .so, etc). * Debugging with gdb and gtktiledviewer To run gtktiledviewer: bin/run gtktiledviewer $PWD/instdir/program path/to/test.odt To receive all incoming events from core use G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all bin/run gtktiledviewer $PWD/instdir/program ../test.odt To debug with gdb: export LO_TRACE='gdb --tui --args' before bin/run, this will run gtktiledviewer in the debugger instead. LibreOfficeKitGtk ***************** Currently consists of only a very basic GTK+ document viewer widget. The widget uses g_info() instead of SAL_INFO(), use the 'G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all' environment variable to display those messages.