Thursday Oct 15, 2009

As you might already know, OpenOffice.org runs a user feedback program, aka improvement program, to collect data about the normal user's use of the OOo software. This is an opt-in program, and the user is asked if he wants to take part in the program the second time he starts his new installed OOo.

On the User Experience web page for the User Feedback Program (1), we can now see some more results of how many users open the installed Help and how they do this (2).

This is quite exciting, as it is the first time Help authors get some feedback "with the users' feet". We see how many users open the Help menu, or in which dialog boxes they click the Help button most often.

However, it is not easy to interpret the big Calc document with all the results (3). Mouse click events are named by developers who never thought about using names that can make sense to the public. The menus and dialogs are named to conform to internal code dependencies, not to fit the visible user interface. I do not claim to understand most of the results, so take the following data just as my first approach to interpret what the data might possibly mean. All numbers are to be interpreted as relative to each other. The sheets are ordered by COUNT, so the events with the most counts of user interaction are at the top. Searching the sheets for "help" returns the following list of observations:

Observations in Writer

Total use of "Save" (by menu, toolbar, or keyboard) is about 2.5 million times in the data, so we possibly see data for about 2 million documents (given that some users only save once, and some save often).

The main Writer Help window gets quite many click events, about 1 million times. That can mean that users love to browse and read the installed Help pages, or it can mean they click often and still find nothing of use to them.

The Index tab page of Help Viewer gets clicked about 50,000 times.

The Find tab page counts about 16,500 clicks, and the Contents tab page gets 4,500 clicks.

So the average user clicks inside the Help pages about ten to twelve times before he leaves the Help Viewer. Too bad we don't have a feedback whether the average user is now happy or sad.

The Writer dialog boxes where the Help button was called most often:

  1. Word Count
  2. Print
  3. FontWork
  4. Options
  5. Spellcheck
  6. Find & Replace
  7. ASCII Filter Options
  8. Special Characters
  9. Extension Update
  10. Printer Setup

From a user experience point of view, it would be a good idea to minimize the use of Help.

So the Word Count dialog should get improved by some text that explains what counts as a word, for example. I guess that information is missing, and users therefore have to click the Help button. Unfortunately, that information is also missing in the Help page. So this is the first thing to improve!

Observations in Calc

For Calc, we see about 1.8 million "Save" operations, so let's say data is for about 1.5 million spreadsheets. The Calc Help was called about half as often as the Writer Help.

The Calc dialog boxes where the Help button was called most often:

  1. Function Wizard
  2. Delete Contents
  3. Find & Replace
  4. Print
  5. Format>Cells>Numbers dialog
  6. Options
  7. Rename Sheet
  8. Conditional Formatting

Observations in Impress/Draw

The Impress and Draw Help were each called about one tenth as often as the Calc Help. Either these applications are very intuitive to use, or users really do not expect to get some Help here.

The Impress dialog boxes where the Help button was called most often:

  1. Presentation Wizard
  2. FontWork
  3. Slide Design
  4. Slide Show

The Draw dialog boxes where the Help button was called most often:

  1. FontWork
  2. Format>Text (for text in a text box)
  3. Format>Line
  4. Options

With these data, Help authors now know where improvements of the Help system are most effective and might be most wanted.


(1): http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/User_Experience/OpenOffice.org_User_Feedback_Program

(2): http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Tracking_results

(3): http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Image:OOo31_Usage_Feedback_Data.ods


Friday Jun 12, 2009

Help for the OpenOffice.org office suite is available in many ways. Every user who seeks some help can find a method that fits best.

  • First, there is the classical installed Help. You know, just press the F1 key, or click any of the Help buttons.

    This once was called "Online Help" because it was available immediately, without any waiting time. And this is still true. By now the word "online" changed its meaning. It is used now for something that is available on the web or by e-mail. And OpenOffice.org offers a lot of online help, too.

  • The web based Help has an overview page at documentation.openoffice.org. From here, links lead to the special pages, as FAQ, How-To, PDF manuals, and more. Many links go to the Wiki pages, where you can read, edit and write helpful information.

  • The Wiki page at http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation presents links to the following helpful sections:

    • User Guides for OpenOffice.org 3

    • User Guides for OpenOffice.org 2

    • Frequently Asked Questions

    • SysAdmin/Developer Guides

    • Reference Lists

    • How Tos

    • Tutorials and Screencasts

  • Another way to ask for Help is by e-mail. The mailing lists are "run" by other OpenOffice.org users who voluntarily spend their time and energy to answer all questions. So please ask politely and try to give all necessary information, for example, which version of OpenOffice.org you are using, and on which operation system.

  • If you want to ask your question on a web forum, where other users of the software will give their answers, browse to http://user.services.openoffice.org/en/forum/

  • And don't forget to read the pages of all the enthusiastic OpenOffice.org users on the web, who provide tutorials, how-to instructions, and much more. For example, the pages of Solveig Haugland (link in the right column of this blog) are much recommended.

  • More Help is available, PDF files and printed books, tutorials, videos. Use your favorite search engine, include your search words and the word OpenOffice.org, to find the answers.

We always want to learn how we can improve the Help. If you have ideas, please subscribe to the documentation mail list at dev@documentation.openoffice.org and discuss your ideas.



Tuesday Jan 20, 2009

Obama missing in Help

Late reports came to our attention that the installed OpenOffice.org Help does not cover any message from or about Barack Obama.


We regret this and want to express our hope that you will still press F1 whenever you are in need of OOo Help. We can help you. Yes, we can.


Wednesday Sep 17, 2008

Sometimes, when you look into the OOo application help, the right side help page is shown with less than 100 percent zoom. This makes reading the help text a difficult task.

Fortunately, it is possible to get back the right view of the help page, although this requires several steps:

1. Close the Help viewer.

2. Choose File - New - HTML Document.

    Now you are in Writer/Web. You can check this in the View menu, which contains now a HTML Source command.

3. Choose View - Zoom. Set the zoom factor to at least 100 percent or higher.

4. Press F1 to open the Help Viewer.

The Help viewer uses the same settings that you define for Writer/Web (html) documents.


Thursday Mar 15, 2007

Creating text art in 10 seconds

You can create interesting artwork from text in OOo Draw. You need a logo or a title page for your brochure? Within a few seconds you can see the first results. Look at these examples that were finished within a few seconds:


Create stunning 3D text objects in Draw.


Play around with graphical text effects in Draw.

To create a 3D object

  1. Open OOo Draw.

  2. Click the T (text box) icon.

  3. Drag a frame, enter the text.

  4. Select the text, for example by pressing Ctrl+A.

  5. Select a plain basic font and a big font size. You can enter any font size in the Font Size box if you want a size that is not listed.

  6. Choose Modify - Convert - To 3D.

  7. Select an area color, a line style, line width, and a different line color.

  8. To rotate the 3D text art, click the Rotate icon. Rest the mouse over any of the six handles to see in which direction you can rotate the 3D object by dragging that handle.

To create graphical text effects

  1. Open OOo Draw.

  2. Click the T (text box) icon.

  3. Drag a frame, enter the text.

  4. Select the text, for example by pressing Ctrl+A.

  5. Yes, it's all the same steps as in "To create a 3D object" above to create graphical text. Select a nice font and enter a big font size.

With the text selected, choose Format - Character - Font Effects to set the font color. In the example, the big O was set to gray color. The white text near the top was set to white color, then moved over the gray character. Use Modify - Arrange to change the stacking order of the text objects.

For the text effect in the middle of the example image, the big character O and the text "OpenOffice.org" were positioned at the same location, then selected together (click both with Shift key held down). Then both were combined by Modify - Combine.

In the installed Help for Draw or Impress you can find more instructions and tips and tricks. Click the "Instructions for Using OOo Draw/Impress" link on the main Draw or Impress Help page.

To export the text art as pictures

The Draw text objects are vector graphics that can be scaled to any size without problems. Copy the objects and paste them into Writer or Calc documents. If you want the objects on a Web page, you must export them to a pixel graphic format.

  1. Select the object to export.
  2. Choose File - Export.
  3. Select a pixel graphics format and enter a name for the picture. Be sure that the Selection check box is enabled.

This blog copyright 2009 by fpe