You need to use OpenOffice to edit documents that are commonly used in word. The problem is that there are no generic font files in the two operating systems. If you use word to open OOO's winding Shanghai song, it will show garbled characters, as if the opposite is true. This is because many fonts in windows are copyrighted and cannot be used for free.
Consider using the common. Refer to the practices on the Internet:
> Copy the font file you need To the Linux directory:
> Mkdir/usr/share/fonts/xpfonts
> CP $ {windows_c}/Windows/fonts/simsun. TTC/usr/share/fonts/xpfonts
> Cd/usr/share/fonts/xpfonts
Here, it seems that the more appropriate target directory is ~ /. Fonts.
> Generate the supporting scale and Dir files and update the fonts records:
> Mkfontscale
> Mkfontdir
> FC-Cache
Someone mentioned that you still need to change the permission of the font file to use it.
> You can select oo in ooo.
Of course, you can also consider installing an OpenOffice in Windows. The advantage is that it must be common. The bad thing is: If you edit it for someone else, you may encounter problems when you use word to open it.
My problems:
Following this step, I disabled OOO repeatedly and then opened it to find that I could not choose. Later, I finally found out that after I optimized the OOO startup speed a few days ago, "ooo Quick Start" always stays on the taskbar, that is, OOO has not been closed! Orz