Python library for OpenDocument format (ODF)
odfdo is a Python3 library implementing the ISO/IEC 26300 OpenDocument Format
standard.
Project: https://github.com/jdum/odfdo
Author: jerome.dumonteil@gmail.com
License: Apache License, Version 2.0
odfdo is a derivative work of the former lpod-python project.
Installation from Pypi (recommended):
pip install odfdoInstallation from sources (requiring setuptools):
pip install .After installation from sources, you can check everything is working (some requirements: pytest, Pillow, ...):
pytestThe tests should run for a few seconds or minutes and issue no error.
The full test suite uses tox to check different Python and lxml versions.
from odfdo import Document, Paragraph
doc = Document('text')
doc.body.append(Paragraph("Hello world!"))
doc.save("hello.odt")
'Intended Audience :: Developers'
There is no detailed documentation or tutorial, but:
- the
recipesfolder contains more than 50 working sample scripts, - the
docfolder contains an auto generated documentation.
When installing odfdo, a few scripts are installed:
odfdo-diff: show a diff between two .odt document.odfdo-folder: convert standard ODF file to folder and files, and reverse.odfdo-show: dump text from an ODF file to the standard output, and optionally styles and meta informations.odfdo-styles: command line interface tool to manipulate styles of ODF files.odfdo-replace: find a pattern (regex) in an ODF file and replace by some string.odfdo-userfield: Show or set the user-field content in an ODF file.odfdo-highlight: highlight the text matching a pattern (regex) in an ODF file.odfdo-headers: print the headers of an ODF file.odfdo-table-shrink: shrink tables to optimize width and height.
About styles: the best way to apply style is by merging styles from a template
document into your generated document (See odfdo-styles script).
Styles are a complex matter in ODF, so trying to generate styles programmatically
is not recommended.
odfdo is intended to facilitate the generation of ODF documents,
nevertheless a basic knowledge of the ODF format is necessary.
ODF document rendering can vary greatly from software to software. Especially the "styles" of the document allow an adaptation of the rendering for a particular software.
The best (only ?) way to apply style is by merging styles from a template
document into your generated document. However a few recipes show how to make
programmatically some basic styles: create_basic_text_styles, add_text_span_styles).
I you work on .ods files (spreadsheet), you may be interested by these scripts using
this library to parse/generate .ods files:
https://github.com/jdum/odsgenerator and https://github.com/jdum/odsparsator
lpod-python was written in 2009-2010 as a Python 2.x library,
see: https://github.com/lpod/lpod-python
odfdo is an adaptation of this former project. odfdo main changes from lpod:
odfdorequires Python version 3.9 to 3.12. For Python 3.6 to 3.8 see previous releases.- API change: more pythonic.
- include recipes.
- use Apache 2.0 license.