Operation Manual
Adding a new theme to the Gallery
To add a new theme to the Gallery:
1) Click the New Theme button above the list of themes (Figure 303).
2) In the Properties of New Theme dialog, click the General tab and type a name for the new
theme.
3) Click the Files tab and add images to the theme, as described earlier.
Deleting a theme from the Gallery
You can delete only themes that you have added to the Gallery; you cannot delete any of the
built-in themes. To delete a theme from the Gallery:
1) Go to Tools > Gallery.
2) In the left part of the Gallery, select in the list the theme you wish to delete.
3) Right-click on the theme, then click Delete on the pop-up menu.
Location of the Gallery and the objects in it
Graphics and other objects shown in the Gallery can be located anywhere on your computer’s hard
disk, on a network drive, or on a CD-ROM. Listings in the Gallery show the location of each object.
When you add graphics to the Gallery using method 1, the files are not moved or copied; only the
location of each new object is added as a reference. When files are added using drag and drop,
they are copied into a folder (dragdrop) in the Gallery, and allocated a file name.
Figure 305 shows in Detailed View, two files in the My Theme in the Gallery, one is contained in
the dragdrop folder, and the other is a reference path to its actual location.
Figure 305: Theme showing files inserted with drag-and-drop and by reference
In a workgroup, you may have access to a shared Gallery (where you cannot change the contents
unless authorized to do so) and a user Gallery, where you can add, change, or delete objects.
The location of the user Gallery is specified in Tools > Options > LibreOffice > Paths. You can
change this location, and you can copy your gallery files (SDV) to other computers.
Gallery contents provided with LibreOffice are stored in a different location. You cannot change this
location.
Creating an image map
An image map defines areas of an image (called hotspots) with hyperlinks to web addresses, other
files on the computer, or parts of the same document. Hotspots are the graphic equivalent of text
hyperlinks (described in Chapter 12). Clicking on a hotspot causes LibreOffice to open the linked
page in the appropriate program (for example, the default browser for an HTML page; LibreOffice
Calc for an ODS file; a PDF viewer for a PDF file). You can create hotspots of various shapes and
include several hotspots in the same image.
310 | Getting Started with LibreOffice 4.0