Wols Lists wrote: > On 06/02/19 16:08, Piet van Oostrum wrote: > > Wol's lists <antlists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > >> Dunno whether this is a bug or a design decision or what, but it's a > >> pretty nasty breach of the principle ... > >> > >> Why, when I click on a cell, does calc NOT select the clicked cell? > >> > >> Okay, I know the answer - it's a hyperlink. BUT. > >> > >> I was editing a csv, I've got a column of email addresses, and some of > >> them have been hyperlinked, some of them haven't. I don't want > >> hyperlinks, I didn't ask for hyperlinks, and I can't see any way of > >> easily removing them! > >> > > Format > Clear Direct Formatting (Ctrl-M on my Mac). > > > But clicking on the cell doesn't select it so <ctrl>M doesn't work! :-) > You could click in a nearby cell and move to it with the arrows. > Sorry I'm being facetious. > > But there was a reason I titled my post "principle of least surprise". > It's pretty fundamental to me that clicking in a cell selects that cell. > So *why* is Calc changing that behaviour in a manner that is going to > surprise - painfully - a lot of people? > > Plus <ctrl>M doesn't undo all the other stuff like changing the cell > colour. Is there any way to disable all this easily, seeing as I neither > want nor need it? To me this seems like an auto-corrupt disaster along > the lines of the story about the professor entering student grades, and > Excel auto-complete changing all the straight grades to plus or minus > ones. A very nasty surprise if you're not expecting it, and a bugger to > prevent it doing it. And a seriously corrupt spreadsheet if you don't > spot it in time. > You can better switch off the automatic URL transformation: Tools > AutoCorrect Options > Options > URL Recognition -- Piet van Oostrum <piet-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> WWW: http://piet.vanoostrum.org/ PGP key: [8DAE142BE17999C4] _______________________________________________ LibreOffice mailing list LibreOffice@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice