cleaned up typos mostly

git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/jakarta/poi/trunk@352098 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
This commit is contained in:
Mark Johnson 2002-02-16 15:57:08 +00:00
parent 345bb2bfbc
commit e2dc98aea5
1 changed files with 38 additions and 42 deletions

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE document PUBLIC "-//APACHE//DTD Documentation V1.0//EN" "../dtd/document-v10.dtd">
<document>
<header>
<title>PoiFS</title>
<subtitle>Overview</subtitle>
<authors>
<person name="Andrew C. Oliver" email="acoliver@apache.org"/>
<person name="Nicola Ken Barozzi" email="barozzi@nicolaken.com"/>
</authors>
</header>
<body>
<s1 title="Overview">
<p>POIFS is a pure Java implementation of the OLE 2 Compound Document format.</p>
<p>
By very definition, all APIs developed by the POI project are based somehow
on the POIFS API.
</p>
<p>
A common confusion is on just what POIFS buys you or what OLE 2 Compound
Document format IS exactly. POIFS does not buy you DOC, or XLS
but is necessary to generate DOCs or XLS files. You see all file
formats based on the OLE 2 Compound Document Format have a common
structure. The OLE 2 Compound Document Format is essentially a
convoluted archive format. Think of POIFS as a "zip" library. So once
you can get at the data in a zip file you still need to interperate the
data. As a general rule, while all of our formats USE POIFS, most of
them attempt to abstract you from it. There are some circumstances
where this is not possible, but as a general rule this is ture.
</p>
<p>
If you're an enduser type just looking to generate XLS files, then you'd
be looking for HSSF not POIFS; however, if you have legacy code that
uses MFC property sets. POIFS is for you! Regarless, you may or may
not need to know how to use POIFS but ultimately if you use technologies
that come from the POI project, you're using POIFS underneith. Perhaps
we should have a branding campaign "POIFS Inside!". ;-)
</p>
<p> TODO: copy POIFS docs and port to XML. For now please reference <link href="http://poi.sourceforge.net">old site</link>.
</p>
</s1>
</body>
<header>
<title>PoiFS</title>
<subtitle>Overview</subtitle>
<authors>
<person name="Andrew C. Oliver" email="acoliver@apache.org"/>
<person name="Nicola Ken Barozzi" email="barozzi@nicolaken.com"/>
</authors>
</header>
<body>
<s1 title="Overview">
<p>POIFS is a pure Java implementation of the OLE 2 Compound
Document format.</p>
<p>By definition, all APIs developed by the POI project are
based somehow on the POIFS API.</p>
<p>A common confusion is on just what POIFS buys you or what OLE
2 Compound Document format is exactly. POIFS does not buy you
DOC, or XLS, but is necessary to generate or read DOC or XLS
files. You see, all file formats based on the OLE 2 Compound
Document Format have a common structure. The OLE 2 Compound
Document Format is essentially a convoluted archive
format. Think of POIFS as a "zip" library. Once you can get
the data in a zip file you still need to interpret the
data. As a general rule, while all of our formats <b>use</b>
POIFS, most of them attempt to abstract you from it. There
are some circumstances where this is not possible, but as a
general rule this is true.</p>
<p>If you're an end user type just looking to generate XLS
files, then you'd be looking for HSSF not POIFS; however, if
you have legacy code that uses MFC property sets, POIFS is
for you! Regardless, you may or may not need to know how to
use POIFS but ultimately if you use technologies that come
from the POI project, you're using POIFS underneith. Perhaps
we should have a branding campaign "POIFS Inside!". ;-)</p>
<p>TODO: copy POIFS docs and port to XML (in progress). For now
please reference <link href="http://poi.sourceforge.net">old
site</link>.</p>
</s1>
</body>
</document>