this post was submitted on 16 Dec 2024
121 points (96.9% liked)

Opensource

1534 readers
45 users here now

A community for discussion about open source software! Ask questions, share knowledge, share news, or post interesting stuff related to it!

CreditsIcon base by Lorc under CC BY 3.0 with modifications to add a gradient



founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
top 7 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] refalo@programming.dev 48 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

If like me you were wondering if MS actually provided their own parsers for their Office file formats... they did not.

It seems to just be a bunch of random pyxyz 3rd-party support libraries all mashed together.

[–] mormund 11 points 1 week ago

What do you mean by parser? Office docs are just zipped XML files. They are trivial to parse. The hard part is all the quirks the document renderers have, which makes it impossible to perfectly match the output. But markdown can't handle any complex formatting anyway

[–] Sibbo@sopuli.xyz 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Maybe the people that wrote their parser have left the company? Typical big software corp problem.

[–] GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I mean, the parser would still be there even if the people left the company, right? The source code remains.

[–] Creat@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 1 week ago

It might also be somewhere, but nobody knows where.

[–] Phoenix3875@lemmy.world 9 points 1 week ago

Reading through the source code, it's more of a repackaging of other open source libraries, probably for its AI effort.

[–] Chais@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 week ago