<paragraphrole="paragraph"id="par_id8253730"xml-lang="en-US"l10n="NEW">OpenDocument and especially LibreOffice represent tables that have joined cells that span rows as tables with nested tables. In contrast, the wiki model of table is to declare column and row spans for such joined cells. </paragraph>
<paragraphrole="paragraph"id="par_id8163090"xml-lang="en-US"l10n="NEW">If only columns of the same row are joined, the result of the transformation resembles the source document very well.</paragraph>
<paragraphrole="paragraph"id="par_id1831110"xml-lang="en-US"l10n="NEW">Irrespective of custom table styles for border and background, a table is always exported as "<emph>prettytable"</emph>, which renders in the Wiki engine with simple borders and bold header.</paragraph>
<paragraphrole="paragraph"id="par_id1831110"xml-lang="en-US"l10n="NEW">Irrespective of custom table styles for border and background, a table is always exported as "<emph>prettytable</emph>", which renders in the Wiki engine with simple borders and bold header.</paragraph>
<paragraphrole="heading"id="hd_id6255073"xml-lang="en-US"level="2"l10n="NEW">Charset and special characters</paragraph>
<paragraphrole="paragraph"id="par_id8216193"xml-lang="en-US"l10n="NEW">The charset of the transformation result is fixed to UTF-8. Depending on your system, this might not be the default charset. This might cause "special characters" to look broken when viewed with default settings. However, you can switch your editor to UTF-8 encoding to fix this. If your editor does not support switching the encoding, you can display the result of the transformation in the Firefox browser and switch the encoding to UTF-8 there. Now, you can cut and paste the transformation result to your program of choice.</paragraph>