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Openoffice for windows
Openoffice for windows






  1. OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS DRIVER
  2. OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS SOFTWARE
  3. OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS CODE
  4. OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS LICENSE
  5. OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS PROFESSIONAL

OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS PROFESSIONAL

Perhaps it is suitable for office workers, but it is definitely something for professional writers to avoid. Openoffice Writer is s***! Nobody supports its format, and it does not convert to other formats properly, with the possible exception of PDF. NO! Openoffice prompted me that I had "unsaved changes" (complete bulls***) and I had to wait another 10 ****ing minutes for it to "save" the document again. After 10 minutes it was finished, so I attempted to close the document. This morning I myself "Saved to" what I was working on. This process takes 10 minutes and freezes up my computer so I just have to sit and wait and wait and wait. Every 10 minutes openoffice "saves" what I am working on. The book I am working on is a picture biography with about 100 photographs. NOBODY supports the openoffice format, which is incompatible with every format except perhaps PDF, which is very unfashionable today. I hate it, but I started a book with it and cannot transfer it to a superior format. Openoffice Writer is incompatible with MS Word, so why did they imitate it? Writer is crap! Plain and simple. I only use openoffice Writer, and have no idea about the performance of the other features. I don't know what Word is like, but it can't be worse than openoffice. The basic problem with openoffice is that it is an imitation of Microsoft Word. This is a remarkable package given that it's free-but the learning curve is a bit higher than for the common garden-variety word-processor. is very important then perhaps you ought to investigate the free and very excellent desktop publishing tool, Scribus: If you are publishing rather than just writing documents-that's to say if the layout of images etc.

openoffice for windows

You must, however, decide on what format you're going to work in for best interchange compatibility.Ģ. A couple of years back, Microsoft published MS Office's formats, DOC etc., so there's little reason why they wouldn't be compatible by now. The file/format compatibility between Microsoft Office and OpenOffice/LibreOffice is now almost perfect-these products are compatible. It's maddening, it's crazy! What's wrong with these Wolf Sullivan:ġ. If anyone knows the reason for this debacle, then let us know.īTW, in my organization-even though it's much more expensive-the sole reason why we've kept MSO is specifically because of the lack of these shortcuts in OpenOffice/LibO.

OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS DRIVER

For me, the omission of these shortcuts in OpenOffice is about as debilitating as a driver losing the 'Drive' selector position from his auto's box.

openoffice for windows

Are the developers of OOo/LibreOffice a bit barmy, or have they lost the plot? Surely, attracting experienced MSO users would be much, much easier if they didn't have to laboriously work their way around the lack of these handy and very productive shortcuts. from MS Office have been totally omitted from OpenOffice-there are NO* equivalents in OOo/LibO. No one has ever given me any reason-let alone a good one-why my beloved CTRL-Q, CTRL-T, CTRL-M, CTRL-SHIFT-T, M etc.

openoffice for windows

For example, for years I've whinged about the lack of keyboard shortcut compatibility between MS Office, Word etc.

OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS SOFTWARE

If you un-selected it during the setup, the choice to disable won't appear in Of course you're absolutely correct but you have make allowances for newbies/neophytes.Įven though Wolf Sullivan hasn't a clue I can understand his frustration UI and keyboard compatibility between software is a first class pain in the A. If you didn't take care of it there, it can be disabled at any time in Tools > Options > Memory. PS - For anyone who doesn't like the Quickstarter feature, it can be un-selected during setup. LibreOffice is the office suite to use from now on.

OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS CODE

Not only that, but the Go-oo project merged their code with LibreOffice, so it's better than OpenOffice ever was.

OPENOFFICE FOR WINDOWS LICENSE

LibreOffice uses the open source LGPL license and is made by some of the original team. Oracle refused to donate OpenOffice for the greater good, then later they abandoned it and gave it away not to the people, but to Apache, so now it has an Apache license. Some of their programmers broke off and formed The Document Foundation and made LibreOffice, because Oracle would have ruined with their corporate mindset.








Openoffice for windows