Question:
Is open office completely free and does it suport windows documents?
2008-06-23 07:34:16 UTC
My sister needs an office suite for work but, it has to work with popular windows documents. [such as files made in excel, or word, would they be readable in open office? and can you create word and excel documents with openoffice?] Also is it possible to use open office on a windows 2000 operating system.
Seven answers:
TheHumbleOne
2008-06-23 09:47:20 UTC
Open Office is reputed to be totally compatible with MS Office. Here is what I have on it.



Free OpenOffice – Word Processing Comparable to MS Word, CALC, similar to Excel, Impress – comparable to Powerpoint.





download Open Office at: http://www.openoffice.org/index.html



Open Office tutorial at: http://www.tutorialsforopenoffice.org/

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FAQs: http://www-openoffice.com/faq.html

Open Office is a free Offfice Suite which has proven to be an alternatvie to Microsoft Office except for one thing that I mentioned, it's FREE. There are many other sites dedicated to Open Office and even those that offer Open Office Tutorials.

OpenOffice.org is a collection of different applications that work together closely to provide the features expected from a modern office suite. Many of the components are designed to mirror those available in Microsoft Office. The components available include:

Writer — a word processor similar in look and feel to Microsoft Word and offering a comparable range of functions and tools. It also includes the ability to export Portable Document Format (PDF) files with no additional software, and can also function as a WYSIWYG editor for creating and editing web pages. One important difference between Writer and Microsoft Word is that in Writer, many functions and number formats from Calc (below) are available in Writer's tables. Another difference is that in Writer, automatic save is off by default.

Calc — a spreadsheet similar to Microsoft Excel with a roughly equivalent range of features. Calc provides a number of features not present in Excel, including a system which automatically defines series for graphing, based on the layout of the user's data. Calc is also capable of writing spreadsheets directly as a PDF file.





Impress — a presentation program similar to Microsoft PowerPoint. It can export presentations to Adobe Flash (SWF) files allowing them to be played on any computer with the Flash player installed. It also includes the ability to create PDF files. Impress suffers from a lack of ready-made presentation designs. However, templates are readily available on the Internet.[6]

Base — a database program similar to Microsoft Access. Base allows the creation and manipulation of databases, and the building of forms and reports to provide easy access to data for end-users. As with Access, Base is able to work as a front-end to a number of different database systems, including Access databases (JET), ODBC data sources and

MySQL/PostgreSQL. Base became part of the suite starting with version 2.0.

Draw — a vector graphics editor comparable in features to CorelDRAW. It features versatile "connectors" between shapes, which are available in a range of line styles and facilitate building drawings such as flowcharts.

Math — a tool for creating and editing mathematical formulae, similar to Microsoft Equation Editor. Formulae can be embedded inside other OpenOffice.org documents, such as those created by Writer. It supports multiple fonts and can export to PDF.

QuickStarter — a small program for Windows and Linux that runs when the computer starts for the first time. It loads the core files and libraries for OpenOffice.org during computer startup and allows the suite applications to start more quickly when selected later. The amount of time it takes to open OpenOffice.org applications was a common complaint in version 1.0 of the suite, and Quickstarter was a solution of sorts. Substantial improvements were made in this area for version 2.0.

The macro recorder — is used to record user actions and replay them later to help with automating tasks, using OpenOffice.org Basic Read more...
jeligula
2008-06-23 07:46:26 UTC
I use Open Office on a Mac OS 10.4 computer at work. The spreadsheets I have to use for admin junk originated in Excel. It opens them just fine, but I have all kinds of problems all the time, so I now just fill out my time sheets by hand. Not worth the hassle. I imagine it would be much better if I upgraded to an Intel machine and used 10.5 but this is what I have. sigh It would probably be just fine on a Windows 2000 machine.
2008-06-23 07:44:33 UTC
Yes Open office is completely free and it does support Windows documents. Yes it will work on a Windoes 2000 operating system.
Elliniko
2008-06-23 07:40:37 UTC
Yes openoffice is just an open source version of word - you can read and create word documents and its completely free!
2016-04-05 04:23:29 UTC
Not only is it free, it's a widely-maintained open source application suite. Even if someone managed to get to the distribution servers and somehow infect the files, it would be discovered pretty quickly and stopped before anyone was hurt by it. You do not have to worry about the security of that application.
?
2008-06-23 07:38:21 UTC
Yes to all as of version 3
2008-06-23 07:39:48 UTC
There is no problem to use OpenOffice.org on any Windows (2000, XP, etc.).



And you can work with Microsoft file formats (doc, xls, ppt) and the new extensions (docx and others) will be okay too...



http://www.openoffice.org/


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