

- #OPENOFFICE VS LIBREOFFICE FOR UBUNTU NOTEBOOKS PDF#
- #OPENOFFICE VS LIBREOFFICE FOR UBUNTU NOTEBOOKS UPDATE#
- #OPENOFFICE VS LIBREOFFICE FOR UBUNTU NOTEBOOKS SOFTWARE#
- #OPENOFFICE VS LIBREOFFICE FOR UBUNTU NOTEBOOKS CODE#
#OPENOFFICE VS LIBREOFFICE FOR UBUNTU NOTEBOOKS UPDATE#
About LibreOffice Calc: I have noticed that if you make many copies of a sheet with graphs and apply some changes, sometimes it doesn't update everithing right away. Overall you can create very nice documents but if they are too big and you have a little bit of time I would suggest to use a LateX based program (as mentioned above). About LibreOffice Writer: if your document is too long and has many images, the programs gets a little slow, especially when saving (it gets up to 10 seconds for documents of about 50 pages and a good number of figures), so when I use it to write my classes' notes I usually fragmentate them in more than one document. I might reevaluate this module in the future but for the moment.
#OPENOFFICE VS LIBREOFFICE FOR UBUNTU NOTEBOOKS SOFTWARE#
About LibreOffice Math: I've hardly ever used though since I find LateX based software a lot more useful and intuitive in case I need to write many formulas and integrate them with the rest of the document. LibreOffice Draw (for simple computer graphics): can't say much since I don't think I have ever used it Useful if you don't use any LateX or LateX-based software. LibreOffice Math: it's basically a math support useful for writing formulas, and can be used as an integration for the Writer module. LibreOffice Base (for databases): I don't have that much to say about this module as I haven't used it a lot but from my experience it seems to have all the basic functionalities and is intuitive enough LibreOffice Impress (for presentations with slides)

#OPENOFFICE VS LIBREOFFICE FOR UBUNTU NOTEBOOKS PDF#
Set you own style, choose everything bout your text, from font and color up to the detailed hyphenation parameters, write what you need then export your file in pdf if needed be.

LibreOffice Writer (for formatted text documents): it's got everything you need for well formatted text documents with images. I mean, everything is about where I would expect it to be. I mean its design is a bit simpler but I like some little things, like having the default shortcut for "save as" as a simple ctrl+shift+S. LibreOffice Calc (spreadsheet): it's your daily spreadsheet companion and I think it's actually neater than his cousin from the Office suite. In fact to my knowledge 6 software are included: One thing to notice is that this is a complete Suite, not a single software. (be it one of the countless Linux's distributions, Windows or Mac OS). doc documents from Word of the Office suite, for instance).Īs mentioned in the title, this software is free, is open source and can ran on every O.S. They are easy to use, free and compatible with many OS and programs (you can also open. Macro function is not that reliable yet, and although LibreOffice is open source it seems the development of the project is very slow, very little functions or UI changes are added after every release.Ĭomments: I'm a student and use Writer and Calc on a daily basis and Impress and Base when needed be. LibreOffice Math - Math documents creation and management tool. LibreOffice Draw - Vector graphics Creation, editing and management tool, alternative to Adoble LibreOffice Base - Database creation, editing and management tool best alternative to Microsoft Access LibreOffice Impress - Presentation creation, editing and management tool best alternative to Powerpoint LibreOffice Writer - Document creation, editing and management tool best alternative to Microsoft Word LibreOffice Calc - Spreadsheets creation, editing and management tool best alternative to Office Excel Sabotaging the development of this great productivity suite tools that are great alternative to Microsoft Office.
#OPENOFFICE VS LIBREOFFICE FOR UBUNTU NOTEBOOKS CODE#
Comments: Great tool that i like to use every day, very fast and lightweight compared to Microsoft office or other office productivity tools.Īfter OpenOffice got acquired by Oracle, the source code was forked under the name LibreOffice which turned to be a better more reliable project, independent from any for profit companies that may end up
