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CaptainCaveMann

macrumors 68000
Original poster
How do i get Apples new word processor? My new ibook didnt come with it. All i got was a coupon for ilife. Ilife doesnt come with pages if im correct. The macs i was using in the apple store all had Pages on them so i figured it came in all the new macs. 😕
 
Appleworks and iLife come with all new macs. You have to purchase iWork (Pages and Keynote) seperately. If you need a wordprocessor there is one in Appleworks and also Textedit.
 
ClarkeB said:
Appleworks and iLife come with all new macs. You have to purchase iWork (Pages and Keynote) seperately. If you need a wordprocessor there is one in Appleworks and also Textedit.
Textedit is not a word processor haha. Its good for html but thats it. Do you guys think Iwork is just as good as M$ 2004 for mac? It is a huge price difference and im on a budget. I need a good word processor for school.
 
ClarkeB said:
Appleworks and iLife come with all new macs. You have to purchase iWork (Pages and Keynote) seperately. If you need a wordprocessor there is one in Appleworks and also Textedit.

The PowerBook only comes with iLife, or at least mine did.
 
My new ibook didnt come with ilife. Also i found most of what im looking for in the thread below titled " Iwork worth it". Thanks all.
 
CaptainCaveMann said:
Textedit is not a word processor haha. Its good for html but thats it. Do you guys think Iwork is just as good as M$ 2004 for mac? It is a huge price difference and im on a budget. I need a good word processor for school.

Actually, I do most of my creative writing in TextEdit. It gets out of the way and stays there.

Visit the other thread in this section on iWorks for more opinions about Pages. I like it.

MS Office gives me the hives. I'd sooner write on the back of a paper sack.
 
*BZZZZZZZZZZZT Wrong.

ClarkeB said:
Appleworks and iLife come with all new macs. You have to purchase iWork (Pages and Keynote) seperately. If you need a wordprocessor there is one in Appleworks and also Textedit.
Actually the PowerMacs and PowerBooks come with iLife and but not AppleWorks.

iMacs/iBooks/eMacs/MacMinis come with both AppleWorks and iLife.
 
CaptainCaveMann said:
Textedit is not a word processor haha.
TextEdit is a very good word processor. It can handle different fonts and image formats within a document and comes with a very nice set of features which can be extended even further with the help of services. You have control over ligatures and kerning, things many actual word processors are missing.

How is it not a word processor? What is it missing that makes it not qualify?

For me, TextEdit handles everything I need up to the point where I need to move to a page layout app.
 
RacerX said:
TextEdit is a very good word processor. It can handle different fonts and image formats within a document and comes with a very nice set of features which can be extended even further with the help of services. You have control over ligatures and kerning, things many actual word processors are missing.

How is it not a word processor? What is it missing that makes it not qualify?

For me, TextEdit handles everything I need up to the point where I need to move to a page layout app.
Auto double spacing. Header options.
 
MisterMe said:
I don't know about your copy, but my copy of TextEdit has double-spacing.

Yeah it has double-spacing. I use it to type up all my documents for school. Works great. Like the other poster says, it gets out of my way, and stays there. Exports pretty damn well to Word too. Reads Word files pretty well on top of that.
 
CaptainCaveMann said:
Auto double spacing. Header options.
Well, maybe you could add some things to your system. For example, in the area of line spacing (among things) I have found that TextExtras (by one of the original people who developed TextEdit) gives me a ton of control over that.

Create-p_02_create_013_41.jpeg

TextExtras Text Attributes panel

There are a number of services I use to extend TextEdit which include (along with TextExtras):These round out TextEdit's features quite nicely.

As for headers and footers, that is when I take the next step up to a page layout app like Create.
 
RacerX said:
Well, maybe you could add some things to your system. For example, in the area of line spacing (among things) I have found that TextExtras (by one of the original people who developed TextEdit) gives me a ton of control over that.

Create-p_02_create_013_41.jpeg

TextExtras Text Attributes panel

There are a number of services I use to extend TextEdit which include (along with TextExtras):These round out TextEdit's features quite nicely.

As for headers and footers, that is when I take the next step up to a page layout app like Create.

Why do you need WordService? TextEdit already opens Word documents nicely...
 
Raven VII said:
Why do you need WordService? TextEdit already opens Word documents nicely...
First, only the version of TextEdit that came with 10.3 works with Word documents.

Second... that isn't what WordService does. WordService provides a ton of handy word processing tools via the services menu as seen below.

ws-services.jpg

WordService's items in Services menu
(highlighted in green)



ws-convert.jpg

Convert submenu


ws-format.jpg

Format submenu


ws-insert.jpg

Insert submenu


There is AntiWord service which does open Word docs for people using pre-10.3 versions of TextEdit, but that is not what this is.
 
Another enthusiastic vote for WordServices! I've been using this very handy utility for years and wonder how anybody can get along without it, especially if they do any desktop publishing. The Reformat command is worth the price all by itself.* It (and all other Services) work in Pages, BTW -- something I really missed in AppleWorks.

*Free!
 
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