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#26 | |
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One thing for sure, though: I'm glad I didn't try producing my book in Word. Not only does it lack the layout features I used extensively, the file was huge (over 80mb) when completed. If I'd lost that it might have been a lot of work down the tubes. ---------- Doesn't Apple still include a trial version of iWork on all new Macs? If not, it's available for free download, for certain.
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*The season starts too early and finishes too late and there are too many games in between. Bill Veeck
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Ignatius J. Reilly———are you a fan of the book that has been my bedside bible for the last twenty-some years: A Confederacy of Dunces?!!!??
malch |
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#28 | |
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-------- I am a Pages user, and find it suits me for 99% of things I do. If I need to send a document, it is usually as a PDF in any case. If I have to send a .DOC file it will retain it's formatting about as well as someone sending a MS Word document. That is to say, there can be as many issues sending an MS Word document to another Word user if their versions are mismatched as sending a Pages document. Many people using Word are doing so in an office environment, where their Word versions are matched. When they say exchanging Word documents is pain-free, they are correct.... within the context of their office experience. However, my wife - MS Word user - does have issues with Word formatting (not often, but it is a regular thing) because she works from home and she is exchanging Word documents with lots of people, each with a slightly different version or platform. And to be fair, often it is not Word (or Pages) that is the culprit - it is the printer that Word (or Pages) thinks it is printing to. When each person is printing to a different printer, then things like margins can get messed ... and the printer may have translate the printing codes differently ... And suddenly a long documents starts getting messed up. If you have precisely formatted for a table to start at the top of page, and the printer adds 2 extra lines to the preceding 3 pages.... it gets messy. Which is why I try to send as PDFs.
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My friends, love is better than anger. Hope is better than fear. Optimism is better than despair. So let us be loving, hopeful and optimistic. And we'll change the world. - Jack Layton |
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#29 |
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Word is probably your best bet. I use Pages as my main word processor but having used it for years, I've become accustomed to what errors it may result in with compatibility so I account for these before hand. It's a much better UI and far easier to use IMO.
With Word, there is no compatibility issues so you shouldn't have to worry about this. Unlike other posters, I disagree that Word for Windows is better than Mac. On the contrary, I prefer the Mac version once you become used to the UI as it is much easier to use IMO.
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iPhone • iPad • MacBook Pro |
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#30 |
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Windows Word has had for many years big problems with large documents with graphics, charts, sections.....etc. if I had a dime for every blue screen during writing RFP responses and contracts....
I hope OS word is more reliable.
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Retina MBP 2.7GHz | 16GB | 768G Thunderbolt Display iPhone 5 | Black | 64GB | AT&T iPad 4 | Black | 64GB | WiFi only
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#31 |
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Now gone
Framemaker was the best word processor for Mac ever! Bomb proof for long documents and with paragraph styles that knew how to stay as designed. However to answer the original question I would pick Word over Pages for compatibility reasons alone in your situation, but the better integration with Endnote (a citation manager) would also play a part in my choice.
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Mac owner since 1992. 4D developer. More macs than I want to admit to. Currently 15 inch cMBP and 13 inch rMBP when travelling. |
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#32 |
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I agree about FrameMaker. Our designers used to use it for all tech documents. It would have worked well for RFPs and contracts. But alas....it was too expensive for the general office.
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Retina MBP 2.7GHz | 16GB | 768G Thunderbolt Display iPhone 5 | Black | 64GB | AT&T iPad 4 | Black | 64GB | WiFi only
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#33 |
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I'd throw in a vote for Pages as well. Had been a 15+ year user of Office when nearly 3 years ago, I uninstalled all of it and haven't looked back. I've got Scrivner as well... But for what I do, Pages is great. If I need to share a document, it's going on Google Docs. That way everyone has access to it for viewing and editing... When time comes to produce it in a different form, copy and paste into Pages.
EXCEL is absolutely the Gold Standard still. More so than Word by a long shot. But for most people, Numbers will get the job done. Keynote far outclasses Powerpoint, which was my main draw for dumping Office. At the end of the Day, Office and Word became too much of a resource hog and just too bloated generally for my needs/taste... The Price was crazy too, unless you're one of the select few who can get it for some ridiculous price $10 - $25 a copy... Coachingguy
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iPhone 5 "Vader", i5 MBP 15", MBA 11' i5, iPad, iPad 2, MBP 2.5, , 32 gig Wifi iPad & iPad 2, Canon 50D The future is determined by the decisions made today. |
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I almost never send anyone a word processing file unless they demand one for a good reason, if only because I have to guess what it might look like when they open it, and at the very least, I will be restricted to using only common fonts. Sadly, Word has turned our computers into high tech typewriters. I will continue to resist by sending PDFs whenever possible.
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*The season starts too early and finishes too late and there are too many games in between. Bill Veeck
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#35 |
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Word is not worth the effort any more...
Consider a wordprocessing program that..
I always wanted ALL these features in Word (outlining is fantastic in Word, my last argument for using Word..). But Word fails on almost all points. Pages don't. The best document processor since the Mac. So simple, so powerful. Windows users are just astonished when they watch me work in this application. |
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#36 |
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Unless I need Word, I prefer to use Pages, which has Autosave+Versions. But Word is generally more powerful and easier/more intuitive to use, too bad it's not very up-to-date with OSX features. I HATE being asked to save, relying on old-fashioned autorecovery save, and the ribbon is kitsch too.
What about Latex markup engine? Is it better than Word once you learn it (assuming one doesn't need to read DOCX files)? I can't recommend Libre- or OpenOffice Writer if you want to open Word files. They're worse than Preview and Pages at reading DOC files. |
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