OOoSwitch: 501 Things You Want to Know About Switching OpenOffice.org from Microsoft Office (Paperback)
Tamar E. Granor, Scott Carr, Sam Hiser
- 出版商: Hentzenwerke Publish
- 定價: $1,500
- 售價: 2.7 折 $399
- 語言: 英文
- 頁數: 311
- 裝訂: Paperback
- ISBN: 1930919360
- ISBN-13: 9781930919365
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相關分類:
LibreOffice
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商品描述
Description:
OpenOffice.org is the leading Open Source Office suite of applications, incorporating a word processor, a spreadsheet, a presentation tool, a drawing tool, a formula builder, and a sophisticated programming language. With over a million users worldwide as of the summer of 2002, OOo is providing very real competition to Microsoft Office because of its robust feature set, low price (it can be downloaded from the Internet for free or can be purchased for the cost of the CDs), and lack of onerous licensing and registration requirements.
Small businesses, school systems, and home users are the obvious candidates for a set of office applications that provide the same functionality as Microsoft Office but without the cost or restrictions. However, larger businesses and governments worldwide hesitant to be dependent on a monopolistic single supplier of proprietary technology are investigating and converting to OpenOffice.org.
Switching from one software package to another can be a frustrating experience. The user has spent untold hours becoming familiar with the features and functionality of one package, and while their head tells them that they have a learning curve ahead of them with a different package, their heart tells them that they should already know how to everything. Reconciling the head and the heart is the purpose of this book.
Microsoft Office users are converting to OpenOffice.org in droves, due to a wide difference in price, no onerous licensing or restrictive installation and activation requirements. However, they don't want to be bogged down, spending a lot of time learning how OpenOffice.org's functionality differs from Microsoft Office. They want to be able to accomplish what they can already do in Microsoft Office with their new office suite. OOoSwitch is aimed at providing this information to the new OpenOffice.org user in an easy to digest format, featuring hundreds of answers to those How do I...?questions.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1 - What is OpenOffice.org?
If youre reading this book, you have probably already tried OpenOffice.org. However, you may be asking what this product is and where it came from? This chapter answers that and lays out some terminology used throughout the book.
Chapter 2 - Installation and Configuration
So you want to give OpenOffice.org a try. Now what? How do you get your hands on it? How do you install it? What do you have once you finish the installation?
Chapter 3 - OpenOffice.org File Storage
How does OpenOffice.org store files? Can it read files created in Microsoft Office and WordPerfect? Can I exchange files created by OpenOffice.org with people using other Office suites?
Chapter 4 - The OpenOffice.org Interface
While the biggest concern in changing office suites may be file compatibility, the most difficult part of the process is unlearning old habits and learning how the new suite works. Fortunately, in OpenOffice.org, the applications have a lot in common, so once you start learning, much of what you learn applies to all of them.
Chapter 5 - Making Life Easier with Templates and Styles
For most users, uniformity within and across documents is important. OpenOffice.org supports this need with styles that define a group of formatting characteristics and templates that combine styles with boilerplate text to form the basis for new documents.
Chapter 6 - Creating Simple Documents
Most of the documents you need to write arent complicated, but do require some formatting and other features. This chapter looks at straightforward document creation with Writer.
Chapter 7 - Dressing Up Documents
Once you get basic documents down, you will probably want to use some more complex features of Writer. This chapter shows you how to add page numbers, tables, and graphics to your text documents, plus how to perform a mail merge and more.
Chapter 8 - Creating Simple Spreadsheets
Spreadsheet software was the breakthrough application for personal computers, the one that led to their widespread acceptance in the business world. OpenOffice.orgs spreadsheet application, Calc, provides the features youd expect: the ability to enter numbers and formulas, have calculations update as the numbers change, format the results for attractive reporting, and more.
Chapter 9 - Database Manipulation with Calc
Calc has the ability to treat its data like a database, reading data from disparate sources and performing various operations. This chapter looks at Calcs database functionality.
Chapter 10 - Working with Graphs and Charts
Most people understand information better when presented as a graph or chart than when they look at the raw data. Calc has the ability to graph data in a variety of ways and offers a wizard-type interface to guide you.
Chapter 11 - Creating Simple Presentations
Presentations are a very different sort of thing compared to documents or spreadsheets, but learning to create simple presentations isnt hard. This chapter examines the basics of Impress.
Chapter 12 - Presentations with Pizzazz
Once you have a simple slide show working, you will likely want to add graphics and transition effects. In addition, Impress offers techniques that make it easy to create uniform presentations and to show only a subset of the slides in a presentation.
Chapter 13 - Creating Web Pages
The growth of the Web cant be exaggerated, and many people who never heard of a web page a few years ago now have the responsibility of managing web sites. OpenOffice.org offers a tool for creating and editing web pages.
Chapter 14 - Creating Drawings
Diagrams using shapes, arrows, lines, and the like are useful for conveying information in a natural way. OpenOffice.orgs Draw application lets you create such diagrams, which you can incorporate into documents created with the other applications.
Chapter 15 - Building Formulas
Those working in technical fields often need to include formulas and equations in documents to demonstrate ideas, show proofs, and so on. OpenOffice.org's Math application makes it easy to construct equations and use them in other applications.
Chapter 16 - Using Master Documents to Consolidate
Some documents, like books, are large enough to make storing them as a single file unwieldy. OpenOffice.orgs master document feature lets you store such a document in multiple files yet still produce such features as a table of contents.
Chapter 17 - Managing Data with OpenOffice.org
While OpenOffice.org doesn't include a full-blown database application development tool like Microsoft's Access and Visual FoxPro, it has considerable power for working with data, including the ability to create databases.
Chapter 18 - Forms, Macros and Automation
Sometimes you need more than what the package natively provides. This chapter looks at three advanced capabilities, custom input forms, macros to speed up or simplify your work, and automation that allows you to use the OpenOffice.org applications from within other applications.
Appendix - Resources
While this book should give you the basics and more, sooner or later, youre likely to want to do something with OpenOffice.org that isnt covered here. This appendix offers a list of places to go for more help.