Spice Opus Review Software For Mac

Posted : admin On 26.09.2019

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Mac

It’s about time. For years, OpenOffice.org used the X11 windowing system to create and run its graphical user interface.

X11 may have been a good choice when OpenOffice.org’s primary role was to provide office applications in OSes, where X11 was a common windowing system. It also allowed the developers to more easily run the application on multiple computer systems; essentially any computer that could run an X11 windowing system could run OpenOffice.org. This included Unix, Linux, Windows, and Mac, as well as others.

But the down side to X11 is that it is not the native windowing system for most platforms. That means that users not only had to install X11, they also had to learn a new user interface that was markedly different than the native windowing system on their computers. To put it bluntly, the older versions of OpenOffice.org that required the X11 windowing system would have earned a big fat one star rating from me. The applications worked well, but it makes no sense to force individuals to relearn basic window and mousing styles just to use an application. Writer also supports complex tables and graphics that you can use to produce compelling documents.

To make it easier to create these documents, Writer can create individual frames that can hold text, graphics, tables, or other content. You can move the frames around your document or anchor them to a specific spot. Each frame can have its own attributes, such as size, border, and spacing. Frames allow you to create simple or complex layouts that move Writer beyond word processing and into the realm of desktop publishing. Bases uses Tables, Views, Forms, Queries, and Reports to work with and create databases. Tables are used to create the structure to hold data. Views allow you to specify which tables, and which fields within a table, will be visible.

Spice Opus Review Software For Mac

Queries are ways to filter a database, that is, find specific information about and relationships between data. Queries can be as simple as “show me everyone who placed an order in the past week,” or very complex. Forms allow you to design how your database will look. Forms are a great way to display and enter data in an easy-to-use graphical manner. Reports are a specialized form for displaying the results of queries or the unfiltered data in a table.

In general, I found Write and Calc to be extremely usable, with most of the features most writers will ever need. As I mentioned earlier, I’m not a user of presentation software, but I found Impress easy to use, although somewhat basic compared to applications like PowerPoint. Draw was my least favorite application. It’s very evident that Draw’s primary purpose is to allow you to create graphics for Impress slides, or to create new slides for a presentation. For its intended purpose it works reasonably well, but it didn’t meet my expectations for a general-purpose drawing tool.

Base is a reasonably good database application. It offers plenty of capabilities, but lacks an easy-to-use interface, something I’ve grown used to with other Mac database applications.