Red Hat Fedora Linux 3 Bible

Other free word processors that come with Fedora include AbiWord and KOffice (which is part of the KDE desktop). As for commercial offerings, there is StarOffice from Sun Microsystems.

Using StarOffice

The StarOffice suite from Sun Microsystems Inc. is a product that runs on Linux, UNIX, and Windows operating systems. Like OpenOffice.org, StarOffice contains many features that make it compatible with Microsoft Office applications. In particular, it includes the capability to import Microsoft Word and Excel files.

StarOffice is probably the most complete integrated office suite for Linux. If you are working in a cross-platform environment, however, you can also get StarOffice for Sun Solaris and Microsoft Windows operating systems. StarOffice includes:

There are also other tools in StarOffice that enable you to create business graphics, edit raster images, and edit mathematical formulas (StarOffice Math).

You can download StarOffice 7 for Linux or purchase a boxed set from the StarOffice Web site at wwws.sun.com/software/star/staroffice/. Although StarOffice was once available free for download, the current price to download the software for home users is $79.95.

Note 

OpenOffice.org is an open-source project sponsored by Sun Microsystems. Sun takes the OpenOffice.org source code and uses it (along with other modules) to create StarOffice. This is very similar to Mozilla, an open-source Web browser, and Netscape, a commercial product built from the Mozilla sources. Of course, the Fedora Project and Red Hat Enterprise Linux have a similar symbiotic relationship.

AbiWord

The AbiWord word processor is a very nice, free word processor from the AbiSource project (www.abisource.com). If you are creating documents from scratch, AbiWord includes many of the basic functions you need to create good-quality documents.

With AbiWord, you can select what type of document the file contains. You can select to read the file in the following formats:

AbiWord doesn’t yet import all of these file types cleanly. Although the recent version of AbiWord supports Word styles, sometimes tables, graphics, and other features don’t translate perfectly. If you want to work with a Word document in AbiWord, open it as AbiWord, correct any font problems, and save the document in AbiWord format. AbiWord has vastly improved in the past few releases, but you can still have problems if you need to exchange files with others who are using Word. (To keep files in the Word format, OpenOffice.org and StarOffice work much better, but not perfectly.)

AbiWord is a great first try as a usable word processor. Recently added features, such as styles and bullets, continue to make AbiWord a more useful word processing tool. It’s not competitive with comparable commercial products, but its developers continue to improve it.

Using KOffice

There is now a KDE office suite of applications that go with the KDE desktop. The KOffice package has the basic applications you would expect in an integrated office suite: a word processor (KWord), spreadsheet (KSpread), a presentation creator (KPresenter), and a diagram drawing program (KChart).

You can start by opening the KOffice Workspace (from the red hat menu, Office ® KOffice Workspace). From the workspace window that opens, you can select from the different office applications from the left column. Open multiple documents in any of the applications. Then click on Documents in the left column to choose which one to display at the moment.

Figure 6-2 shows the KOffice workspace, displaying a KWord document.

Figure 6-2: The KOffice Workspace lets you work with multiple KDE office applications at once.

You can work with a variety of document, spreadsheet, and image types; not many commercial document types are supported yet. So you may need to import documents using other tools before you can read them into KWord. The KSpread can open several different spreadsheet styles, however, such as Microsoft Excel and GNUmeric spreadsheets. Kivio is a useful flowcharting tool.

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