• cuuube@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    For its price, it’s amazing. As a replacement for Excel - it’s fine I guess, but really depends on what your do. Excel has a lot more features than libre office doesn’t have (formatting as table, the newer formulas, and the VBA code is not the same). However if you just want it to do basic calculations with, like, excel 2010 equivalent then it will definitely work. Things like data validation, conditional formatting, nested formulas, and recording macros will work no problem.

    I can’t really speak for the other products.

  • JazzlikeDiamond558@lemm.ee
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    9 hours ago

    To answer the question, despite the few bugs and few formatting issues, YES, it is a decent replacement for MS Office.

    • Max@lemm.ee
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      8 hours ago

      Man I hope that is just a me-issue, but I work with excel a lot for work and try to use libre office at home. And the excel alternative is not great. I can see the similarities to excel, but when I want to use it, I have a lot of trouble finding things and using them as I am used to.

      You WILL be able to do basic things and I am sure it will almost always be possible to get to similar results, but the way there does not feel the same.

  • xia@lemmy.sdf.org
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    9 hours ago

    It’s missing that built-in game where you explore a maze of stateful quasi-menus looking for a tool/option that you know you’ve used before.

  • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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    9 hours ago

    It was decent replacement 10 years ago. Openoffice. If somehow you need to pay by subscription, I’m not sure it was missing features back then.

  • Octagon9561@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    LibreOffice is amazing on Linux, ngl though it is a bit unpolished on both Windows and especially Mac.

  • SplashJackson@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    The issue is that it doesn’t come with a keyboard shortcut scheme that matches Microsoft, so any company that does a trial with LibreOffice will see a massibe productivity drop right away as everyone’s muscle memories become obsolete, and you don’t want to tell Nancy the Dispatcher that she has to forget and relearn all the Excel shortcuts she’s been using for the last 20 years. She would give you a piece of her mind, once she’s back from her smoke.

    • Novocirab@feddit.org
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      10 hours ago

      It would be really awesome if there were a compatibility script or so that adjusts all LibreOffice shortcuts to match those of MS Office as far as possible.

    • adbenitez@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      Hey, how do you know she is named Nancy!? And that she smokes a bit too much! 😱

  • ohwhatfollyisman@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Calc crashes all the bloody time. want to drag a worksheet tab? crash. want to drag a field to a pivot table column? crash. want to copy a bit of a formula? crash. want to exhale? crash.

    plus it has no support for tables, xlookup, or power query. it’s like an unstable version of excel from 1997.

    when it comes to spreadsheets, excel is the best in twrms of stability and features and google sheets is next. calc is a distant third.

    whatever they have to replace word, too, pales in comparison because it’s so much more finicky to manage styles and formatting. but it’s apple’s Pages that’s surprisingly the best–most festure-packed-- word processing application.

    their powerpoint replacement is functional but doesn’t contain all the features of ms powerpoint.

  • XNX@slrpnk.net
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    1 day ago

    Onlyoffice has a better ui in my opinion but libreoffice is good enough

  • plumbercraic@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 days ago

    The pivot charts and tables drive me kinda nuts. Typically I have a dataset I’ve prepared in python and find pivot tables faster and easier than matplotlib. In excel I make a Data tab and connect it to an external CSV, then in another tab pick my filters, columns and rows, and then chart type. Then I iterate - run the Python again to make a new CSV and just press refresh in excel and I get updated visualisations. This workflow just doesnt work for me in Libre Office. Can’t figure out how to live link CSVs. Pivot tables are OK but oubot charts are not a thing - have to manually point them at a dataset and there’s no nice panel to choose columns and rows.

    I dunno, maybe it’s just I gotta learn a different way but honestly just easier to use a windows VM for this stuff.

  • Baggins@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    Not bad, I use it regularly but I’m not a power user. It doesn’t have the ten million and one things the other one does, the ones you never use. It’s quite light on resources. Not as intrusive either.

    Give it a spin.

    • optional@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      I was recently forced to use MS Office 355 and I was shocked by the amount of features it lacks, one might actually want to use.

      • Baggins@piefed.social
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        2 days ago

        Was that the web version? The last time I used Word it was the full all singing all dancing version. That was a while ago. And it was downloaded to my machine. Does it not even do that anymore?

        • optional@feddit.org
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          2 days ago

          Yes, the web version. All I wanted to do was to highlight dates more than a month ago in a different colour in Excel. But it only provided me with useless options like “current month” or “tomorrow” and no way to enter any custom conditions.

          • Baggins@piefed.social
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            13 hours ago

            Ah, it’ll be the same Wythenshawe Excel then. I format and print my wife’s work rota each week. It’s prepared in Excel quite terribly.

            The Web version didn’t have half the formatting commands the ‘real’ version had.

            Libre Office had them 😉

  • klangcola@reddthat.com
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    2 days ago

    You should there is also OnlyOffice, which has better compatibility with Microsoft file formats (and uses Microsoft formats by default). Its also generally good, and open source.

    I use both OnlyOffice and LibreOffice on different computers. Both are good.

  • Señor Mono@feddit.org
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    2 days ago

    I used it several years ago for scientific writing. It was good back then and it is good now.

    The problem is the adoption in companies/institutions that fear to miss out on something if they don’t use Office. Sadly Office files are still the business/office standard (until businesses step up and encourage people to use open document formats).