Word File Editor Download [UPDATED]

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Madison Spiers

unread,
Jan 21, 2024, 12:28:37 PM1/21/24
to helcogusgua

UPDATE: I tried this for a while.. and do hearby announce this was a profoundly stupid idea. (I can say that about myself:). MS Word is a word processor, and a very good one. It is nowhere near being a programmer's editor. It's that apple-orange thing.

word file editor download


Download ✦✦✦ https://t.co/i72JT1TdKk



I need to have a textarea with highligting (Some css effect) of certain words and phrases.Previously I have got this working with editarea - however as it is a dead project more and more issues arose so I am trying an alternate more current editor - Ace.

I request you add a dedicated word processer to the program, that has many basic functions useful for better text insertion. I think you would enable it with a text tool - it would expand into a window that you could create a text document with without borders, margins and the like, or edit text, it would import a variety of file types, then it would paste that onto the layout page.

I guess the requirement means that the users should be able to use the Microsoft Word editor for editing the word documents which lives in the CMS. The operation of creating new word document and editing a new word document should be possible from within the editor. They would not like to login into AEM and download the asset for editing and then uploading it back whenever they are done.

I do not understand your question of incorporating word editor in AEM. The word processing software are generally desktop software and allow you to edit documents offline. With Google docs you can edit the documents online but then integrating with AEM will be a complex effort.

PS: granted you can say - create a folder, put all those word files there and imagine it (the folder) as a "database" - but too cumbersome that way with M$ Word + plugin vs what I already use now... so I do not need to tweak the M$ Word - I am looking for alternative software like SmartEdit Writer (which while not dealing with ONE file already seamlessly handles save/open/backup/export/etc of its database /which is a set of folders & files inside/ + has less memory footprint vs M$ Word) ... using M$ Word + plugin will be a step back for me.

I must admit to being confused at your apparent need for Tabs in MS-Word, or any other word processor. We do a lot of word processing at my place, and I've ever needed more than one document per instance, sometimes with several (windowed) instances open simultaneously for comparison, copying etc.

can do that with multiple documents and windows in any word processor. Organize them with a file folder. Then you have one clean master document when done and can zip all your other notes and sections away for archival l.

A word processing file contains user information in plain text or rich text format. A plain text file format contains unformatted text and no font or page settings etc. can be applied. In contrast, a rich text file format allows formatting options such as setting fonts type, styles (bold, italic, underline, etc.), page margins, headings, bullets and numbers, and several other formatting features.

Read More

i see how to create "notes", but not sure how to just type a document up. Do I have to go to word or PowerPoint to do this? How do others type up their sermons...or do you just preach from a "notes" document?

Logos isn't designed for sermon writing per se. It's a research, study & reading platform. Logos has said that they don't want to write a word processor, because it's very difficult to write one better than what's already out there. Most of us in the Windows environment use MSWord, some use Libre Office, and a few use other word processors that fit their preferences and experience. I'm not familiar with the options in the Mac world, though MS Word is available now there as well. I suppose Google Docs could also work, though I'm not aware of those who use that option (they're probably out there).

If you do use Word to write up your sermons then you can get Logos to make a very well indexed and handy book out of them. I don't use word but I convert them to word after. The reason is because you can tag them all with Bible verses, themes, duration even location. It means that I can easily check what I have preached, when and to who etc. I don't like to reuse and illustration with the same people but I have some good stories worth sharing more than once etc.

Brian Helm:Once I got used to It, I found the Notes editor in Logos to be very similar to the word processor in Wordsearch10...obviously not Word, but easy to copy/paste and do additional formatting.

Current behavior: Document with single line of [[test linktest]] gives a word count of 3.
Desired behavior: Word count should be 1, using only the link text, not the hidden info for the link.

Character/word count includes the contents of Front Matter and characters inside markdown links or wiki links, formatting characters, multiple end of lines or whitespace that is stripped from the resulting formatted text.

It is a problem because for all purposes I can imagine, I need the char/word count of the resulting formatted text, not of its source. Could you please add an option to only count chars/words of the formatted (previewed) text without Front Matter? Thanks in advance.

Like many people I know, I frequently use commented text (wrapped in %%) as a way to keep outline and main text in the same document. Notes to self, notes from collaborators, it all gets tucked in a comment. The problem is that these notes show up in the word count, and there is no easy way to see my progress.

Experienced freelance writer and editor providing word-processing and editorial services according to WMU guidelines. Familiar with APA, MLA Chicago and AP styles and willing to learn others. Advanced computer skills in Microsoft Word and WordPerfect; experience with templates. M.A. in Organizational Communication and B.A. in English, Western Michigan University. References available upon request.

Hi, all! AFAIK there are lots of Openbox/XFCE/Awesome/XMonad/PekWM/etc lovers among Archlinux, which means that this board is the best place to ask for an advice if one looks for a lightweight app. I am looking for a lightweight word processor. Something with support for basic formatting and some (or at least one) major format. I am aware of AbiWord (didn't like it though), Ted (good thing, too bad it is inactive these days) and... nothing else! Can anybody advice me something here?

I'm almost desperate enough at this point to make my own word processor, for my own use. But that seems completely insane, given that the year is 2022 and word processing is almost literally the first application that PCs had, and were stable in the early 1980s... Although you had to pay dearly for them, admittedly.

For my needs, I have found that Atom (or any other modern text editor) and Markdown gets me almost everything I need, and I can easily preview it and export it to PDF. I save immense amounts of time not messing with layout in a word processor that can't decide if it wants to be a text editor or a DTP tool.

My old trick for that is (in some draft document) to add some temporary text with weird punctuation or string. For example: @*@*@TO BE COMPLETED (sometimes I highlight it in red). Then you need to search the @*@*@ string. This trick does not require any capability of your word processor or document formater, beyond searching for some weird punctuation (which is your conventional one, choozen to be unlikely to appear in the definitive text). If you forgot your convention, put a post-it on your desk (or send you some email about what is remaining to be written / corrected / improved).

With my set-up of it, it is not WYSIWYG at all, deliberately, because I want to see the literal characters I've entered to a file. This has been useful at times in the past when a file got slightly mangled, and I could look directly at the characters in it, rather than simply having a word-processing program declare it corrupted/unreadable.

When you enable inclusiveness editing in Microsoft Word, it flags any words or phrases that may be offensive and noninclusive. In addition to highlighting the term, the editor also suggests acceptable alternatives.

df19127ead
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages