Is LibreOffice Writer able to read properly Ms Office Word docx Files? [closed]












10














Is LibreOffice Writer able to read properly Ms Office Word docx Files?



I think it can't and users should be aware of it!



I tried to open many documents .docx created with Ms Office 2007 and appeared modified/transformed when I tried to open them with LibreOffice.



Can I do anything about it?










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closed as too broad by Eric Carvalho, Braiam, waltinator, mikewhatever, Avinash Raj Apr 27 '14 at 16:26


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 5




    ... it depends on the version of libreoffice ... support is better in the latest version.
    – fossfreedom
    Mar 31 '12 at 11:42










  • If you don't need to edit the .docx files, why don't you convert them to PDF? - This way almost everything stays formatted as it is. For me this was till now the only solution...
    – hakaishi
    Mar 31 '12 at 12:07










  • Abiword should read and write .docx
    – user4815
    Mar 31 '12 at 12:47










  • Read yes ! write no. In libre office 3 there is still lack of support for SmartArts,Shapes and Charts.
    – Curious Apprentice
    Sep 3 '12 at 12:50
















10














Is LibreOffice Writer able to read properly Ms Office Word docx Files?



I think it can't and users should be aware of it!



I tried to open many documents .docx created with Ms Office 2007 and appeared modified/transformed when I tried to open them with LibreOffice.



Can I do anything about it?










share|improve this question















closed as too broad by Eric Carvalho, Braiam, waltinator, mikewhatever, Avinash Raj Apr 27 '14 at 16:26


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 5




    ... it depends on the version of libreoffice ... support is better in the latest version.
    – fossfreedom
    Mar 31 '12 at 11:42










  • If you don't need to edit the .docx files, why don't you convert them to PDF? - This way almost everything stays formatted as it is. For me this was till now the only solution...
    – hakaishi
    Mar 31 '12 at 12:07










  • Abiword should read and write .docx
    – user4815
    Mar 31 '12 at 12:47










  • Read yes ! write no. In libre office 3 there is still lack of support for SmartArts,Shapes and Charts.
    – Curious Apprentice
    Sep 3 '12 at 12:50














10












10








10


1





Is LibreOffice Writer able to read properly Ms Office Word docx Files?



I think it can't and users should be aware of it!



I tried to open many documents .docx created with Ms Office 2007 and appeared modified/transformed when I tried to open them with LibreOffice.



Can I do anything about it?










share|improve this question















Is LibreOffice Writer able to read properly Ms Office Word docx Files?



I think it can't and users should be aware of it!



I tried to open many documents .docx created with Ms Office 2007 and appeared modified/transformed when I tried to open them with LibreOffice.



Can I do anything about it?







libreoffice






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 31 '12 at 11:32









Bruno Pereira

59.5k26179206




59.5k26179206










asked Mar 31 '12 at 11:28









digitalcrow

5732620




5732620




closed as too broad by Eric Carvalho, Braiam, waltinator, mikewhatever, Avinash Raj Apr 27 '14 at 16:26


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as too broad by Eric Carvalho, Braiam, waltinator, mikewhatever, Avinash Raj Apr 27 '14 at 16:26


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 5




    ... it depends on the version of libreoffice ... support is better in the latest version.
    – fossfreedom
    Mar 31 '12 at 11:42










  • If you don't need to edit the .docx files, why don't you convert them to PDF? - This way almost everything stays formatted as it is. For me this was till now the only solution...
    – hakaishi
    Mar 31 '12 at 12:07










  • Abiword should read and write .docx
    – user4815
    Mar 31 '12 at 12:47










  • Read yes ! write no. In libre office 3 there is still lack of support for SmartArts,Shapes and Charts.
    – Curious Apprentice
    Sep 3 '12 at 12:50














  • 5




    ... it depends on the version of libreoffice ... support is better in the latest version.
    – fossfreedom
    Mar 31 '12 at 11:42










  • If you don't need to edit the .docx files, why don't you convert them to PDF? - This way almost everything stays formatted as it is. For me this was till now the only solution...
    – hakaishi
    Mar 31 '12 at 12:07










  • Abiword should read and write .docx
    – user4815
    Mar 31 '12 at 12:47










  • Read yes ! write no. In libre office 3 there is still lack of support for SmartArts,Shapes and Charts.
    – Curious Apprentice
    Sep 3 '12 at 12:50








5




5




... it depends on the version of libreoffice ... support is better in the latest version.
– fossfreedom
Mar 31 '12 at 11:42




... it depends on the version of libreoffice ... support is better in the latest version.
– fossfreedom
Mar 31 '12 at 11:42












If you don't need to edit the .docx files, why don't you convert them to PDF? - This way almost everything stays formatted as it is. For me this was till now the only solution...
– hakaishi
Mar 31 '12 at 12:07




If you don't need to edit the .docx files, why don't you convert them to PDF? - This way almost everything stays formatted as it is. For me this was till now the only solution...
– hakaishi
Mar 31 '12 at 12:07












Abiword should read and write .docx
– user4815
Mar 31 '12 at 12:47




Abiword should read and write .docx
– user4815
Mar 31 '12 at 12:47












Read yes ! write no. In libre office 3 there is still lack of support for SmartArts,Shapes and Charts.
– Curious Apprentice
Sep 3 '12 at 12:50




Read yes ! write no. In libre office 3 there is still lack of support for SmartArts,Shapes and Charts.
– Curious Apprentice
Sep 3 '12 at 12:50










7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















12














Yes it can... Most of the time without issues.



LibreOffice supports by default several formats including the ones used by Microsoft Office, including the Office Open XML specification from .docx, .pptx and .xlsx.



That does not mean that everything will look exactly the same when you open a file in MS Office 2007 and in LibreOffice. To tell the truth not all files created in MS Office 2007 will open the same even in Ms Office 2010, and the opposite is also true.



You should be aware that Office XML specifications were created by Microsoft and that nuances can be seen using different versions of the editor that you are using. That will also be true even with Microsoft software.



Just don't expect that everything will be the same all the time. Things like missing fonts and weird formatting in the original document will cause massive issues while trying to open it in LibreOffice. Open XML formats are bad. End of story.



As an option you can however run MS Office in Ubuntu easily. Nothing is impossible. Just buy a MS Office license, run the installer with Wine and you can do all the things you do in Windows using MS Office 2007 under Ubuntu.






share|improve this answer























  • The important thing nobody mentioned: if one have a problem with «docx» compatibility between Libre Office and MS Office, since «docx» now is an open standard, it is pretty much possible that this is the guilty of MS Office, which (what an irony) doesn't work with «docx» properly. So, if anybody have problems with the MS Office, feel free to recommend them to upgrade to software that does following standards, like LibreOffice, for example.
    – Hi-Angel
    Feb 21 '16 at 23:08



















3














I had this problem as well (it doesn't help that MS keeps changing their formats) :(



Hot Tip



One solution I found that seemed to work is to ask people I am working on documents with to simply save it in an older doc version. It seems to guarantee that I could see the document in the original format and the people I was collaborating with were able to properly open my documents properly (previously saving LibreOffice in docx was preventing them from doing that).



Hope that helps some folks :)



** Update: It appears as though the latest release of Open Office has better DocX support (only available in the latest version of Ubuntu 12 though)






share|improve this answer























  • Hey no problem... also I just updated this to note that there is better support (apparently) in Ubuntu 12's LibreOffice latest release. :)
    – shaneonabike
    Jun 13 '12 at 16:50



















1














Another factor that often is overlooked when compatibility is discussed is that documents created in MS Office in Windows often uses MS fonts that is not available in Linux. An exchanged font makes documents look different and the layout will get lost.
This can partly be fixed by using exactly the same fonts in MS Office and LibreOffice.






share|improve this answer





















  • It's not only the fonts its the format of the document a friend of mine gave me to print a docx document and its format, objects,frames etc were misplaced completely altering the document in a big way, this was very embarassing.
    – digitalcrow
    Aug 21 '12 at 19:00



















1














Not really, I cant use with any Documents that my business creates in Office 2007/10 - the formatting is all over the place.



Really should not be touted as a "full office suite compatible with MS office - it really isn't and in no way should it be used for businesses.






share|improve this answer





























    1














    I agree that it has some basic compatibility but as people have said here, the ususal workflow where a Windows/Office user sends you a docx which you edit and send back is fundamentally unfeasible with LibreOffice, and the main reason I still need to boot into Windows. Any file with tables or advanced formatting will tend to break.



    I can't yet verify if the new/beta version does handle these better but at the moment I would still consider it risky






    share|improve this answer





























      1














      Unfortunately, LibreOffice still has poor formatting compatibility with MS Office, despite a few improvements in the latest version. It's still way short for being able to open a Word document, edit it, save it, then open it in Word without losing formatting in one way or another. Docx compatibility is even worse than doc.



      The only office suite for Linux that provides true interoperability with Microsoft Office is SoftMaker Office. Its word processor TextMaker opens and saves doc and docx without any flaws. Amazing. A free 30 day trial version of SoftMaker Office is available on SoftMaker's website for you to prove it.






      share|improve this answer





















      • FreeOffice TextMaker unfortunately does NOT save as .DOCX. The newest Word format it supports is Word 2003.
        – Dan Dascalescu
        Mar 12 '15 at 6:10





















      0














      Seems there is a new beta update with DOCX improvements.
      A List of Changes is available.



      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:libreoffice/libreoffice-prereleases
      sudo apt-get update
      sudo apt-get dist-upgrade





      share|improve this answer




























        7 Answers
        7






        active

        oldest

        votes








        7 Answers
        7






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        12














        Yes it can... Most of the time without issues.



        LibreOffice supports by default several formats including the ones used by Microsoft Office, including the Office Open XML specification from .docx, .pptx and .xlsx.



        That does not mean that everything will look exactly the same when you open a file in MS Office 2007 and in LibreOffice. To tell the truth not all files created in MS Office 2007 will open the same even in Ms Office 2010, and the opposite is also true.



        You should be aware that Office XML specifications were created by Microsoft and that nuances can be seen using different versions of the editor that you are using. That will also be true even with Microsoft software.



        Just don't expect that everything will be the same all the time. Things like missing fonts and weird formatting in the original document will cause massive issues while trying to open it in LibreOffice. Open XML formats are bad. End of story.



        As an option you can however run MS Office in Ubuntu easily. Nothing is impossible. Just buy a MS Office license, run the installer with Wine and you can do all the things you do in Windows using MS Office 2007 under Ubuntu.






        share|improve this answer























        • The important thing nobody mentioned: if one have a problem with «docx» compatibility between Libre Office and MS Office, since «docx» now is an open standard, it is pretty much possible that this is the guilty of MS Office, which (what an irony) doesn't work with «docx» properly. So, if anybody have problems with the MS Office, feel free to recommend them to upgrade to software that does following standards, like LibreOffice, for example.
          – Hi-Angel
          Feb 21 '16 at 23:08
















        12














        Yes it can... Most of the time without issues.



        LibreOffice supports by default several formats including the ones used by Microsoft Office, including the Office Open XML specification from .docx, .pptx and .xlsx.



        That does not mean that everything will look exactly the same when you open a file in MS Office 2007 and in LibreOffice. To tell the truth not all files created in MS Office 2007 will open the same even in Ms Office 2010, and the opposite is also true.



        You should be aware that Office XML specifications were created by Microsoft and that nuances can be seen using different versions of the editor that you are using. That will also be true even with Microsoft software.



        Just don't expect that everything will be the same all the time. Things like missing fonts and weird formatting in the original document will cause massive issues while trying to open it in LibreOffice. Open XML formats are bad. End of story.



        As an option you can however run MS Office in Ubuntu easily. Nothing is impossible. Just buy a MS Office license, run the installer with Wine and you can do all the things you do in Windows using MS Office 2007 under Ubuntu.






        share|improve this answer























        • The important thing nobody mentioned: if one have a problem with «docx» compatibility between Libre Office and MS Office, since «docx» now is an open standard, it is pretty much possible that this is the guilty of MS Office, which (what an irony) doesn't work with «docx» properly. So, if anybody have problems with the MS Office, feel free to recommend them to upgrade to software that does following standards, like LibreOffice, for example.
          – Hi-Angel
          Feb 21 '16 at 23:08














        12












        12








        12






        Yes it can... Most of the time without issues.



        LibreOffice supports by default several formats including the ones used by Microsoft Office, including the Office Open XML specification from .docx, .pptx and .xlsx.



        That does not mean that everything will look exactly the same when you open a file in MS Office 2007 and in LibreOffice. To tell the truth not all files created in MS Office 2007 will open the same even in Ms Office 2010, and the opposite is also true.



        You should be aware that Office XML specifications were created by Microsoft and that nuances can be seen using different versions of the editor that you are using. That will also be true even with Microsoft software.



        Just don't expect that everything will be the same all the time. Things like missing fonts and weird formatting in the original document will cause massive issues while trying to open it in LibreOffice. Open XML formats are bad. End of story.



        As an option you can however run MS Office in Ubuntu easily. Nothing is impossible. Just buy a MS Office license, run the installer with Wine and you can do all the things you do in Windows using MS Office 2007 under Ubuntu.






        share|improve this answer














        Yes it can... Most of the time without issues.



        LibreOffice supports by default several formats including the ones used by Microsoft Office, including the Office Open XML specification from .docx, .pptx and .xlsx.



        That does not mean that everything will look exactly the same when you open a file in MS Office 2007 and in LibreOffice. To tell the truth not all files created in MS Office 2007 will open the same even in Ms Office 2010, and the opposite is also true.



        You should be aware that Office XML specifications were created by Microsoft and that nuances can be seen using different versions of the editor that you are using. That will also be true even with Microsoft software.



        Just don't expect that everything will be the same all the time. Things like missing fonts and weird formatting in the original document will cause massive issues while trying to open it in LibreOffice. Open XML formats are bad. End of story.



        As an option you can however run MS Office in Ubuntu easily. Nothing is impossible. Just buy a MS Office license, run the installer with Wine and you can do all the things you do in Windows using MS Office 2007 under Ubuntu.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Dec 16 '18 at 9:44









        Zanna

        50.2k13133241




        50.2k13133241










        answered Mar 31 '12 at 11:47









        Bruno Pereira

        59.5k26179206




        59.5k26179206












        • The important thing nobody mentioned: if one have a problem with «docx» compatibility between Libre Office and MS Office, since «docx» now is an open standard, it is pretty much possible that this is the guilty of MS Office, which (what an irony) doesn't work with «docx» properly. So, if anybody have problems with the MS Office, feel free to recommend them to upgrade to software that does following standards, like LibreOffice, for example.
          – Hi-Angel
          Feb 21 '16 at 23:08


















        • The important thing nobody mentioned: if one have a problem with «docx» compatibility between Libre Office and MS Office, since «docx» now is an open standard, it is pretty much possible that this is the guilty of MS Office, which (what an irony) doesn't work with «docx» properly. So, if anybody have problems with the MS Office, feel free to recommend them to upgrade to software that does following standards, like LibreOffice, for example.
          – Hi-Angel
          Feb 21 '16 at 23:08
















        The important thing nobody mentioned: if one have a problem with «docx» compatibility between Libre Office and MS Office, since «docx» now is an open standard, it is pretty much possible that this is the guilty of MS Office, which (what an irony) doesn't work with «docx» properly. So, if anybody have problems with the MS Office, feel free to recommend them to upgrade to software that does following standards, like LibreOffice, for example.
        – Hi-Angel
        Feb 21 '16 at 23:08




        The important thing nobody mentioned: if one have a problem with «docx» compatibility between Libre Office and MS Office, since «docx» now is an open standard, it is pretty much possible that this is the guilty of MS Office, which (what an irony) doesn't work with «docx» properly. So, if anybody have problems with the MS Office, feel free to recommend them to upgrade to software that does following standards, like LibreOffice, for example.
        – Hi-Angel
        Feb 21 '16 at 23:08













        3














        I had this problem as well (it doesn't help that MS keeps changing their formats) :(



        Hot Tip



        One solution I found that seemed to work is to ask people I am working on documents with to simply save it in an older doc version. It seems to guarantee that I could see the document in the original format and the people I was collaborating with were able to properly open my documents properly (previously saving LibreOffice in docx was preventing them from doing that).



        Hope that helps some folks :)



        ** Update: It appears as though the latest release of Open Office has better DocX support (only available in the latest version of Ubuntu 12 though)






        share|improve this answer























        • Hey no problem... also I just updated this to note that there is better support (apparently) in Ubuntu 12's LibreOffice latest release. :)
          – shaneonabike
          Jun 13 '12 at 16:50
















        3














        I had this problem as well (it doesn't help that MS keeps changing their formats) :(



        Hot Tip



        One solution I found that seemed to work is to ask people I am working on documents with to simply save it in an older doc version. It seems to guarantee that I could see the document in the original format and the people I was collaborating with were able to properly open my documents properly (previously saving LibreOffice in docx was preventing them from doing that).



        Hope that helps some folks :)



        ** Update: It appears as though the latest release of Open Office has better DocX support (only available in the latest version of Ubuntu 12 though)






        share|improve this answer























        • Hey no problem... also I just updated this to note that there is better support (apparently) in Ubuntu 12's LibreOffice latest release. :)
          – shaneonabike
          Jun 13 '12 at 16:50














        3












        3








        3






        I had this problem as well (it doesn't help that MS keeps changing their formats) :(



        Hot Tip



        One solution I found that seemed to work is to ask people I am working on documents with to simply save it in an older doc version. It seems to guarantee that I could see the document in the original format and the people I was collaborating with were able to properly open my documents properly (previously saving LibreOffice in docx was preventing them from doing that).



        Hope that helps some folks :)



        ** Update: It appears as though the latest release of Open Office has better DocX support (only available in the latest version of Ubuntu 12 though)






        share|improve this answer














        I had this problem as well (it doesn't help that MS keeps changing their formats) :(



        Hot Tip



        One solution I found that seemed to work is to ask people I am working on documents with to simply save it in an older doc version. It seems to guarantee that I could see the document in the original format and the people I was collaborating with were able to properly open my documents properly (previously saving LibreOffice in docx was preventing them from doing that).



        Hope that helps some folks :)



        ** Update: It appears as though the latest release of Open Office has better DocX support (only available in the latest version of Ubuntu 12 though)







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jun 13 '12 at 16:50

























        answered Jun 9 '12 at 16:41









        shaneonabike

        35929




        35929












        • Hey no problem... also I just updated this to note that there is better support (apparently) in Ubuntu 12's LibreOffice latest release. :)
          – shaneonabike
          Jun 13 '12 at 16:50


















        • Hey no problem... also I just updated this to note that there is better support (apparently) in Ubuntu 12's LibreOffice latest release. :)
          – shaneonabike
          Jun 13 '12 at 16:50
















        Hey no problem... also I just updated this to note that there is better support (apparently) in Ubuntu 12's LibreOffice latest release. :)
        – shaneonabike
        Jun 13 '12 at 16:50




        Hey no problem... also I just updated this to note that there is better support (apparently) in Ubuntu 12's LibreOffice latest release. :)
        – shaneonabike
        Jun 13 '12 at 16:50











        1














        Another factor that often is overlooked when compatibility is discussed is that documents created in MS Office in Windows often uses MS fonts that is not available in Linux. An exchanged font makes documents look different and the layout will get lost.
        This can partly be fixed by using exactly the same fonts in MS Office and LibreOffice.






        share|improve this answer





















        • It's not only the fonts its the format of the document a friend of mine gave me to print a docx document and its format, objects,frames etc were misplaced completely altering the document in a big way, this was very embarassing.
          – digitalcrow
          Aug 21 '12 at 19:00
















        1














        Another factor that often is overlooked when compatibility is discussed is that documents created in MS Office in Windows often uses MS fonts that is not available in Linux. An exchanged font makes documents look different and the layout will get lost.
        This can partly be fixed by using exactly the same fonts in MS Office and LibreOffice.






        share|improve this answer





















        • It's not only the fonts its the format of the document a friend of mine gave me to print a docx document and its format, objects,frames etc were misplaced completely altering the document in a big way, this was very embarassing.
          – digitalcrow
          Aug 21 '12 at 19:00














        1












        1








        1






        Another factor that often is overlooked when compatibility is discussed is that documents created in MS Office in Windows often uses MS fonts that is not available in Linux. An exchanged font makes documents look different and the layout will get lost.
        This can partly be fixed by using exactly the same fonts in MS Office and LibreOffice.






        share|improve this answer












        Another factor that often is overlooked when compatibility is discussed is that documents created in MS Office in Windows often uses MS fonts that is not available in Linux. An exchanged font makes documents look different and the layout will get lost.
        This can partly be fixed by using exactly the same fonts in MS Office and LibreOffice.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jun 13 '12 at 18:32









        Pavel

        111




        111












        • It's not only the fonts its the format of the document a friend of mine gave me to print a docx document and its format, objects,frames etc were misplaced completely altering the document in a big way, this was very embarassing.
          – digitalcrow
          Aug 21 '12 at 19:00


















        • It's not only the fonts its the format of the document a friend of mine gave me to print a docx document and its format, objects,frames etc were misplaced completely altering the document in a big way, this was very embarassing.
          – digitalcrow
          Aug 21 '12 at 19:00
















        It's not only the fonts its the format of the document a friend of mine gave me to print a docx document and its format, objects,frames etc were misplaced completely altering the document in a big way, this was very embarassing.
        – digitalcrow
        Aug 21 '12 at 19:00




        It's not only the fonts its the format of the document a friend of mine gave me to print a docx document and its format, objects,frames etc were misplaced completely altering the document in a big way, this was very embarassing.
        – digitalcrow
        Aug 21 '12 at 19:00











        1














        Not really, I cant use with any Documents that my business creates in Office 2007/10 - the formatting is all over the place.



        Really should not be touted as a "full office suite compatible with MS office - it really isn't and in no way should it be used for businesses.






        share|improve this answer


























          1














          Not really, I cant use with any Documents that my business creates in Office 2007/10 - the formatting is all over the place.



          Really should not be touted as a "full office suite compatible with MS office - it really isn't and in no way should it be used for businesses.






          share|improve this answer
























            1












            1








            1






            Not really, I cant use with any Documents that my business creates in Office 2007/10 - the formatting is all over the place.



            Really should not be touted as a "full office suite compatible with MS office - it really isn't and in no way should it be used for businesses.






            share|improve this answer












            Not really, I cant use with any Documents that my business creates in Office 2007/10 - the formatting is all over the place.



            Really should not be touted as a "full office suite compatible with MS office - it really isn't and in no way should it be used for businesses.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Oct 25 '12 at 15:27









            Murphy1138

            1481211




            1481211























                1














                I agree that it has some basic compatibility but as people have said here, the ususal workflow where a Windows/Office user sends you a docx which you edit and send back is fundamentally unfeasible with LibreOffice, and the main reason I still need to boot into Windows. Any file with tables or advanced formatting will tend to break.



                I can't yet verify if the new/beta version does handle these better but at the moment I would still consider it risky






                share|improve this answer


























                  1














                  I agree that it has some basic compatibility but as people have said here, the ususal workflow where a Windows/Office user sends you a docx which you edit and send back is fundamentally unfeasible with LibreOffice, and the main reason I still need to boot into Windows. Any file with tables or advanced formatting will tend to break.



                  I can't yet verify if the new/beta version does handle these better but at the moment I would still consider it risky






                  share|improve this answer
























                    1












                    1








                    1






                    I agree that it has some basic compatibility but as people have said here, the ususal workflow where a Windows/Office user sends you a docx which you edit and send back is fundamentally unfeasible with LibreOffice, and the main reason I still need to boot into Windows. Any file with tables or advanced formatting will tend to break.



                    I can't yet verify if the new/beta version does handle these better but at the moment I would still consider it risky






                    share|improve this answer












                    I agree that it has some basic compatibility but as people have said here, the ususal workflow where a Windows/Office user sends you a docx which you edit and send back is fundamentally unfeasible with LibreOffice, and the main reason I still need to boot into Windows. Any file with tables or advanced formatting will tend to break.



                    I can't yet verify if the new/beta version does handle these better but at the moment I would still consider it risky







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Oct 25 '12 at 15:49









                    paulusm

                    1664




                    1664























                        1














                        Unfortunately, LibreOffice still has poor formatting compatibility with MS Office, despite a few improvements in the latest version. It's still way short for being able to open a Word document, edit it, save it, then open it in Word without losing formatting in one way or another. Docx compatibility is even worse than doc.



                        The only office suite for Linux that provides true interoperability with Microsoft Office is SoftMaker Office. Its word processor TextMaker opens and saves doc and docx without any flaws. Amazing. A free 30 day trial version of SoftMaker Office is available on SoftMaker's website for you to prove it.






                        share|improve this answer





















                        • FreeOffice TextMaker unfortunately does NOT save as .DOCX. The newest Word format it supports is Word 2003.
                          – Dan Dascalescu
                          Mar 12 '15 at 6:10


















                        1














                        Unfortunately, LibreOffice still has poor formatting compatibility with MS Office, despite a few improvements in the latest version. It's still way short for being able to open a Word document, edit it, save it, then open it in Word without losing formatting in one way or another. Docx compatibility is even worse than doc.



                        The only office suite for Linux that provides true interoperability with Microsoft Office is SoftMaker Office. Its word processor TextMaker opens and saves doc and docx without any flaws. Amazing. A free 30 day trial version of SoftMaker Office is available on SoftMaker's website for you to prove it.






                        share|improve this answer





















                        • FreeOffice TextMaker unfortunately does NOT save as .DOCX. The newest Word format it supports is Word 2003.
                          – Dan Dascalescu
                          Mar 12 '15 at 6:10
















                        1












                        1








                        1






                        Unfortunately, LibreOffice still has poor formatting compatibility with MS Office, despite a few improvements in the latest version. It's still way short for being able to open a Word document, edit it, save it, then open it in Word without losing formatting in one way or another. Docx compatibility is even worse than doc.



                        The only office suite for Linux that provides true interoperability with Microsoft Office is SoftMaker Office. Its word processor TextMaker opens and saves doc and docx without any flaws. Amazing. A free 30 day trial version of SoftMaker Office is available on SoftMaker's website for you to prove it.






                        share|improve this answer












                        Unfortunately, LibreOffice still has poor formatting compatibility with MS Office, despite a few improvements in the latest version. It's still way short for being able to open a Word document, edit it, save it, then open it in Word without losing formatting in one way or another. Docx compatibility is even worse than doc.



                        The only office suite for Linux that provides true interoperability with Microsoft Office is SoftMaker Office. Its word processor TextMaker opens and saves doc and docx without any flaws. Amazing. A free 30 day trial version of SoftMaker Office is available on SoftMaker's website for you to prove it.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Apr 25 '14 at 14:19









                        user274160

                        111




                        111












                        • FreeOffice TextMaker unfortunately does NOT save as .DOCX. The newest Word format it supports is Word 2003.
                          – Dan Dascalescu
                          Mar 12 '15 at 6:10




















                        • FreeOffice TextMaker unfortunately does NOT save as .DOCX. The newest Word format it supports is Word 2003.
                          – Dan Dascalescu
                          Mar 12 '15 at 6:10


















                        FreeOffice TextMaker unfortunately does NOT save as .DOCX. The newest Word format it supports is Word 2003.
                        – Dan Dascalescu
                        Mar 12 '15 at 6:10






                        FreeOffice TextMaker unfortunately does NOT save as .DOCX. The newest Word format it supports is Word 2003.
                        – Dan Dascalescu
                        Mar 12 '15 at 6:10













                        0














                        Seems there is a new beta update with DOCX improvements.
                        A List of Changes is available.



                        sudo add-apt-repository ppa:libreoffice/libreoffice-prereleases
                        sudo apt-get update
                        sudo apt-get dist-upgrade





                        share|improve this answer


























                          0














                          Seems there is a new beta update with DOCX improvements.
                          A List of Changes is available.



                          sudo add-apt-repository ppa:libreoffice/libreoffice-prereleases
                          sudo apt-get update
                          sudo apt-get dist-upgrade





                          share|improve this answer
























                            0












                            0








                            0






                            Seems there is a new beta update with DOCX improvements.
                            A List of Changes is available.



                            sudo add-apt-repository ppa:libreoffice/libreoffice-prereleases
                            sudo apt-get update
                            sudo apt-get dist-upgrade





                            share|improve this answer












                            Seems there is a new beta update with DOCX improvements.
                            A List of Changes is available.



                            sudo add-apt-repository ppa:libreoffice/libreoffice-prereleases
                            sudo apt-get update
                            sudo apt-get dist-upgrade






                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Jun 13 '12 at 17:39









                            duffydack

                            5,43611716




                            5,43611716















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