Top 5 Open Source Plugins for ONLYOFFICE Docs
ONLYOFFICE Docs is a good alternative to Microsoft Office for Linux-based operating systems. In a nutshell, it’s an online office package that comes with web-based editors allowing you to create and edit text documents, spreadsheets, presentations, and fillable forms in your browser.
The suite is notable for its complete compatibility with the OOXML formats (DOCX, PPTX, and XLSX) and support for other popular formats, including ODF.
Another one today:
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ONLYOFFICE 7.2 Introduces Plugin Marketplace, Live Viewer, and More
ONLYOFFICE is an open-source office suite that offers a lot of utility in a relatively small package.
This follows the previous major release of ONLYOFFICE 7.1 and offers quite a few improvements.
Let's see what is on offer.
Liam Proven:
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Onlyoffice version 7.2 released, download for free • The Register
The latest point-release of Onlyoffice, a free Microsoft Office-compatible suite, is here with multiple small improvements and better support for Asian and African writing systems.
Despite Microsoft's seemingly unassailable hegemony, Office does still have rivals other than Google Docs. There's more than one free-and-open-source productivity suite out there. Onlyoffice has a few points in its favor, and the new version 7.2 increases its appeal.
Onlyoffice 7 came out at the start of the year and this is the second point-release. This version has improved font support, notably for handling ligatures – the combined characters created by joining two (or more) letters together. This isn't a big deal in English; it's useful for some words of Latin origin, such as anæsthetic. However, for some alphabets, where most or all letters join together, it's critical, so this means Onlyoffice 7.2 now has much better support for Bengali (বাংলা বর্ণমালা) and N'Ko (ߒߞߏ), among others.
By Joey Sneddon:
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ONLYOFFICE 7.2 Released with Various New Features & Improvements
An updated version of ONLYOFFICE is available to download for Windows, macOS, and Linux.
ONLYOFFICE 7.2 ships with all of the latest changes to the online version, plus some ‘unique features’ exclusive to the desktop editors, including automatic light/dark mode on Windows and macOS (the feature is present on Linux builds but doesn’t, in my testing, do what it should).
Such as? Well, the new version of the Document has ligature support in text files; lets you easily insert the current heading into a table of contents; and adds a new “Headings” panel to the main toolbar (replacing the navigation panel). Converting .pdf, .djvu, and .xps documents to .docx is also said to have improved.
The Presentation tool now supports custom path animations, offers advanced settings, is able to playback audio and video in slides without requiring VLC, and intros advanced “placement” options for images, when selecting an image and choosing ‘advanced settings’.