
Hello all, Thanks for your help with crossover office trial yesterday. It worked. Instead of CTrl Alt F3 I right clicked the desktop (as suggested) and chose terminal. I assume that Ctrl Alt F3 takes you right out of X windows and I also assume that SU means Super user and is the same as Logon / Root Excel now runs sweetly in gnome. I have to say Excel opens my pricebooks from suppliers far, far better than open office (which crashes or runs very slow on about half of the pricebooks) They are just too big or have too many bookmarks. Since the suppliers collectively send me a dozen or so spreadsheets a week, this is quite a big issue. Quatro Pro in Windows environment does a much better job of opening suppliers' pricebooks than open office or any of the Linux ones I have loaded on gnome or KDE. -- Cheers, Wayne D. Garton

I assume that Ctrl Alt F3 takes you right out of X windows
Yes, thats right
and I also assume that SU means Super user and is the same as Logon / Root
Yep.
Excel now runs sweetly in gnome. I have to say Excel opens my pricebooks from suppliers far, far better than open office (which crashes or runs very slow on about half of the pricebooks) They are just too big or have too many bookmarks. Since the suppliers collectively send me a dozen or so spreadsheets a week, this is quite a big issue. Quatro Pro in Windows environment does a much better job of opening suppliers' pricebooks than open office or any of the Linux ones I have loaded on gnome or KDE.
Out of curiousity, have you tried gnumeric? I have found it to work very well with excel spreadsheets. The only cavaet I can think of is that if your spreadsheet has VBA[1] in it, it probably wont work properly in gnumeric. If its just a spreadsheet however, it'll work fine. [1] Visual Basic for Applications. This isn't the same as spreadsheet functions, like SUM or HLOOKUP etc - they should all work fine in gnumeric. Daniel

Out of curiousity, have you tried gnumeric? I have found it to work very well with excel spreadsheets. The only cavaet I can think of is that if your spreadsheet has VBA[1] in it, it probably wont work properly in gnumeric. If its just a spreadsheet however, it'll work fine.
On a related note, Gnumeric seems to have issues with UTF-8 under RedHat 9. If you set the LC_ALL environment var to en_US before you launch it things are better. But in general it doesn't like RH9's font or unicode setup. Newer versions of Gnumeric might be better. -- Oliver Jones § Senior Software Engineer § Deeper Design Limited. oliver(a)deeper.co.nz § www.deeperdesign.com § +64 (21) 41-2238

Excel now runs sweetly in gnome. I have to say Excel opens my pricebooks from suppliers far, far better than open office (which crashes or runs very slow on about half of the pricebooks) They are just too big or have too many bookmarks. Since the suppliers collectively send me a dozen or so spreadsheets a week, this is quite a big issue. Quatro Pro in Windows environment does a much better job of opening suppliers' pricebooks than open office or any of the Linux ones I have loaded on gnome or KDE.
You might want to try Ximian's edition of OpenOffice. It has been updated/patched significantly to be more MS compatible. It defaults to saving files in Word and Excel format even to aid in interoperability with Windows users. It also has nicer icons. :) Regards -- Oliver Jones § Senior Software Engineer § Deeper Design Limited. oliver(a)deeper.co.nz § www.deeperdesign.com § +64 (21) 41-2238
participants (3)
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Daniel Lawson
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Oliver Jones
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Wayne D. Garton