Hi :)
OMG!! i didn't realise that post was sooo long!!  Sorry!

The upshot is that there are a lot of choices worth trying.  Most are free
so they can be tried for a while and/or a few installed alongside each
other and uninstalled or reinstalled later.

Outside of the Microsoft eco-system most things co-operate well or can
replace each other without running into so much incompatibility issues.
Most office apps have to try to cope with MS formats but MS make that as
difficult as possible (perhaps intentionally or maybe just by
incompetence).  Non-MS office apps, just like desktop office programs
probably cope better with the MS formats as used by other non-MS office
programs/apps.

There have even been many cases of people using non-MS office programs in
order to help MS Office users to share files that wouldn't normally be
possible to share between different versions of MS Office.

So, don't worry about which one(s) you try first.  Most will handle almost
any documents just fine, even documents from MS Office.
Regards from
Tom :)





On 14 May 2016 at 11:37, Tom Davies <tomc...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi :)
> The chances are that almost any Android office app works quite well as the
> tablet version of LibreOffice.
>
> One of LibreOffice's (and OpenOffice and many others) main strength(s) is
> that they tend to "play well together".  This is very different from the MS
> ethos where it's often difficult even to use different versions of their
> own software on a single document.
>
> So, in many ways it could be said that any of the office apps on Android
> ARE the tablet versions of LibreOffice!  A better match though is to say
> that "Google Docs" is one of the Cloud versions of LibreOffice and the
> https://open365.io/
> is another one.
>
> ( The reference to 365 worries me but it seems to be nothing to do with MS
> Office 365.  The .io also worries me a little but at the same time it is
> good to see that the US or England doesn't try to claim credit for them,
> and that the program doesn't have to pretend to be from the US in order to
> attract users.  So, on balance, i think this is well worth a good try. )
>
> Annoyingly the Android office apps almost all seem to be dedicated to
> using the proprietary MS format (such as DocX, XlsX, PptX etc) rather than
> the truly open standards one, "ODF" (Odt for text-based documents, Ods for
> spreadsheets, Odp for presentation etc).  Such apps have variable success
> with documents that come from MS Office but are more likely to be able to
> be able to use documents from each other - and from LibreOffice when "Save
> as MS Word ..." is used.  It is always best to keep an 'original' in ODF
> because ODF is more stable, consistent and less prone to random injections
> of hidden code.  It's not always feasible, of course, in much the same way
> that backing-up is not always feasible either and with much the same cause
> for regret when either is not done.
>
>
> MS people often claim that DocX (and XlsX and their others) are
> interoperable across different platforms and with different programs but in
> the real world this seems a bit untrue = so people often resort to using
> Pdf to share documents.  It is true that there is one version of MS's
> formats that has been accepted by the ISO standards agency, along with
> ODF.  Unfortunately none of their implementations of their own ISO format
> is consistent with either their own ISO documentation or their other
> implementations of it.
>
> So documents written in MS Office 2007 have problems opening in MSO 2010
> or 2013 or their MS Office 365.  The other way around would make sense -
> because documents written in newer versions might make use of features that
> are not in older versions.  The problem is that older (but still fairly
> recent) documents often cannot be read in newer versions of the same
> software!!  Coincidentally this is one reason why people have to keep
> buying 'new' versions of MS Office, or else use Pdfs when sharing documents
> by email or whatnot or storing documents for the longer-term.
>
> Humorously, MS used to make the same claims of interoperability for their
> "Rtf" format, with similar levels of lack of success!  Allegedly MS lost a
> court-case about their failure to create a consistent standard at which
> point they kinda dropped the Rtf format and produced the new DocX (etc)
> formats.
>
>
>
> There seems to be a lot of confusion and misinformation in this thread so
> far [edit: and out in the world too apparently!].  AOO does NOT stand for
> "Android OpenOffice"!  It is an easy mistake to make and typing in "AOO"
> into the Play-Store does give the correct result of "AndrOpen Office" (3.9
> stars out of a max possible 5 stars), which has a logo/icon which says
> "AOO"!!
>
> AOO is "The Apache Software Foundation"'s (ASF's) name for Apache
> OpenOffice.  So, ASF might have good grounds for taking AndrOO to court for
> dilution of the brand-name or somesuch but i seriously doubt they would
> bother do anything except perhaps start supporting it instead.  It might
> create some 'free' advertising in fairly mainstream media for both AOO and
> AndroOO if they do duke it out in court but the legal costs and time&energy
> might well out-weigh the benefits of doing so, let alone the cost in terms
> of goodwill.
>
> Actually typing AOO into the Play-Store gave me other results, such as
> "OpenDocument Reader" (4 stars) which also claims to be able to "modify"
> "OpenDocuments".  I'm not sure if it works or what they mean by "modify" or
> even if they mean "ODF" when they say "OpenDocuments".  It does look very
> worth trying out though.
>
> Typing in "libre office" or the more correct "LibreOffice" gave almost
> identical results except that it moved the "LibreOffice Viewer" (3.6
> stars), "LibreOffice Viewer Beta" (3.9 stars), "Google Docs" (4.2 stars)
> above AndrOO and the OpenDocument Reader.  Various additional things such
> as LO templates and the LibreOffice Impress Remote [as in remote control
> for using when giving a presentation as long as both the projector/laptop
> have wifi or are connected to the internet or are on the same Lan/Wifi (a
> lot of options there!)] also appeared above AndroOO.
>
> Typing in "LO" or "lo" gave loads of irrelevant stuff such as games and
> whatnot.
>
> "LibreOffice Viewer" (ie not the "beta-testing" one) claims to be able to
> edit existing paragraphs and gives quite a bit of detail about what it's
> limitations currently are.  Very clear and easy to understand a lot of the
> "Read more" section linked to just under the "install" button.
>
>
>
> As Tim KrackedPress and Jorge Rodríguez seemed to be saying, editing
> documents - or as others say in a wider context "content creation" is
> somewhat limited on a tablet.
>
> I find the default keyboard really limiting and annoying but adding the
> "Hackers Keyboard" at last gave me keyboard arrow keys and allows such
> things as "Ctrl arrow" to skip a word at a time (sadly it wont let me keep
> my finger on the Ctrl though so that particular combo is pretty useless for
> me).  There are many other possible keyboards and some others have a couple
> of the arrow keys too but i haven't tried them out much.  The Hacker's
> Keyboard has tons of options so i can now side-swipe to change between
> different keyboards or use the volume buttons to increase the size of the
> keyboard so my fingers fit the keys quite well, but then i can't see much
> of the document - or decrease the size of the keyboard so i can see the
> document but increases fat/old-finger errors.
>
> The one thing i really miss is a decent sized number-pad though,
> preferably one beside the document (in landscape) rather than underneath it
> though and with vital keys that often get missed off such things - such as
> Tab, Ctrl, Shift/Num-lock, /*-+ and . and arrow keys, along with cut,
> paste, save and open/close document!  I'm not asking much am i??! ;)  Ok, i
> am.  Maybe i could try to make it my first attempt at writing an app
> myself!
>
>
>
> As for attaching keyboard and mouse a friend got a blue-tooth keyboard
> (lacks a number-pad of course!) that works quite well on 'my' tablet.  Even
> it's keys are a tad too small for me although netbooks or even a tiny
> chrome-books keys were all fine for me.  I guess a bigger blue-tooth
> keyboard might be good though.
>
> As for connecting a usb-hub my ancient flaky, pos, crumbling old little
> hub seems pretty useless but maybe if it's wires hadn't broken off it might
> be a bit better.  It intermittently carries data so a mouse might work with
> it for brief bouts (usually only when i wished it didn't).  So, probably a
> pebkac issue from ages ago!
>
> Recently i got a 7 port usb hub for £11 in the Uk
>
> https://thepihut.com/collections/raspberry-pi-power-supplies/products/7-port-usb-hub-for-the-raspberry-pi
> which is fantastic.  If it's connected to a laptop or desktop or if it's
> own power-supply is plugged in then it does "smart charging" although if a
> lot of devices are trying to charge then even plugged in it tends to favour
> the lower charge-speeds (better for battery life but not for impatience)
> but if it's only charging 1 device then it favours the 1.0(ish)Amp (well
> more like 900mA tbh) 50%/hr range more often and only drops to 25%/hr with
> just a few forays to lower charge rates.
>
> I've had a good hunt around on amazon.co.uk but the closest similar
> things seem to cost more and don't look such good quality until getting
> MUCH more expensive.  I'm unlikely to break this one with idle faffing.
>
> I've not tried it with usb keyboard or mouse with a tablet or phone but
> both worked well with my Pi, and with the laptop so i don't see why it
> wouldn't work with the tablet too.
>
>
>
> So, i think there are a LOT of suitable Android apps for viewing
> documents.  Editing documents is trickier but maybe isn't what is required
> anyway?
>
> As with so many things on Android it is probably worth installing a couple
> of different things and see which works best for her or you and then
> uninstall the others in a few weeks or something.  One great thing is that
> there are lots of free ones that can be installed, tested and uninstalled
> without much struggle so you don't even have to stick with whichever one
> you first like.
>
>
> Good luck, happy hunting and regards from
> Tom :)
>
>
>
> On 13 May 2016 at 16:38, charles meyer <reachmepl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi Jorge,
>>
>> Thank you so much for sharing that.
>>
>> I used Open Office before I switched to Libre in Windows and found
>> them fairly close function-wise.
>>
>> I'll share there's an Android OO for her tablet with my friend.
>>
>> Thank you again for kindly sharing that.
>>
>> Best,
>>
>> Charles.
>>
>> Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Libre Office for Androids
>> Date: Thu, 05 May 2016 21:02:12 -0600
>> From: jorge <jrodrigue...@cpcecr.com>
>> To: charles meyer <reachmepl...@gmail.com>
>> CC: users@global.libreoffice.org <users@global.libreoffice.org>
>>
>> Hi Charles and all:
>>
>>         Until I know, LO for Android is in progress but at this moment as
>> a
>> viewer only and Alpha or begining Beta version (not stable) for LO as we
>> use in GNU / Linux and windows.
>>
>> There is an other version that could help you and your friend: This is
>> Aoo (Android OpenOffice). It is a version of OpenOffice for Android.
>> I've used it and it works good (In general as I probed: Writer, and
>> Calc). It is the nearest of LO at this moment that I know.
>>
>> As I read, Aoo is based on OpenOffice but is not part of Apache Fundation.
>>
>> I suggest to your friend that use keyboard and mouse with your tablet too.
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Jorge Rodríguez
>>
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