T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1274.1 | Word perfect is IT! ($180 @ Abel?) | 16BITS::KRUGER | | Fri Mar 25 1988 16:56 | 7 |
| Scribble is the pits.
Word perfect is tremendous, although I hate the keyboard bindings
and you can't change them. See the word perfect note earlier, get
it for $99 if you're a student (even part time).
dov
|
1274.2 | ProWrite | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Sat Mar 26 1988 00:46 | 28 |
| I'm currently waiting for ProWrite v2.0 to arrive in the mail.
I bought ProWrite when it first came out some time ago, but the
first release was too buggy and weak for me to use. I'm currently
using TextCraft Plus, but although it is very easy to learn and
use, it doesn't support fonts or graphics. No spell checker, either.
All I really want(ed) in a word processor was something on a par
with MacWrite, with support for Amiga color graphics. ProWrite
2.0 promises to be all this, and more. According to the upgrade
flyer, it will support:
* 95K word spell checker
* Mail merge
* all graphics, including HAM
* re-sizable graphics
* flow text around graphics
* sideways printing
* user-defined defaults
Also, v2.0 will include the new printer.device (faster printer drivers,
with intelligent dithering and smoothing.
I wouldn't want to write War and Peace with ProWrite. For serious
work, WordPerfect is the only real choice for now. ProWrite seems
good for small reports with graphics.
Ed.
|
1274.3 | Worth the upgrade | WINNER::JBERNARD | John Bernard YWO/292-2591 | Sat Mar 26 1988 23:56 | 10 |
| ProWrite v2 (I got my update a couple of weeks ago) comes on 2 disks,
has a large and small (20k) dictionary, mail merge, bunches of
additionalfeatures, and hasn't crashed once yet. I don't use it
(ProWrite) often, but it is handy for color emphasis or including
graphics in your docs. Plus, for $20, its worth the upgrade.
It also comes with a brand new manual instead of addendums... a
nice touch...
John
|
1274.4 | I vote for WordPerfect | BOOVX2::SCOTT_MORRIS | | Mon Mar 28 1988 10:58 | 8 |
| My vote is for word Perfect.
It comes with a spelling checker which I need. I haven't tried it's
thesorous but it's nice to know it's there. I seems to have more
options then I will ever use but it's comforting to know that I'm
not likely to outgrow it.
I used TextCraft before that. What a Dog.
|
1274.5 | WP | MQFSV2::DESROSIERS | Tout est possible | Mon Mar 28 1988 16:31 | 8 |
| Word Perfect can be configured to accept (DEC)multinational character
sets and is thus compatible with my LA100, furthermore files can
be sent to the office VAX to be printed on LN03's. I am still in
the process of learning all the bells and whistles but it fills
the bill quite nicely.
Jean
|
1274.6 | ProWrite and TeX | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Mar 28 1988 17:35 | 23 |
| I also like ProWrite V2. I bought it for $75 plus my VisiWrite
disk. I don't use it for mail-merge, I use TeX for that and for
writing anything like a book. However, it is fine for short reports.
I recently created a chart using MultiPlan, cropped it in DeluxPaint,
and included it in a report using ProWrite.
The advantages I see over VisiWrite are: 1) spelling checker,
2) text can be positioned beside graphics, 3) graphics can be moved
around, 4) support of the full character set from the keyboard.
That last point needs explanation. Although VisiWrite allows any
of the Amiga characters in a document, they don't support the dead
keys, which create accents for letters. As a result, to get some
characters I had to do cut-and-paste from a file created with Amiga
Basic, which contained all the character codes. With ProWrite I
can enter all the codes from the keyboard.
Although they claim that text can "flow around" graphics, I haven't
found a way to do this. To me, "flow around" means you can specify
the starting and ending position of each line of a paragraph. As
best I can tell, they don't permit that--If you want to change margins
you have to start a new paragraph.
John Sauter
|
1274.7 | what's good for students? | CIMNET::KYZIVAT | Paul Kyzivat | Wed Mar 30 1988 19:04 | 27 |
| Ah! Both WordPerfect and ProWrite experts. Can I pick your minds?
Most of my writing is done at work, so word processing on the amiga is
for the kids school work and the occasional business letter. We have
been suffering with Scribble! while waiting for an acceptable
alternative. My complaints with Scribble are its human engineering, and
its feeble capabilities to sub/super-script, footnote, etc. and in
general format a document in conformance with school requirements.
I have been considering WorkPerfect, but when I dropped in for a demo
at Memory Location there was no one who knew how to use it. In response
to a bingo card from AmigaWorld they were so kind as to send me a
reprint of the AmigaWorld review. Big help! I could go out and buy
one of the books on WP, but they will not tell how it has been
amiga-ized.
I presume WordPerfect has all the necessary capabilities, but I am
concerned that it might be too complex and poorly human engineered for
casual use by kids, wife, etc. I also have the impression that it
might not be able to drive my LA50. Are these valid concerns?
I have heard very little about ProWrite. What is it lacking?
Is it capable of handling a term paper with footnotes, endnotes,
etc., and specifying the formatting of them? The graphics and color
capabilities would be desirable if it has enough other capabilities.
Paul
|
1274.8 | endnotes OK; footnotes = TeX | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Mar 31 1988 09:08 | 17 |
| re: .7, ProWrite
I haven't tried writing a term paper with ProWrite, but my wife
has written papers using VisiWrite, and that produce could handle
endnotes OK. I assume ProWrite would have no more trouble with
endnotes than VisiWrite, since it isn't hard to do.
Footnotes, however, is a much harder problem. I don't recall anything
in the ProWrite manual about footnotes, though it has page headers
and footers. When you write something with footnotes you are starting
to get away from the WYSIWYG environment, since you want to enter
the text of the footnote at the reference point, but have it printed
at the bottom of the current page.
If I were writing a paper with footnotes, I'd use TeX. It has a
very flexible footnote feature.
John Sauter
|
1274.9 | WordPerfect. Definitely. | SWSVAX::IBMFUND01 | | Thu Mar 31 1988 14:24 | 10 |
| My vote is for WordPerfect. It's a very professional product, and
will serve you well. My wife is convinced she's jinxed re: computers
(must be her magnetic personality), but she uses it for recipes,
letters, etc. without fuss.
The support is amazing. I sent in a note asking about upgrades,
and they sent me four new, upgraded disks including the dictionary,
thesauras, 250 printer drivers, and four bug fixes.
Highly recommended.
|
1274.10 | Is WordPerfect WYSIWYG? | CIMNET::KYZIVAT | Paul Kyzivat | Thu Mar 31 1988 18:41 | 6 |
| Is WordPerfect WYSIWYG? Scribble pretends to be, but really isn't. It
ends up exhibiting the worst features of both. I would like something
which really is, but failing that would rather go to an SGML type of
thing than a kludge like Scribble.
Paul
|
1274.11 | | CSC32::J_PARSONS | Things are better off than I had feared | Thu Mar 31 1988 20:00 | 5 |
| WordPerfect isn't WYSIWYG, and doesn't pretend to be. It's probably
not the easiest piece of software to learn to use either, and it
doesn't do graphics. However I don't know of a single feature I've
ever seen implemented in any other word processor (other than graphics)
that WordPerfect can't do. It's very powerful.
|
1274.12 | WYSIWYG | SWSVAX::IBMFUND01 | | Fri Apr 01 1988 08:48 | 6 |
| Additionally, WordPerfect has an excellent documentation package
including a dozen or so lessons on disk with full support in the
manual.
WYSIWYG (or a preview feature) is in WordPerfect 4.2. I'm looking
forward to it, especially since the upgrade path will be painless.
|
1274.13 | For the kids' future | LEDS::MOORE | Tom Moore NKS1-4/E4 291-7195 | Sat Apr 02 1988 23:48 | 15 |
| I picked Word Perfect because of the kids. If they are going to learn one it
should have lots of features and be available on any machine they might end up
using. I looked at it as an investment in my kids' education. My 6th grader
can use a major part of the features and my third grader writes birthday lists
of games which he prints on the printer. That's why I bought it and the wife
and kids think it's great.
I don't like its user interface. I think they could make much better use of the
pulldown menues and mouse functions. It lacks the intutitive interface you
seem to find on much of the AMIGA software. I expect it will get better and I
will learn easier ways to do some of the stupid multi-step operations. For all
of these reasons I think it is worth it. It gets used more than any other
piece of software I have.
-Tom-
|
1274.14 | | FORTY2::MCCARTNEY | Dead from the neck up. | Thu Apr 28 1988 09:30 | 14 |
|
Hi,
I'm considering buying a WP package and have just about made my mind up
to buy ProWrite V2.0 (WordPerfect is just too expensive for me) but
there was just one point I wanted clearing up. An earlier not mentioned
the fact the the original ProWrite only worked in interlace mode. Now
I'm still using a TV so if this is the case then ProWrite is a no-no.
Can someone tell me if the new ProWrite can use a non-interlaced
screen.
Thanks in advance,
Colin.
|
1274.15 | Sure! | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Thu Apr 28 1988 09:54 | 5 |
| Yup. The disk actually contains two versions, one called ProWriteMR
for medium resolution. It has all of the features of the hi-res
version, and even conserves a bit of chip ram to boot.
Ed.
|
1274.16 | Menu-itis | HYSTER::DEARBORN | Trouvez Mieux | Thu Apr 28 1988 15:51 | 25 |
| Well, I cast a vote AGAINST WordPerfect.
Too complicated. Getting something to print out correctly is far
to complex, time consuming and problematic. There are menus for
everything...far too many menus. One screen with all the printer
settings would have been much, much better.
Yeah, it's loaded with features. So what? The last time I needed
to do a footnote was in college, a long time ago. For the type
of work I do for DEC, WordPerfect is far too overengineered for
me.
If Kind Words supported other Amiga fonts, it would get my vote.
Everyone is down on TextCraft. I find it easy to use, even if it
is a slow package. Kind Words was written by the same people (to
be the newer version of TextCraft.)
If you are a heavy word processor, are used to the IBM world, need
tons of features...then WordPerfect is the way to go.
If you spend most your time composing letters, notes, memos and
simple documents, save your money.
Randy
|
1274.17 | Another PROGRAM! from MSS | TEACH::ART | Art Baker, DC Training Center (EKO) | Thu Apr 28 1988 23:18 | 5 |
|
Has anyone seen EXCELLENCE! from MicroSystem Software ?
Is it real, or just some more vaporous fumes ? In the
May issue of AmigaWhirl, there was an ad that looked
pretty impressive (but then, that's why it was an ad...)
|
1274.18 | | WJG::GUINEAU | | Fri Apr 29 1988 08:23 | 9 |
|
How about that PD Word Processor on a recent FF disk?
For someone like me who doesn't even know what a word processor is :-)
it might be more usefull than NOTEPAD or DPAINT (Although DPAINT makes some
real neat flyers and such!)
John
|
1274.19 | Don't do it. | SOFTY::HEFFELFINGER | Give my body to science fiction. | Sun May 01 1988 00:55 | 9 |
| John,
If you're referring to WW (WordWright), I'd suggest that you stay
away from it. It's got a clumsy feel to it, and it tends to flake
out in certain circumstances. It gave me nothing but headaches.
I went back to using DME, and I just do without italics, underlines,
etc.
Gary
|