Comment ouvrir un fichier odg sur mac

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brinet Posted messages 4 Status Membre -  
 Anonymous user -
Hello,

I want to print a file created on PC on my printer connected to a Mac

I can't open the folder

Thank you in advance for guiding me

Configuration: Mac OS X (10.9.4) / Safari 7.0.6

7 réponses

Aliboron Martin Posted messages 3655 Registration date   Status Contributeur Last intervention   989
 
A priori, a file with the .odg extension opens with LibreOffice (or other variants of OpenOffice). Normally, it corresponds to a Draw file, the graphic module of this suite.

--
Hello to you!
Bernard
2
Anonymous user
 
Hello,

OpenOffice is directly available in French from its source, here:
http://www.openoffice.org/fr/Telecharger/

Moreover, OpenOffice has the advantage of not requiring Java to be installed, unlike Libre Office, considering that Java can be a source of potential issues, it’s better to opt for OpenOffice.

Best regards

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To get an appropriate response, always indicate your exact system configuration.
Have a nice day :-) - Francis
1
Aliboron Martin Posted messages 3655 Registration date   Status Contributeur Last intervention   989
 
? Are you sure? When I read this passage, it doesn't seem very different from what's being done for LibreOffice, yet...
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Anonymous user
 
Every time I wanted to install LibreOffice, the system asked me to install Java.
During the last attempt, I bypassed this installation to see what would happen, but then the suite didn't work properly in some modules (I can't remember which ones), so I uninstalled it. It's a shame because aside from that, I really liked LibreOffice that I had tested on an old version of Mac OS. However, since it's been a while since I've had Java installed on my Mac, and I don't want to reinstall it without a real need, I've eliminated the idea of using LibreOffice. On the other hand, the installation of OpenOffice goes ahead without this request, and it works correctly.
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Anonymous user
 
Hello,

Contrary to *_Francis_*'s opinion, I would rather opt for installing LibreOffice.

For a few years, I used OpenOffice and I switched to LibreOffice.

LibreOffice is installed on my Mac OS X Mavericks and I will never install OpenOffice again.

Why? Because of what Oracle did to the OpenOffice developers.

A bit of history:
https://framablog.org/2012/05/27/libreoffice-openoffice-histoire/

If you want to know more about what Sun and Oracle did to the OpenOffice developers, just type it into your search engine and you'll find a multitude of articles on the subject. For me, OpenOffice is dead. Long live LibreOffice.

--
"To obtain any change in our lives, we must first express gratitude for what we already have."
1
Anonymous user
 
Hello,

I do not contradict what is said on this page, but I am only interested in the final result for an average user. For me, as long as possible, Java will be banned from my Mac.

Moreover, some features of OpenOffice are not found in LibreOffice. (for example, retrieving the audio track from a PowerPoint presentation).
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Anonymous user
 
*_Francis_* - September 16, 2014 at 2:58 PM

Additionally, some features of OpenOffice are not available in LibreOffice. (for example, retrieving the audio track from a PowerPoint presentation).

I agree with you *_Francis_*, I know that, but still, I will never install OpenOffice again. I do not approve of what Sun and Oracle have done to the developers.

As for Java, all you need to do is download it from the official site java.com, just like we do for Flash Player on "adobe.com," and just like I always do myself.

It is also true that we cannot retrieve the audio track from a PowerPoint presentation with LibreOffice, but I admit that sometimes I receive .pps files that are supposed to have sound, but I don't hear any sound at all. These .pps files were created with Microsoft PowerPoint. To be honest, I couldn't care less about the sound, and I focus more on the content of the message in the .pps.

I am convinced that in the future, the developers of LibreOffice will ensure that we can hear the sound of a .pps created with either PowerPoint or LibreOffice.

The development of LibreOffice is constantly evolving, and if the majority of users of the latter request it, I remain convinced that the developers will take these requests into consideration. Just give them some time.

That's my opinion, and I will never change my mind, whether you like it or not.
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brinet Posted messages 4 Status Membre
 
Hello and thank you, but how do I open the draw file with Mac?
0
Aliboron Martin Posted messages 3655 Registration date   Status Contributeur Last intervention   989
 
Well, you download LibreOffice, you install it, and you open your file (or rather, let's say you try to open your file, you never know)...
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brinet Posted messages 4 Status Membre
 
Of course, I still can't imagine that PC is compatible with Mac!!! Okay, it works with the OpenOffice software, but it's in English. I can manage, but do you have a tip to convert it to French???
Thanks again for your help

BB
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Aliboron Martin Posted messages 3655 Registration date   Status Contributeur Last intervention   989
 
On the download page, you have a second green button "Translated user interface". That should suit you. ;-)

However, I don't see what your Mac-PC compatibility story is doing here...
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brinet Posted messages 4 Status Membre
 
Listen, not everyone masters computers like YOU!!!

For those who understand, greetings

BB
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Aliboron Martin Posted messages 3655 Registration date   Status Contributeur Last intervention   989
 
I didn't understand anything there...

If it was a form of thanks, I'm very pleased, but it's not very clear. ???
0
Anonymous user
 
Hello,

Regarding the sound, I wasn't talking about hearing it. I have MS Office 2011 which allows me to play .pps files with audio. I was talking about extracting (detaching) the audio track as an individual audio file.

As for Java, of course, it's always the Java file from the correct source that needs to be used. Besides, when the system needs it, it automatically takes the version suited for Mac OS, which is different from the others and specific to Mac OS. I never had to search the internet to get the right version of Java when I used it in the distant past.
That's not the problem. The problem is Java itself, which is inherently a gateway for nuisances.
See this article:
https://www.securitemac.com/java-mac.html

See you later

--
To get an appropriate response, always indicate your exact system configuration.
Have a good day :-) - Francis
0