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LibreOffice 7.3 released

Version 7.3 of the LibreOffice "Community" edition is out. "In addition to the majority of code commits being focused on interoperability with Microsoft's proprietary file formats, there is a wealth of new features targeted at users migrating from Office, to simplify the transition".


From:  "media-AT-documentfoundation.org" <media-AT-documentfoundation.org>
To:  pr-AT-lwn.net
Subject:  [Press Release] LibreOffice 7.3 Community is better than ever at interoperability
Date:  Wed, 02 Feb 2022 13:18:00 +0100
Message-ID:  <b9eff58910719294512740951f7cc014@phplist.com>

In addition to the majority of code commits being focused on
interoperability with Microsoft's proprietary file formats, there is a
wealth of new features targeted at users migrating from Office, to simplify
the transition

Berlin, February 2, 2022 - LibreOffice 7.3 Community, the new major release
of the volunteer-supported free office suite for desktop productivity, is
available from
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...
Based on the
LibreOffice Technology platform for personal productivity on desktop,
mobile and cloud, it provides a large number of improvements targeted at
users migrating from Microsoft Office to LibreOffice, or exchanging
documents between the two office suites.

There are three different kinds of interoperability improvements:

- Development of new features, such as the new handling of change tracking
in tables and when text is moved, which have a positive impact on
interoperability with Microsoft Office documents.
- Performance improvements when opening large DOCX and XLSX/XLSM files,
improved rendering speed of some complex documents, and new rendering speed
improvements when using the Skia back-end introduced with LibreOffice 7.1.
- Improvements to import/export filters: DOC (greatly improved
list/numbering import); DOCX (greatly improved list/numbering import;
hyperlinks attached to shapes are now imported/exported; fix permission for
editing; track change of paragraph style); XLSX (decreased row height for
Office XLSX files; cell indent doesn't increase on each save; fix
permission for editing; better support of XLSX charts); and PPTX (fixed
interactions and hyperlinks on images; fix the incorrect import/export of
PPTX slide footers; fix hyperlinks on images and shapes; transparent shadow
for tables).

In addition, LibreOffice's Help has also been improved to support all
users, with a particular attention for those switching from Microsoft
Office: search results - which are now using FlexSearch instead of
Fuzzysort for indexing - are focused on the user's current module, while
Help pages for Calc Functions have been reviewed for accuracy and
completeness and linked to Calc Function wiki pages, while Help pages for
the ScriptForge scripting library have been updated.

ScriptForge libraries, which make it easier to develop macros, have also
been extended with various features: the addition of a new Chart service,
to define charts stored in Calc sheets; a new PopupMenu service, to
describe the menu to be displayed after a mouse event; an extensive option
for Printer Management, with a list of fonts and printers; and a feature to
export documents to PDF with full management of PDF options. The whole set
of services is available with identical syntax and behavior for Python and
Basic.

LibreOffice offers the highest level of compatibility in the office suite
market segment, starting with native support for the OpenDocument Format
(ODF) - beating proprietary formats in the areas of security and robustness
- to superior support for DOCX, XLSX and PPTX files. In addition,
LibreOffice provides filters for a large number of legacy document formats,
to return ownership and control to users.

Microsoft files are still based on the proprietary format deprecated by ISO
in 2008, and not on the ISO approved standard, so they hide a large amount
of artificial complexity. This causes handling issues with LibreOffice,
which defaults to a true open standard format (the OpenDocument Format).

LibreOffice 7.3 is available natively for Apple Silicon, a series of
processors designed by Apple and based on the ARM architecture. The option
has been added to the default ones available on the download page.

A video summarizing the top new features in LibreOffice 7.3 Community is
available on YouTube:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...
and
PeerTube:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...
A
description of all new features is available in the Release Notes [1]

Contributors to LibreOffice 7.3 Community

LibreOffice 7.3 Community's new features have been developed by 147
contributors: 69% of code commits are from the 49 developers employed by
three companies sitting in TDF's Advisory Board - Collabora, Red Hat and
allotropia - or other organizations (including The Document Foundation),
and 31% are from 98 individual volunteers.

In addition, 641 volunteers have provided localizations in 155 languages.
LibreOffice 7.3 Community is released in 120 different language versions,
more than any other free or proprietary software, and as such can be used
in the native language (L1) by over 5.4 billion people worldwide. In
addition, over 2.3 billion people speak one of those 120 languages as their
second language (L2).

LibreOffice for Enterprises

For enterprise-class deployments, TDF strongly recommends the LibreOffice
Enterprise family of applications from ecosystem partners - for desktop,
mobile and cloud - with a large number of dedicated value-added features.
These include long-term support options, professional assistance,
personalized developments and other benefits such as SLA (Service Level
Agreements):
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...

Despite this recommendation, an increasing number of enterprises are using
the version supported by volunteers, instead of the version optimized for
their needs and supported by the different ecosystem companies. Over time,
this represents a problem for the sustainability of the LibreOffice
project, because it slows down the evolution of the project. In fact, every
line of code developed by ecosystem companies for their enterprise
customers is shared with the community on the master code repository, and
improves the LibreOffice Technology platform.

Products based on LibreOffice Technology are available for major desktop
operating systems (Windows, macOS, Linux and Chrome OS), for mobile
platforms (Android and iOS), and for the cloud. Slowing down the
development of the platform is hurting users at every level, and the
LibreOffice project may fall short of its expectations and possibilities.

Migrations to LibreOffice

The Document Foundation has developed a Migration Protocol to support
enterprises moving from proprietary office suites to LibreOffice, which is
based on the deployment of an LTS version from the LibreOffice Enterprise
family, plus migration consultancy and training sourced from certified
professionals who offer value-added solutions in line with proprietary
offerings. Reference:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...

In fact, LibreOffice - thanks to its mature codebase, rich feature set,
strong support for open standards, excellent compatibility and LTS options
from certified partners - is the ideal solution for businesses that want to
regain control of their data and free themselves from vendor lock-in.

Availability of LibreOffice 7.3 Community

LibreOffice 7.3 Community is immediately available from the following link:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...
Minimum requirements for proprietary
operating systems are Microsoft Windows 7 SP1 and Apple macOS 10.12.

LibreOffice Technology-based products for Android and iOS are listed here:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...
while for App Stores
and ChromeOS are listed here:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...

For users whose main objective is personal productivity, and therefore
prefer a release that has undergone more testing and bug fixing over the
new features, The Document Foundation maintains the LibreOffice 7.2 family,
which includes some months of back-ported fixes. The current version is
LibreOffice 7.2.5

The Document Foundation does not provide technical support for users,
although they can get it from volunteers on user mailing lists and the Ask
LibreOffice website:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...


LibreOffice users, free software advocates and community members can
support The Document Foundation with a donation at
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...


LibreOffice 7.3 is built with document conversion libraries from the
Document Liberation Project:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...


[1] Release Notes:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...


Press Kit

Download link:
http://documentfoundation.hosted.phplist.com/lists/lt.php...

--

This message / press release was sent to pr@lwn.net by
media@documentfoundation.org

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