File formats and metadata
File formats and metadata
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Microsoft Office prior to Office 2007 used proprietary file formats based on the OLE Compound File Binary Format.[38] This forced users who share data to adopt the same software platform.[39] In 2008, Microsoft made the entire documentation for the binary Office formats freely available for download and granted any possible patents rights for use or implementations of those binary format for free under the Open Specification Promise.[40][41] Previously, Microsoft had supplied such documentation freely but only on request.[42]
Starting with Office 2007, the default file format has been a version of Office Open XML, though different than the one standardized and published by Ecma International and by ISO/IEC. Microsoft has granted patent rights to the formats technology under the Open Specification Promise[43] and has made available free downloadable converters for previous versions of Microsoft Office including Office 2003, Office XP, Office 2000[44] and Office 2004 for Mac OS X. Third-party implementations of Office Open XML exist on the Windows platform (LibreOffice, all platforms), macOS platform (iWork '08, NeoOffice, LibreOffice) and Linux (LibreOffice and OpenOffice.org 3.0). In addition, Office 2010, Service Pack 2 for Office 2007, and Office 2016 for Mac supports the OpenDocument Format (ODF) for opening and saving documents – only the old ODF 1.0 (2006 ISO/IEC standard) is supported, not the 1.2 version (2015 ISO/IEC standard).
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https://studio.youtube.com/video/R794kE--h5A/edit/basic
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7a_ALmufqPU
https://studio.youtube.com/video/_ctcF86GV-k/edit/basic
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