Free Spreadsheet Software For Mac Os X

With its impressive tables and images, Numbers makes it possible to create beautiful spreadsheets, and comes included with most Apple devices. Use Apple Pencil on your iPad to add useful diagrams and colorful illustrations. And with real-time collaboration, your team can work together, whether they’re on Mac, iPad, iPhone, or a PC.

Numbers starts you off with a blank canvas instead of an endless grid, so you have the freedom to move everything around your canvas at will and organize your data any way you choose. And everyone editing the spreadsheet has access to the same powerful features on iOS, iPadOS, and macOS.

Mac

Spreadsheet Software For Mac Os X Quip is one of my favourite online collaboration tool that simplifies your life and helps your team get work done faster. One of the highlights I love on Quip is we can easily import documents from Evernote, Dropbox, Google Drive, Box, etc. Mame emulator for macos. Apple’s iWork apps are available for free in the App Store: Pages (word processor), Numbers (spreadsheet), and Keynote (presentations). Your Mac must have macOS Catalina 10.15 or later to run. May 26, 2020 If your Mac is using an earlier version of any Mac operating system, you should install the latest Apple software updates, which can include important security updates and updates for the apps installed by macOS, such as Safari, Books, Messages, Mail, Music, Calendar, and Photos. Mac Software Features.

It’s easy getting started.

Drop your data into one of the gorgeous, ready-to-use templates, then customize your data any way you like. Select fonts and style cell borders. And add, resize, and apply styles to tables.

Have Numbers do the math.

Numbers supports hundreds of functions. Its intuitive tools make it simple to perform complex calculations with great precision, figure out formulas, filter the data, and sum up what it all means. Use pivot tables and Smart Categories to quickly organize and summarize tables for an even deeper understanding of the story behind your data.

Explore patterns and trends with pivot tables, now in Numbers

Easily create a pivot table to view your data in different ways

Quickly summarize, group, and rearrange data while your source data remains unchanged

Stunning results. Instantly.

Bar and column charts with clearly labeled numbers and adjustable sizes, insightful radar and donut charts, interactive graphs, and a library of over 700 customizable shapes help you turn your numbers into beautiful data visualizations.

What’s new in Numbers.

New

Find trends with pivot tables.

This powerful and intuitive data analysis tool makes exploring patterns and trends easy and beautiful. You can even open Microsoft Excel files with pivot tables right in Numbers. And they aren’t just for Mac — pivot tables work great on your iPad and iPhone, too.

New

Highlight comparisons with radar charts.

Visually compare multiple variables across different series. Radar charts make it easy to see similarities and differences clearly.

Forms. Reimagined.

With redesigned forms, it’s never been easier to create and customize a form. Add a form to any table or use the Basic form template.

Turn handwriting into text. Magically.

With Scribble for iPadOS and Apple Pencil, your handwritten numbers and data will automatically be converted to typed text. Jot down a formula, and see it turn quickly into text.

Powerful RegEx features.

Match text flawlessly with RegEx functions. Easily manipulate text, match patterns in your data, and create formulas that are even more flexible.

XLOOKUP comes to Numbers.

With XLOOKUP, you can find values in columns and rows, or look for exact, approximate, or partial matches. This function makes Numbers even more compatible with Microsoft Excel.

You don’t work in one place on just one device. The same goes for Numbers. Work seamlessly across all your Apple devices. The spreadsheets you create using a Mac or iPad will look the same on an iPhone or web browser — and vice versa.

Free Spreadsheet Software For Mac Os X El Capitan

You can also work on spreadsheets stored on iCloud or Box using a PC.

Work together in the same spreadsheet, from across town or across the world. You can see your team’s edits as they make them — and they can watch as you make yours, too. Just click or tap the Collaborate button and invite people to join.

Sketch diagrams, mark up, or add color to help you visualize your data with Apple Pencil on your iPad.

Best Spreadsheet App For Mac

Teaming up with someone who uses Microsoft Excel? Numbers makes it a great working relationship. You can save Numbers spreadsheets as Excel files. Or import and edit Excel spreadsheets right in Numbers.

Resources

See everything that’s new in Numbers

Additional Resources

Numbers User Guides

Keynote

Design stunning, memorable
presentations.

Learn more about Keynote

Microsoft Excel For Mac

Free Spreadsheet Software For Mac Os X

Pages

Create documents that are,
in a word, beautiful.

Learn more about Pagestechnofile
Al Fasoldt's reviews and commentaries, continuously available online since 1983

T h e R o a d L e s s T r a v e l e d
'Office' software suites (free and cheap) for OS X computers


Sept. 21, 2005
By Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2005, Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2005, The Post-Standard
Mac OS X users who want to own an 'office suite' but don't want to buy Microsoft Office have three software suites to choose from.
Two of them are free and the other is inexpensive, but all three have technical drawbacks of one kind or another. Considering the discounted price of the real thing -- Microsoft Office 2004 for the Macintosh sells for as little as $130 for the student-teacher edition -- these three competitors are not likely to take much market share from Microsoft's flagship suite.
But if you don't want to spend a cent on Office-compatible software, you might want to try NeoOffice/J, an Open Source (and therefore free) set of programs based on the highly regarded suite called OpenOffice. (The official name of the software is 'OpenOffice.org,' a needlessly confusing name.)
NeoOffice/J can be downloaded from www.planamesa.com/neojava/en/donate.php. It's easy to set up and use. The word processor is especially well designed, but the other NeoOffice/J components -- particularly the Excel-compatible spreadsheet application and the PowerPoint clone -- are a little weak.
NeoOffice/J is a Java application. If you've never run a Java app, try this one out. Java is a cross-platform programming language that works on just about any operating system. It's been quite slow in gaining ground against normal programming methods. (Don't confuse Java with JavaScript; the latter is used mainly by Web browsers to handle certain tasks.)
If (and only if) you've used the X11 windowing interface in Unix or Linux, you could choose the original OpenOffice software suite, written for X11. Apple has an X11 system of its own and there are others that work fine on modern Macs, too. Get the original suite from www.openoffice.org.
Another Java application is ThinkFree Office, a suite with a friendly look and feel. As with NeoOffice/J, the word processor is the most powerful part of ThinkFree Office and the spreadsheet and presentation software are not up to Microsoft's level. You can get it from www.shop.avanquest.com/usa/list.php?subcat=180. It costs $50.
My recommendation is to skip these programs and pay for the real thing. Microsoft has a special version of Office 2004 for anyone who is a student or a teacher -- or who has a student or a teacher in the family. (The policy sounds too liberal to be true, but it's quite true.)
You can find the student-teacher edition at retail stores and on the Web. A check on Amazon.com two weeks ago showed a price of $97.99 after rebates. Unlike the standard version of Office 2004, which allows only a single installation, the student-teacher version comes with three licenses; it can be installed on three computers at the same time.
Finally, you should not assume that you need Microsoft Office if all you really need is a good word processor with a competent spell checker and thesaurus. TextEdit, the unassuming word processor that comes with OS X, uses the excellent spell checker built into your Mac's operating system. If you have Mac OS X 10.4 (called Tiger), you also have a handy thesaurus. Press Cmd-Ctrl-D with your cursor on any word for the dictionary, then click the 'More' button for the thesaurus.