

Unfortunately, iWork's Pages has limitations when it comes to this. I teach English in Japan and so I need good support for Japanese texts.
#Iwork or office for mac software#
I really really want to use it as my sole productivity software but unfortunately iWork 09 has some limitations in the stuff I do for work. So for me the answer is both but only you can determine which course is best for you. Long ago I designed an Excel spreadsheet to track my investments and the idea of redesigning it (without macros, no less) appeals not at all. Most of the time I use iWork but a few times a year I need to collaborate with colleagues and Word is a must. Are you working on your PhD, produce glossy magazines, work in a Microsoft dominated office? iWork may not be such a good fit. Own a retail outlet, a café, do financial planning, sell real estate? iWork is a good fit in most cases. If you are a high school student, iWork fits the bill. iWork was designed by Apple to perform jobs that consumer users and SOHO users might want to do. Office was designed by Microsoft to perform nearly any job that nearly anyone might want to do. IWork is a great product but it isn't for everyone and that accounts for perhaps up to 50% of the posts and complaints you'll come across in this discussion group. But before you handing your savings over to Microsoft, be sure to check the free 30-day trial of iWork first! We all have different needs and tastes I went for iWork, others prefer Office.

#Iwork or office for mac pdf#
However, I have already tried sending drafts from Pages to my supervisors via, and it has worked just fine (they can then make comments straight from the browser or download my Pages document as pdf or Word document)! If you send Pages documents to your profs via I'm sure they'll be terribly impressed (especially if they're Windows users)! The only big advantage of using Microsoft Office is its file formats: that it uses today's de facto standard formats. Personally I write my drafts in Scrivener and exports the document into Pages for editing and layout.
#Iwork or office for mac pro#
Nisus Writer Pro uses the rtf format, which can be read by almost any word processor out there.

If you just need a good academic word processor, Mellel is another option, though I personally chose not to use it as it handles.

On the Mac side, however, you find so many great alternatives that it is really worth considering if Microsoft Office is the best for you. On the Windows side, it appears to me that no one ever questions if you really need Microsoft Office – it's almost considered a must-have. Bibliographic software, such as Bookends (far superior to Endnote) works well with Pages, and iWork just integrates really well with iLife and the native OS X apps. Styles are handled in a much simpler way and if you have to include graphics or images in your work, Pages gives you better control over the visual elements than Word does. As I'm a grad student in the humanities, a word processor is what I need the most, and Pages is a much more stable, responsive and straightforward application compared to Word. While I own both suites (terrible waste of money!), I now only use iWork (after '09 came out). iWork creates better looking documents/spreadsheets/presentations, and while there is, afterall, is slight learning curve, it's pretty easy to get used to. If you only casually need to use productivity apps, there is no doubt that iWork will do the job.
