Re: Word Perfect in Linux?

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I realize you are being honest.
for me personally it is rooted int he variety of writing I do professionally. And yes you can create rtf documents in wordperfect, and save to some editions of Microsoft word, and lotus, and many other formats. It is part of why ms word used to provide a wordperfect tinplate, so people could pretend they were using a real word processor. Equally because ms word does not support its own formats, I am often asked by clients in the nonprofit sector, media markets for whom I write and people in general if I can provide a document in something outside of Microsoft. The funny thing? I only started doing ASCII files more this year, in part because of my bookshare books...and there are three different editions of ASCII too.
Including one from the American National standards Institute.
Plain text gets creative for me save for when I am writing emails, but I can do this offline in wp, spell check and paste the contents into an email as a backup for what I do here at shellworld. Equally I use the program to manage directories, move files, etc. sometimes with greater ease then from the c prompt. Many companies provide .rtf files as a substitute for pdf and word, so I can create what is needful and most times read what is sent. Then there is the search /replace, the flawless table formats, the thesaurus, the writing tools, the fax program, lol! Speaking only for myself, WordPerfect has been the corner stone of my professional and personal communications since I first sat down at a computer in 1988.
But this is me.
Kare

On Fri, 28 Mar 2014, Jackie McBride wrote:

So, I'm curious, guys & gals? Why do yall even need a word processor?
Just askin'. Stuff like markdown, ascii doc, textile, re-text, etc.
etc. etc. is easy, can do the same things, & is nothin' more than
plain text. You certainly can't load word documents or whatever into
wp for dos, so I mean I'm just interested--what is in fact the alure
of a word processor? I'm really not tryin' to be snotty or anything
here. I'm just very very curious.

On 3/28/14, Karen Lewellen <klewellen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Paul,
Now you will get showered with appreciation twice.  For what you provided
earlier, going back to that one, and what you provide here.
Question? is there anywhere on the planet where wordperfect 6.3 for dos
can be found?
I have wp 5.1, rarely used, 6.0 and  6.2 for dos on my main computer.  I
use Wordperfect for dos many many times a day in fact.  Still I have never
heard of 6.3?
Thanks for all you provided professionally, and for being here on
this list.
Kare

On Fri, 28 Mar 2014, Paul Merrell wrote:

On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 2:32 PM, Hart Larry <chime@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Thanks so much Paul-and-All for those articles-and-file locations. Given
a
chance to finally have an access to reveal codes, as well as an ability
to
nuke hard returns as a search-and-replace, will certainly be nice. From
a
beginning DOS user in 1994 I found WP6 powerful but eventually easy2use.
Thanks once again

You're welcome. For my money, WordPerfect 6.3 for DOS was the pinnacle
of word processors. None of the Windows versions can compete. If it
only had long filename support, I'd probably be running it still.

Best regards,

Paul

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--
Jackie McBride
Author of the Upcoming Book
"Beyond Baffled: the Technophobe's Guide to Creating a Website"
www.brighter-vision.com Where Visionaries & Technology Unite
Jaws Scripting training
www.screenreaderscripting.com

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