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:Linux.com: Viewing Word Files at the Command Line
Linux.com: Viewing Word Files at the Command Line
Mar 2, 2006, 05 :30 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (8058 reads)

(Other stories by Scott Nesbitt)

"As a Linux user, there are times when you have to play nicely with users of Windows or Mac OS--such as when they send you Microsoft Word files. When you receive a Word file, you can either follow Richard Stallman's advice and refuse it, or bite the bullet and work with it. Modern Linux word processors--such as OpenOffice.org Writer, AbiWord, KWord, and TextMaker--can deal with most Word files. But if you don't want to fire up a word processor in order to read or print the document, you can turn to the command line. A handful of small but powerful Linux command line utilities make viewing, printing, and even converting Word files to another format a breeze.

"Antiword is a nifty application that can convert Word documents to plain text, PostScript, and PDF. According to the developer, conversion to DocBook XML is still experimental and doesn't always work well..."

Complete Story

Related Story:
Linux.com: CLI Magic: Antiword(Mar 08, 2005)



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