Not all documents. Some documents you can right-click and 'open with' another program such as Notepad.
The revised statutes of Ontario apply only to the citizens of Ontario, whereas the revised statutes of Canada apply to all citizens of Canada, Ontario included.
Acrobat Reader is the only option that I can knw of ! ! !
Phi does only cover written documents. There can be a few written documents.
Google Documents is what I use, free and reliable, the only one I can think of without need to buy or download a program, just need a Google account
When the user of a computer is trying to open a drive and the computer responds with an "Open With" request it is asking what Software program created the file. Some files can only be opened using the original program that created them. A person can choose which program to use when opening the file or let the computer look for the program.
The Google word processor is one component of the Google Documents program. This program can be found on the Google website. The program gets average reviews and is recommended for people who only use word processing once in a while.
You would only get high marks if you revised and worked as hard as you can
There are a number of reasons that a document is locked. One is that the person who created it wants the document to be 'read only'. Another reason is that the program used to create the document is slightly different from the one you use and that is why it is 'read only'. If I want to send a document to another person and I want that person to make changes then I will send the document in Microsoft Word 95 format. This Mac person knows that most Windows people do still read, write, and save documents in that format simply because it works for them
Proprietary file types are files that do not have an open specification, and thus can only be created and edited by a certain program.
No, but I wish there was. Sign me up if there's a mailing list!
They rely on documents and evidence.
Yep. You open it up and start writing. If you mean handwritten... you'll have to scan your document in at some point, and depending on the software you use to do it, yes, you can usually pull the document into Word. If you only scan it as a picture, then you won't be able to edit it, but if you have a good test-recognition program, then you can edit it in Word probably.