I dont no I dont no
The Microsoft Office has open text formatting, which includes Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. In addition, the Adobe software package also has open text formatting, which include Adobe Reader and Adobe Acrobat.
Open Office is capable of saving files in rich text format (.rtf). When you save a file in open office, the default is .doc but you can change it to another format if you choose to. I've been using Open Office for a number of years, and find it an excellent suite of programs to use. See the related link for Open Office suite (free to download, and it's open source software).
To find all rectangles with an area of 51, we can use the formula ( \text{Area} = \text{length} \times \text{width} ). The pairs of factors of 51 are (1, 51) and (3, 17), which means the rectangles can have dimensions of either 1 by 51, 51 by 1, 3 by 17, or 17 by 3. These dimensions represent all possible rectangles with the specified area.
No, you can't.
No, you can't.
when you cut text, the text is removed from the document and placed on the office clipboard.
If you need to setup the Office of Office Assistant you would need to follow the rules. 1. Open the Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 or 2007 2. Select the option, Out of Office Assistant from Tool menu. 3. Select the radio option, "I am Currently Out of Office' and Enter your required details in Text area. 4. If you want you can set the Rules for Incoming message by entering the text in text area. 5. Press the OK button.
Yes. In word You can do text wrapping And then do behind text and it will go behind the text
About anything Microsoft Word can do (I am assuming you are more familiar with that): especially write text documents, create spreadsheets, and presentations.
In text, two rectangles typically represent an emoji or symbol that may not be supported by the device or platform being used. This can occur when the font or operating system does not recognize the specific character, resulting in a placeholder display. It can also indicate an error in rendering certain graphics or text elements.
Open Office Writer will open and display most HTML documents fine, and they can then be saved as rtf's. Word can also do it, but in my experience less accurately.
I don't know why it does that but the only way i found that copied any text from a web document to Open Office is by going to Edit>Paste Special>Formatted Text[RTF] Hope this helps I don't know either o_o, but when this happens I just copy the text in the table then undo the paste and repaste if OOo is giving me issues about getting rid of the table.