Click on File/Save or hit the floppy disc icon
You can save your Microsoft works document in "saved as" to be a Microsoft word document. All you do is have to go to "File" the go to "Save As" then go to "Save as type" and then click the down arrow next to the "Save as type" and click "word 97-2003 Document (*.doc)" or click "word 2007 Document (*.docx). This should work. I would save it as the word 97-2003 Document (*doc). Hope this helps, Waveracer200
Yes, for the most part the two are compatible, however Access 2007 creates a new type of database format (ACCDB) that Access 2003 cannot read (it uses MDB). There are some new features in Access 2007 that 2003 does not have (obviously), but if you're using a database that's formatting for 2000 or 2003, then Access 2007 can work with it seamlessly. My advice is that if you have users on multiple versions of Access, then use the database file format with the OLDEST version common to everyone. Richard Rost AccessLearningZone.com
Windows and MAC
No. You would need a converter and that may not even work for 2000, although it will for 2003. The thing to do is do a Save As in Word 2007, and save the file in an earlier version. Then you can open it. If it is not your file get the person who you got it from to do that.
Microsoft Office 2003 was released on October 21, 2003 and was the first version to officially work on Windows 7. With programs such as Microsoft Office people became more enabled to work from home.
sure it does
It is an website where you can save things and edit them. It is useful than a USB because if you have a copy of a document on the computer, and one copy on the USB, it will only save for each one. And you can also share photo and work.
I work from home and have started using Microsoft Skydrive to network with others. It is free and you can upload and save documents securely. You can also select who has access to files and docuements.
It works exactly as it is meant to. You don't understand how table relationships work.
Click File then Save. The keyboard shortcut is Ctrl S. Also you can click the picture of a disk in the toolbar.
If Works will not convert your Word document, you may have to re-save your document at school. If you click on "Save As", go down the list of possible formats. There should be one or two choices to save in a Works format.
It's compatible with Windows XP SP3 (32 bits) and operating systems of 64 bits like Windows XP Pro x64 or Windows Server 2003/2003 R2 are not supported.