If the document from the Mac has been saved in a format recognised by Word then it can be opened by Word. There are variations in different versions of Word which means that sometimes even Word cannot open a Word document.
Yes. Word documents created on a Mac can be opened in Windows, and vice-versa.
Yes, if you use Microsoft Word, OpenOffice or NeoOffice particulary the most recent version
of course mac can open pc files .... but it should of a different format that is specially designed for mac.
You can get Microsoft Excel for a Mac. On a PC version, you can do a Save As from the File menu and pick one of the Macintosh formats. This file can then be copied or even e-mailed to the Mac and be opened and used.
As frequently as Windows does on a PC.
Yes.
yes it will, i think its only mac onto windows youll need to change
How many files are displayed in the recent documents list in word?
TextEdit on a Mac can handle many Word documents. Word itself is only available to download as part of the Office suite or it can be purchased from any Mac software supplier.
Microsoft have said that the operating system is the biggest difference between Word for Mac and Word for Windows. I use OpenOffice which is able to read, write and save Word Docs on this iMac. OpenOffice is also low cost especially compared to Office
In 1940 two brothers Dick and Mac McDonald opened a restaurant in California.
St. Mac Dara's Community College was founded in 1982.Source, their website:http://www.stmacdaras.ie/our-school/
Mac word documents files pop up when the computer is turned on.
To find the list of most recent documents, open up Microsoft Word. Once Word is opened, go to the top of your computer screen and click on "File". Next click on "Open Recent" to see the list of the last ten Word files that have been accessed.
When you open new documents in Word, the program names them with a default name ("document x") determined by the number of new documents created during that session. The first one to open is "document 1," the second "document 2," etc.