LinuxQuestions.org
Download your favorite Linux distribution at LQ ISO.
Home Forums Tutorials Articles Register
Go Back   LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Software
User Name
Password
Linux - Software This forum is for Software issues.
Having a problem installing a new program? Want to know which application is best for the job? Post your question in this forum.

Notices


Reply
  Search this Thread
Old 03-03-2019, 06:12 AM   #1
CatDog
LQ Newbie
 
Registered: Oct 2018
Posts: 15

Rep: Reputation: Disabled
looking for the perfect word processor


One of the most important programs found on any computer is a text editor / word processor. I'm looking for the perfect one (who isn't). I type in "word processor" followed by a keyword to see what's out there, and nearly all the returns are for Windows. I add "linux" to the search term and get less relevant returns for what i am looking for.

What I am looking for is:

1. Free
2. Can do full screen with black background.
3. Lite weight
4. Spell checking
5. Auto saving / recovery
6. Can open and save .odt .txt and .doc

No other feature matters. I have very simple, but very precise needs.

Here are my reasons for some of these specific features.

Full Black Screen:
Doing a full screen with black background is very important because I am doing this on a laptop, an all white background is murder on the battery because more white= more light= more electrical consumption.

Auto-save / recovery:
When I am doing something I often hyper focus and can't be bothered to constantly manually save. Also, it needs to have a recovery mode in case I need to hold the power button on my laptop when the system locks up (this is actually pretty common).

Can open and save to odt txt doc:
on all my devices, be it windows, linux, android, or fire OS, those are the formats I save to and open. So I want to keep this compatibility.

Lite Weight:
My laptop has 2GB of ram and a slow CPU, thus the less resources this thing uses, the better.

The three word processors I have now take up the following ram:
Libre Office Writer: 143MB
FocusWriter 59MB
Leafpad 20MB

Anything under 90MB is lite weight. LibreOffice is seriously the biggest word processor I'd ever run.

Here, leafpad is very limited in capability. LibreOffice is very feature rich, but too big and I can't make it do black full screen properly.
FocusWriter would be the perfect word processor, but the recovery feature doesn't work. It gives me the option to recover the file, but gives me a blank page after recovery. I can't find any support forum for this software, so this problem won't be fixed any time soon. Such a shame, aside from that one issue, it is my perfect editor.
 
Old 03-03-2019, 06:59 AM   #2
knudfl
LQ 5k Club
 
Registered: Jan 2008
Location: Copenhagen DK
Distribution: PCLinuxOS2023 Fedora38 + 50+ other Linux OS, for test only.
Posts: 17,513

Rep: Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641Reputation: 3641
Add 1 : LibreOffice, Textmaker-Free

Add 3 : Textmaker-Free

Textmaker-Free → "FreeOffice for Linux" Revision 944 | 2018-12-12 →
https://www.freeoffice.com/en/freeoffice-download
 
Old 03-03-2019, 07:13 AM   #3
Turbocapitalist
LQ Guru
 
Registered: Apr 2005
Distribution: Linux Mint, Devuan, OpenBSD
Posts: 7,328
Blog Entries: 3

Rep: Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726Reputation: 3726
Quote:
Originally Posted by CatDog View Post
O
Anything under 90MB is lite weight. LibreOffice is seriously the biggest word processor I'd ever run.
Well then, Calligra might be even larger.

Abiword, should be a bit smaller, however. How much does it cover your needs?
 
Old 03-03-2019, 07:56 AM   #4
sidzen
Member
 
Registered: Feb 2014
Location: GMT-7
Distribution: Slackware64, xenialpup64, Slacko5.7
Posts: 204

Rep: Reputation: 36
IMHO there has not been one since M$ quashed WP5.1 (never was free, though).
 
Old 03-03-2019, 11:05 AM   #5
DavidMcCann
LQ Veteran
 
Registered: Jul 2006
Location: London
Distribution: PCLinuxOS, Debian
Posts: 6,143

Rep: Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314Reputation: 2314
Software, unless commercial, does what the designers think necessary, and that may not be what you think necessary! Obviously you need a word-processor: you are not going to get odt or doc support with a text-editor. You can try Abiword, but that's a bit basic. I can run LibreOffice on a 32-bit desktop with 1GB, so you shouldn't have too much trouble. If you want to speed things up, get a lighter desktop / window-manager. As for a black screen, I haven't seen one of them since Psion Quill on the QDOS and MSDOS!
 
Old 03-03-2019, 02:23 PM   #6
agillator
Member
 
Registered: Aug 2016
Distribution: Mint 19.1
Posts: 419

Rep: Reputation: Disabled
I suspect you are going to find nothing that fulfills all your requirements so you may have to prioritize. I agree that LibreOffice is large. However, I think most of that is because of its capabilities and that may be a worthwhile tradeoff. LO should work quite comfortably in 2GB. As to the black background take a look at https://ask.libreoffice.org/en/quest...lor-in-writer/. The instructions there say to go to Tools/Options/Libre Office/Appearance. There you should be able to set both the document and the application backgrounds to black (or any other color). To get what I think you want you would have to set both. Whether it will materially affect battery life I can't say. Whether it will otherwise satisfy your needs I also can't say; you will just have to try it.

As an aside, if memory is a limit have you looked into increasing memory? Memory is not that expensive and even laptops will support more memory unless it has already been upgraded. It is really not that hard to upgrade. The hardest part is getting to the memory. If you are lucky you only have to remove a panel in the back. If you are not so lucky you have to remove the entire back. You can find instructions for most laptops on the net and it is something that can be done by anyone with average abilities who can follow instructions. It does invalidate a warranty, however, so if your laptop is still under warranty I would take it to a professional if you are going to upgrade.
 
  


Reply



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off



Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
What Is The Perfect Hardware For The Perfect Linux Box? petergh Linux - Hardware 7 12-15-2006 08:53 AM
Word Perfect 8 digger Linux - Newbie 2 06-27-2003 06:04 PM
Corel draw and word perfect futurist Linux - Software 1 03-25-2003 10:21 PM
Word Perfect 8 on KDE DiBosco Linux - General 12 12-16-2001 06:03 AM
Viewers for Word, Word Perfect, etc. Claude Williams Linux - General 2 11-22-2001 04:01 AM

LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Software

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:54 PM.

Main Menu
Advertisement
My LQ
Write for LQ
LinuxQuestions.org is looking for people interested in writing Editorials, Articles, Reviews, and more. If you'd like to contribute content, let us know.
Main Menu
Syndicate
RSS1  Latest Threads
RSS1  LQ News
Twitter: @linuxquestions
Open Source Consulting | Domain Registration