https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2205/S00032/pages-12-apples-excellent-free-word-processor.htm
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Pages 12: Apple’s excellent free word processor |
For: | Free, great for layout, all the features most people need. |
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Against: | Native file format, fewer features than Microsoft Word. |
Maybe: | Collaboration with other iWorks users, iCloud app. |
Verdict: | Good looking, easy to use. Pages is great option for Apple users who don't plan to do complex word processing |
Rating: | 4.5 out of 5 - score is for Apple users. |
Price: | Free |
Web: | Apple Pages |
There is a web version of Pages on iCloud that
anyone can use, you don’t have to be an Apple customer.
The web version works fine with Windows, ChromeOS or
Android. You will need to sign up for a free iCloud account
that comes with 5GB of storage.
For many Apple users Pages will be the only word processor you ever need. It integrates brilliantly across the various Apple devices and to iCloud. You can move from device to device and get the same user experience, Pages works much the same way everywhere.
The main alternatives to Pages are Microsoft Word, which is part of Microsoft Office and Google Docs which is part of GSuite.
Office and GSuite are not free, although there are free options. You may not find these free options enough for serious work. If you prefer free software there is LibreOffice.
Microsoft
Office and LibreOffice offer more features, but many of
these are not essential for everyday
word-processing.
Pages, Word and Google Docs each have a different central focus. Pages is all about putting words and pictures onto a printed or online page.
Its strength lies in layout.
You could produce an advertisement, a newsletter or a pamphlet faster with Pages than with, say, Microsoft Word and a layout app.
You might choose Pages as a low
cost alternative to a professional design application like
Adobe Indesign.
It is a sprawling, complex comprehensive application. That makes it versatile, but it takes a long time to learn how to get the best from it. In comparison Pages is lighter and quicker to master.
Apple built Pages
to work with its computers, tablets and phones. If you are
familiar with these products, Pages will feel familiar.
Microsoft developed Word for Windows computers. These days
the Mac versions are far better than in the past, but there
are times when that Windows heritage can confuse Mac
users.
Google Docs’s strength is in collaboration. Pages is great for collaboration if you only work with colleagues who use Macs. Otherwise it is not as good as Google Docs. Nor is Microsoft Word.
While Google Docs is good on a desktop or on a ChromeOS device, it is far from the best choice on a tablet or a phone. Google’s mobile apps are inferior to Pages or Microsoft Word. Pages works far better on Apple tablets and phones.
Likewise
Pages is a long way ahead of Google Docs for layout and
complex documents. In terms of features it sits between
Google Docs and Word.
There are templates to help you get started. Pages has the best range of templates of any popular word processor and there are many more you can download from Apple and third parties.
When you first open Pages you’ll see a main window and a right-hand sidebar. This sidebar shows formatting and layout controls. If you want to focus on words, it is easy to hide the side-bar.
A second, optional left-hand sidebar can show comments and features like a table on contents.
Unlike other word processors, there isn’t a draft view. This can be annoying at first because, as the name suggests, Pages is organised around pages. And like every other word processor, that means it sees the world from a printed document perspective.
No matter what you are working on, there can
be headers and footers to navigate, even if you plan to
build a single online-only document.
This isn’t much of a problem in practice as long as you remember which features don’t translate. You can’t send a native Pages document to a colleague using Microsoft Windows and expect them to open it. There is a workaround, but it involves them signing up for an iCloud account and opening the document in the online version of Pages.
Life is far easier if you remember to save your Pages document in Word before sending. You can choose to send as PDF, text or RTF. Don’t expect your formatting to stay unchanged if you make a round trip where a colleague edits and returns the document.
The software picks up almost everything from other formats. You could, say, open a Microsoft Word document that has review comments and mark-up, then work through these in Pages.
Pages
collaboration works fine if you work on the same document as
a colleague using either Pages or the web app.
On the iPhone you can use a screen view designed to make editing easier. It hides the images and fancy features allowing you to focus on the text.
Apple has a feature on its operating systems called Continuity. It means that if you have Bluetooth switched on and both devices are on the same Wi-Fi network, you can move seamlessly from editing a Pages document on one device to another.
Another feature called Handoff means you can pick up on another device where you left off.
It feels like magic to work on a desktop document at home and continue to edit the same document on your iPhone while riding on a train or bus to work.
If Pages 12 has a weakness it is
dealing with long documents. It’s fine if you are writing
anything up to a few thousand words, say a long essay,
magazine feature or book chapter. Things break down when
documents get bigger than this.
Yet for many users Pages 12 is a solid choice and it is free.
Many long-term Pages users were not impressed when Apple updated its iWork word processor from Pages ’09 to Pages 5 in late 2013.
People who invested time and effort learning and mastering the earlier Pages ’09 version of the software found key features were missing. If they had written scripts, many stopped working.
In time
the features returned. Apple drip-fed updates restoring much
of what was missing in the first version of Pages
5.
It does this well. Pages is a low cost alternative to Adobe Indesign for people who need to make words and pictures look good, but who don’t need professional tools and don’t want to pay a lot for them.
It can deliver great looking designs. You don’t
need to be an expert to get results.
Like it or not that puts it up against Microsoft Word, Excel and Powerpoint or Google Docs, Sheets and Slides.
Pages 5 does
not feature collaboration tools like Google Docs. Nor does
it have the heavy duty tools you’ll find in Microsoft
Word. It’s more basic in these departments.
You can work with documents that come
from Word or Google Docs and you can send Pages documents
back to these apps. You’ll even see many of the review
marks from the other applications – although not all.
There are few, if any, problems converting between document
formats.
Pages 5 is the best tool if you want to share and edit documents across a Mac, an iPhone and an iPad. There are apps for all three devices and they work much the same in each.
The big change in the move from
Pages ’09 to Pages 5 is iCloud. You can choose to store
documents on your Mac’s hard drive or to iCloud. This
means you could start writing a document on an iPad at home.
Pick up the document from iCloud on your phone while riding
the train to work, then finish it off on your desktop Mac in
your office.
If you are committed to Microsoft Word or Google Docs you may not want to switch, but the option is there should you need it.
Pages 12: Apple’s excellent free word
processor was first posted at
billbennett.co.nz.
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