Thanks Ryan, I just gave up on the issue mainly because it was a loosing battle and because every search that I did never explained the difference between the two. I went down this path when I first got my Mac, so I knew it would cause a debate. Even Apples's explanation of it says it's a word processor, but if I worked for the newspaper they would laugh me out the door if I told them I was using Text Edit.
On Apr 25, 2008, at 10:42 PM, Ryan Dour wrote:

The Mac doesn't come with a word processor. It comes with a text editor. I believe that in this day and age, TextEdit is categorized under text editor, not really word processor. People consider word processors to be programs that can arrange type faces and provide basic layout. TextEdit in RTF mode can do some of this, but just look at Word, Pages, etc. That's what the public would consider today to be a word processor. Otherwise, you could call nano at the command line a word processor. I remember the old Apple IIe and AppleWorks. The thing was easily just a text editor by today's standards, but would have been considered a word processor back in the day.

Ryan



On Apr 25, 2008, at 12:31 PM, David Poehlman wrote:

Hi All,

I just got a message telling me that someone went to an apple store to look at Macs and when they asked if the mac came with a word processor, the sales
person said no.

--
Jonnie Appleseed
With His
Hands-On Technolog(eye)s
Reducing Technologies disabilities
one byte at a time






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