Hi :) The proper guides/manuals/books are here; https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/Publications (they are available elsewhere too but that wiki-page is the most up-to-date and even has chapters before the full book has been completed for publication). The proper guides are great at giving a strong overview to help anticipate how everything works.
If you scroll further down that page (or click on the table-of-contents) then you get to some quick-reference cards https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/Publications#Desktop_Reference_Cards these can be useful to have printed out but they might be a little out-of-date now and thus miss a lot of new features, or screen-shots might look a bit archaic or show things looking rough that are really smoooth now. Even so they are excellent for "at a glance" help. Handy to have on a wall easy to read from a desk or few. There is an FAQ (=frequently asked question) at https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Faq to dip into to look-up things quickly. The in-built help is useful. In the top icon-bar just click on the little blue question mark. Sometimes the English one is a bit geeky or might be misleading or inaccurate in places because Office (i mean LibreOffice but i often just use Office for short because i use it so much) develops so fast that it's not possible to keep up all the time. Not that things keep changing around just that Murphy's Law suggests that the 1 thing you need to look-up turns out ot be a new feature. It's usually pretty good for quickly looking things up. There are a few videos and other things listed here; https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/Other_Documentation_and_Resources Buried somewhere in there is an excellent book on how to program macros to do some really useful stuff. Also here; https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Macros Often people use Extensions/Add-ons http://extensions.libreoffice.org/ but being able to program in your own stuff can be quite rewarding. There is an online training resource at; http://www.spoken-tutorial.org/ for example on Writer, in English; http://www.spoken-tutorial.org/tutorial-search/?foss=LibreOffice+Suite+Writer&language=English There is a comparison betweeen LIbreOffice and MS Office https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Feature_Comparison:_LibreOffice_-_Microsoft_Office but again it's already out-of-date, or maybe perpetually out-of-date due to the rapid development of LibreOffice. Mostly you'll notice that LibreOffice really is cross-platform and even on platforms or niche markets where LibreOfrfice itself doesn't have a presence there is inevitable something else in the same eco-system that does work well with LibreOffice files Of course MS Office seems to try hard to be incompatible with everything else because that way people are kinda forced into buying MS Office. However, most of the problems you find are also problems if files are opened with a different version of MS Office than the version the file was created with. For example a table created in MS Office 2007 might well not work in MS Office 2010 or 2013. Files created in anything other than MS Office almost never have a problem when opened in LibreOffice regardless of version. Hopefully some of these links prove useful and most will point to other links and to other resources. Regards from Tom :) On 15 September 2014 14:43, Paul Auger <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi all. > > We are brand new to Libre. We are used to MS office. Is there a "cheat > sheet" that says "If you do this in office these here the steps you need to > take to do the same thing in Libre?" Also we have noticed that when we > import documents especially those with tables the formatting is altered. > any advice? > > -- > Paul J. 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