Gnumeric, the Gnome Office Spreadsheet
Gnumeric 1.7.91 aka "TBD" is now available.
The Gnumeric spreadsheet is part of the GNOME desktop environment: a project to create a free, user friendly desktop environment.
The goal of Gnumeric is to be the best possible spreadsheet. We are not attempting to clone existing applications. However, Gnumeric can read files saved with other spreadsheets and we offer a customizable feel that attempts to minimize the costs of transition.
Gnumeric is a free spreadsheet program that is part of the GNOME desktop and has Windows installers available. It is intended to be a free replacement for proprietary spreadsheet programs such as Microsoft Excel, which it broadly and openly emulates. Gnumeric was created and developed by Miguel de Icaza, but he has since moved on to other projects. The current maintainer is Jody Goldberg.
Gnumeric has the ability to import and export data in several file formats, including CSV, Microsoft Excel, HTML, LaTeX, Lotus 1-2-3, OpenDocumentQuattro Pro; its native format is the Gnumeric file format (.gnm or .gnumeric), an XML file compressed with gzip.It includes all of the spreadsheet functions of the North American edition of Microsoft Excel and many functions unique to Gnumeric. Pivot tables and conditional formating are not yet supported but are planned for future versions. and
Gnumeric's accuracy has helped it to establish a niche among people using it for statistical analysis and other scientific tasks. For improving the accuracy of Gnumeric, the developers are cooperating with the R Project.
Gnumeric version 1.0 was released December 31, 2001. The current unstable release is version 1.7.x, the first to have basic Microsoft Office Open XML support.
Gnumeric is...
- Free!
- Gnumeric and its source code are available free of charge, licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License. This makes it easy to audit, and make custom extensions.
- Fast!
- Gnumeric handles large spreadsheets while remaining responsive.
- Accurate!
- A spreadsheet should calculate the right answer. Gnumeric's built-in functions and tools are accurate. A recent report praised Gnumeric as more accurate than leading proprietary spreadsheets.
For a comprehensive list of features, go here.
News
December 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.91 is out. This is the second release candidate leading up to 1.8. Get it from here!
November 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.90 is out. This is the first release candidate leading up to 1.8. Get it from here!
November 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.14 is out. Get it from here!
October 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.13 is out. Get it from here!
September 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.12 is out. Get it from here! We have a new Win32 build of that.
July 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.11 is out. Get it from here!
May 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.10 is out. Get it from here! We have a new Win32 build of that.
April 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.9 is out. Get it from here!
March 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.8 is out. Get it from here!
February 2007: Gnumeric 1.7.7 is out. Get it from here!
Migration
Gnumeric will import your existing Microsoft Excel files. Import filters also exist for Lotus 1-2-3, Applix, Sylk, XBase, Open Office, Quattro Pro, Dif, Plan Perfect, and Oleo files, but these import filters are less complete. If you have knowledge of these file formats or have access to the underlying program, maybe you can help.


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