MS Office & Software Packages
1. Introduction to Office Suites
An Office Suite is a collection of productivity software (bundled applications) intended to be used by office workers, students, and professionals.
Major Office Packages
- MS Office: Developed by Microsoft. It is Proprietary (Closed Source) and Paid software.
- LibreOffice: Developed by The Document Foundation (openoffice.org). It is Open Source and Free.
- iWork: Developed by Apple. It is Paid and designed for macOS/iOS.
- Google Workspace (formerly G-Suite): Developed by Google. It is Cloud-based and offers free tiers for personal use.
2. Key Facts & History
- Announcement Year: 1988 (Announced by Bill Gates at COMDEX).
- First Version: Office 1.0 (Released in 1990 for Windows).
- Latest Perpetual Version: Office 2021.
- Cloud Version: Microsoft 365 (formerly Office 365).
- Software Classification: * Application Software: Designed for end-users to perform specific tasks.
- Horizontal Market Software: Designed for a wide range of industries (unlike "Vertical" software meant for one specific niche).
3. Version Evolution
Microsoft Office has evolved through two distinct eras: the "Classic" menu era and the "Ribbon" era (introduced in 2007).
Older Versions (Legacy)
- Office 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0
- Office 95, 97, 2000, XP (2002), 2003
Modern Versions
- Office 2007: Introduced the .docx XML format and the Ribbon interface.
- Office 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019
- Office 2021: The current standalone (non-subscription) version.
- Note: Office 2011 was specifically a version for Mac, often confused with the Windows 2010 release.
4. Core Applications & File Extensions
Modern versions of Office use XML-based formats (signified by the 'x' at the end), which offer better security and smaller file sizes.
|
Application |
Purpose |
Default Extension |
|
MS Word |
Word Processing (Documents) |
.docx |
|
MS Excel |
Spreadsheets (Data/Calculations) |
.xlsx |
|
MS PowerPoint |
Presentations (Slides) |
.pptx |
|
MS Access |
Database Management (DBMS) |
.accdb |
|
MS Outlook |
Email & Calendar |
.pst / .ost |
6. Key Commands & Shortcut Keys
Special Key Types
- Modifier Keys: Ctrl, Alt, Shift.
- Toggle Keys: Caps Lock, Num Lock, Scroll Lock (These act as ON/OFF keys).
Control Key (Ctrl) Commands
- Ctrl + A: Select all
- Ctrl + B: Bold
- Ctrl + C: Copy
- Ctrl + D: Open font window (in MS Word)
- Ctrl + E: Center Alignment
- Ctrl + F: Open find window
- Ctrl + G: Go to
- Ctrl + H: Find & Replace
- Ctrl + I: Italicize text
- Ctrl + J: Justify alignment
- Ctrl + K: Create a hyperlink
- Ctrl + L: Left alignment
- Ctrl + M: Indent a paragraph (MS Word)
- Ctrl + N: Create a new page
- Ctrl + O: Open a file
- Ctrl + P: Print
- Ctrl + Q: Remove paragraph formatting
- Ctrl + R: Right align text
- Ctrl + S: Save document
- Ctrl + T: Create new tab in web browser
- Ctrl + U: Underline text
- Ctrl + V: Paste
- Ctrl + W: Close open tab in a browser
- Ctrl+ x: cut
- Ctrl+ y: Redu
- Ctrl+ z: Undo
- Ctrl + Alt + Del: Known as the "3-Finger Salute." Used to reboot or open the Task Manager.
- Ctrl + Shift + Esc: Directly opens the Task Manager (faster than Ctrl+Alt+Del).
- Alt + Tab: Switch between open applications/windows.
- Windows + D: Show Desktop (minimizes all windows instantly).
- Ctrl + Enter: Insert a Page Break (starts a new page immediately).
- Ctrl + [ / ]: Decrease or Increase Font Size by 1 point.
- Ctrl + Home / End: Jump to the very beginning or the very end of a document.
- F1: Help (Opens help menu for the active app).
- F2: Rename a selected file or folder.
- F5: Refresh page (Browser) or Start Slideshow (PowerPoint).
- F7: Spell Check & Grammar (Extremely important for MS Word).
- F12: Save As (Quickly save a copy of your file).
- Modifier Keys: Ctrl, Alt, Shift (They don't do anything alone; they modify other keys).
- Toggle Keys: Caps Lock, Num Lock, Scroll Lock (Press once for ON, once for OFF).
Quick Summary: Software Types
- Application Software: Software used to perform specific tasks (Word, Excel).
- Horizontal Software: General-purpose software used by everyone.
- Closed Source: Proprietary software (you cannot see the code, e.g., MS Office).
- Open Source: Free to use and modify (e.g., LibreOffice).