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Wordfast pro
Wordfast pro




wordfast pro
  1. WORDFAST PRO UPGRADE
  2. WORDFAST PRO FREE

However, I feel that selling a Linux-specific program that depends on a piece of non-free software (and not publicizing that dependency) is a little misleading in my case, my reason for purchasing the Wordfast Pro upgrade was so that I would no longer have to run CrossOver Linux and MS Office and could use a version of Wordfast that runs natively on Linux. Here is the change log for the latest version, released yesterday. In the past, the Wordfast team has been very supportive of translators who run their software on Linux, and I do really appreciate that they have released a Linux-specific version of their program (which installs and opens just fine on my Ubuntu system). The people in charge of Wordfast development have certainly worked hard since the introduction of Wordfast Pro (the multi-platform tool that uses its separate editor, as opposed to Wordfast Classic, which is Microsoft Word-based). OpenOffice makes a slight change to the composition of the file and we are working on resolving that.” Unfortunately this makes Wordfast Pro essentially unusable by translators like myself who run OpenOffice exclusively and do not use MS Office. doc files not saved with MS Word 98-03 will not open in Wordfast.

WORDFAST PRO FREE

So if you, like me, use the free and open source office suite to create and/or edit files in MS Word format, you’re out of luck with Wordfast Pro, since it will tell you that your Word format documents are “not in a supported format.” Wordfast support confirmed this, when they told me that “…any. This solution works, but it’s a little clunky since it takes a lot of memory and since it requires upgrading three pieces of software (and in my case, I never use Microsoft Office unless I’m working in Wordfast since OmegaT supports the OpenDocument format).Īlas, the Linux-specific version of Wordfast Pro has what is in my opinion a serious dependency flaw it cannot work with Word format files that are created or saved in a program other than MS Word. use to solve many of the problems of puter having a 2000 - word fast ac- of. For years, I’ve run the original Wordfast (now called “Wordfast Classic”) on my Linux system by running CrossOver Linux and then Microsoft Office. and can pro- mensurate with traffic flow without duce neat and precise. OmegaT is my tool of choice, but when a client wants Trados-style uncleaned files, I often find it easier to work in Wordfast than to create the uncleaned files from OmegaT’s output. Like many other open source software-using translators, I was really excited when Wordfast announced that it was releasing a platform-independent translation environment tool, Wordfast Pro.






Wordfast pro