The following is a list of spreadsheets.
- IBM Lotus Symphony. IBM Lotus Symphony is a full featured office suite in one application. The application has word processing, spreadsheet, presentation and web browsing capabilities built in.
- Lotus Symphony is a an integrated software program that combines five tools: spreadsheet - word processing, graphics, database management, and data communications - in one package. The spreadsheet has similar functionality to Lotus 1-2-3, however it uses a different software 'engine'. These releases are of the original suite produced by Lotus.
Free and open-source software[edit]
Cloud and on-line spreadsheets[edit]
- Sheetster – 'Community Edition' is available under the Affero GPL
- Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware includes a spreadsheet since 2004 and migrated to jQuery.sheet in 2010.[1]
- Spreadsheet.com Online spreadsheet with the power of a database and project management system, real-time updates and messaging.
Lotus Symphony takes its name from Lotus 1-2-3, a spreadsheet application that helped IBM crack the business market in the 1980s, just as Generation Y was being born. A few years later, Lotus introduced Lotus Symphony, a program designed to run under an operating system called MS-DOS. That version of Lotus Symphony for DOS included five separate applications that resided in memory when you launched it.
Spreadsheets that are parts of suites[edit]
- Gnumeric — for Linux. Started as the GNOME desktop spreadsheet. Reasonably lightweight but has very advanced features.[2]
- KSpread — following the fork of the Calligra Suite from KOffice in mid-2010, superseded by KCells in KOffice and Sheets in the Calligra Suite.[3]
- LibreOfficeCalc — developed for MS Windows, GNU/Linux, BSD and Apple Macintosh (Mac) operating systems by The Document Foundation. The Document Foundation was formed in mid-2010 by several large organisations such as Google, Red Hat, Canonical (Ubuntu) and Novell along with the OpenOffice.org community (developed by Sun) and various OpenOffice.org forks, notably Go-oo. Go-oo had been the 'OpenOffice' used in Ubuntu and elsewhere. Started as StarOffice in the late 1990s, it became OpenOffice under Sun and then LibreOffice in mid-2010. The Document Foundation works with external organisations such as NeoOffice and Apache Foundation to help drive all three products forward.[4]
- NeoOffice Calc — for Mac. Started as an OpenOffice.org port to Mac, but by using the Mac-specific Aquauser interface, instead of the more widely used X11 windowing server, it aimed to be far more stable than the normal ports of other suites.[5]
- OpenOffice.orgCalc — for MS Windows, GNU/Linux and the Apple Macintosh. Started as StarOffice. Sun changed the name to OpenOffice.org and developed a community of developers (and others) between the late 1990s and mid-2010. Oracle gave it to the Apache Foundation in 2011. IBM contributed their fork of OpenOffice.org, IBM Lotus Symphony, to Apache a few weeks later.[6]
- Siag — for GNU/Linux, OpenBSD and Apple Mac OS X. A simple old spreadsheet, part of Siag Office.[7]
- Sheets — for MS Windows, GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, Apple Mac OS X and Haiku. Part of the extensive Calligra Suite. Possibly still mainly for Linux, but ports have been developed for other operating systems.[8]
Standalone spreadsheets[edit]
Proprietary software[edit]
Online spreadsheets[edit]
- EditGrid – access, collaborate and share spreadsheets online, with API support; discontinued since 2014
- Google Sheets – as part of Google Docs
- Zoho Sheet Spreadsheet on the cloud that allows real-time collaboration and more, for free.
- iRows – closed since 31 December 2006
- JotSpot Tracker – acquired by Google Inc.
- Smartsheet – Online spreadsheet for project management, interactive Gantt, file sharing, integrated with Google Apps[9]
- ThinkFree Online Calc – as part of the ThinkFree Office online office suite, using Java
- Airtable - a spreadsheet-database hybrid, with the features of a database but applied to a spreadsheet.
Spreadsheets that are parts of suites[edit]
- Ability Office Spreadsheet – for MS Windows.
- Apple iWorkNumbers, included with Apple's iWork '08 suite exclusively for Mac OS X v10.4 or higher.
- AppleWorks – for MS Windows and Macintosh. This is a further development of the historical Claris Works Office suite.
- WordPerfect OfficeQuattro Pro – for MS Windows. Was one of the big three spreadsheets (the others being Lotus 123 and Excel).
- EasyOffice EasySpreadsheet – for MS Windows. No longer freeware, this suite aims to be more user friendly than competitors.
- Framework – for MS Windows. Historical office suite still available and supported. It includes a spreadsheet.
- IBM Lotus Symphony – freeware for MS Windows, Apple Mac OS X and GNU/Linux.
- Kingsoft Office Spreadsheets 2012 – For MS Windows. Both free and paid versions are available. It can handle Microsoft Excel .xls and .xlsx files, and also produce other file formats such as .et, .txt, .csv, .pdf, and .dbf. It supports multiple tabs, VBA macro and PDF converting.[10]
- Lotus SmartSuiteLotus 123 – for MS Windows. In its MS-DOS (character cell) version, widely considered to be responsible for the explosion of popularity of spreadsheets during the 80s and early 90s.[citation needed]
- MarinerPak Mariner Calc – for Apple Macintosh. Full featured and light weight.
- Microsoft OfficeExcel – for MS Windows and Apple Macintosh. The proprietary spreadsheet leader.
- Microsoft Works Spreadsheet – for MS Windows (previously MS-DOS and Apple Macintosh). Only allows one sheet at a time.
- PlanMaker – for MS Windows, GNU/Linux, MS Windows Mobile and CE; part of SoftMaker Office
- Quattro Pro – part of WordPerfect Office
- StarOffice Calc – Cross-platform. StarOffice was originally developed by the German company Star Division which was purchased by Sun in 1998. The code was made open source and became OpenOffice.org. Sun continues developing the commercial version which periodically integrates the open source code with their own and third party code to make new low price versions.
Stand alone spreadsheets[edit]
- As-Easy-As – from Trius, Inc.; unsupported; last MS-DOS and Windows versions available with free full license key.
Multi-dimensional spreadsheets[edit]
Spreadsheets on different paradigms[edit]
[clarification needed]
- DADiSP – Combines the numerical capability of MATLAB with a spreadsheet like interface.
- Resolver One – a business application development tool that represents spreadsheets as IronPython programs, created and executed in real time and allowing the spreadsheet flow to be fully programmed
Spreadsheet-related developmental software[edit]
- ExtenXLS – Java Spreadsheet Toolkit.
Specifications[edit]
Program | Rows (per sheet) | Columns (per sheet) | Total Cells (per sheet) | Sheets | Total Cells (per workbook) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gnumeric | 16,777,216 | 16,384 | 274,877,906,944 | 142,648 | 603,103 |
KSpread | 32,767 | 32,767 | 1,073,676,289 | 130,645 | 953,923 |
LibreOffice Calc 6.0.1 and 5.4.5 | 1,048,576 | 1,024 | 1,073,741,824 | 1,024 | 1,099,511,627,776 |
Lotus 1-2-3[11] | 65,536 | 256 | 16,777,216 | 256 | 4,294,967,296 |
Microsoft Excel 2003 | 65,536 | 256 | 16,777,216 | 65,531 | 1,099,427,741,696 |
Microsoft Excel 2007, or later versions[12][13][14] | 1,048,576 | 16,384 | 17,179,869,184 | Limited by available memory | Limited by available memory |
OpenOffice.org Calc 2[15] | 65,536 | 256 | 16,777,216 | 256 | 4,294,967,296 |
OpenOffice.org Calc 3.0, 3.1 and 3.2[16][17] | 65,536 | 1024 | 67,108,864 | 256 | 17,179,869,184 |
OpenOffice.org Calc 3.3[18] | 1,048,576 | 1024 | 1,073,741,824 | 256 | 274,877,906,944 |
Pyspread | ~80 000 000 (limited by sum of row heights) | ~30 000 000 (limited by sum of column widths) | Limited by available memory | Limited by available memory | Limited by available memory |
Resolver One | limited by machine memory* | limited by machine memory* | limited machine memory* | limited by machine memory* | limited by machine memory* |
-* 32-bit addressable memory on Microsoft Windows, i.e. ~2.5 GB.
Historical[edit]
- VisiCalc The first widely used normal spreadsheet with A1 notation etc.
- Lotus 1-2-3 Took the market from Visicalc in the early 1980s.
- Lotus Improv Novel design that went beyond A1 notation.
- Multiplan Early version of Excel.
- 20/20 Multiplatform competitor to 1-2-3 with database integration and real-time data updating.
- 3D-Calc multi-dimensional spreadsheet for Atari ST[19]
- SuperCalc – CP/M-80 Included with early Osborne computers. It also was ported to MS-DOS and to Microsoft Windows.
- Dynacalc — from Computer Systems Center, similar to VisiCalc. It was designed to run on Microware's OS-9, a Unix-like operating system.[20]
- VP Planner – Similar in look and feel to Lotus 1-2-3, but included 5 level multi-dimensional database[21]
- Wingz Multi Dimensional Spreadsheet from Informix (1988)
- Boeing Calc – was a spreadsheet package written by subsidiary of aviation manufacturer Boeing (1985).
See also[edit]
Lotus Symphony Dos
References[edit]
- ^Spreadsheet, Tiki.
- ^'Gnumeric', Office (downloads), Gnome.
- ^The KOffice Project, archived from the original on 2005-12-31, retrieved 2006-03-02.
- ^LibreOffice.
- ^NeoOffice.
- ^OpenOffice.org.
- ^'Scheme In A Grid'. NU: Siag. 2000-12-07. Retrieved 7 March 2017.
- ^The Calligra Suite.
- ^Apps Marketplace Profile, Google.
- ^Spreadsheets, Kingsoft.
- ^'Limitations of 1-2-3 for Windows'. IBM. Archived from the original on 2013-01-03. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
- ^'Excel specifications and limits'. MS Office Support. Microsoft. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
- ^'Excel specifications and limits'. MS Office Support. Microsoft. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
- ^'Excel specifications and limits'. MS Office Support. Microsoft. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
- ^'What is the maximum number of cells in an OpenOffice.org spreadsheet?'. FAQ. OpenOffice.org. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
- ^'What's the maximum number of rows and cells for a spreadsheet file?'. Calc FAQ. OpenOffice.org. Archived from the original on 2009-05-04. Retrieved 2008-11-04.
- ^'OpenOffice.org 3.0 New Features'. 3.0 Features. OpenOffice.org. Retrieved 2008-11-10.
- ^'OpenOffice.org 3.3 New Features'. 3.3 Features. OpenOffice.org. Retrieved 2010-12-13.
- ^Frank Schoonjans, '3D-Calc', Atari ST.
- ^'Dynacalc'(PDF) (manual). Tandy. Retrieved April 13, 2015.
- ^Stephenson, James; Brothers, Kent; Mitchell, Dave (December 1, 1986). VP-Planner: Spreadsheet Flexibility with Database Powe. Paperback Software International, Stephenson Software. ISBN0-87142021-X.
Lotus Symphony Download
Integrated software package for creating and editing text, spreadsheets, charts and other documents on the MS-DOS operating systems.Wikipedia
- IBM Lotus Symphony
Proprietary software suite of applications for creating, editing, and sharing text, spreadsheet, presentations, and other documents and browsing the World Wide Web. First distributed as commercial proprietary software, then as freeware, before IBM contributed the suite to the Apache Software Foundation in 2014 for inclusion in the free and open-source Apache OpenOffice software suite.Wikipedia
- Comparison of Office Open XML software
Open and free document file format for saving and exchanging editable office documents such as text documents (including memos, reports, and books), spreadsheets, charts, and presentations. The following tables list applications supporting a version of the Office Open XML standard (ECMA-376 and ISO/IEC 29500:2008).Wikipedia
- Lotus 1-2-3
Discontinued spreadsheet program from Lotus Software . The IBM PC's first killer application, was hugely popular in the 1980s and contributed significantly to the success of the IBM PC.Wikipedia
- Comparison of OpenDocument software
Abbreviation for the OASIS Open Document Format for Office Applications, is an open and free (excluding maintenance and support) document file format for saving and exchanging editable office documents such as text documents (including memos, reports, and books), spreadsheets, databases, charts, and presentations. Developed by the OASIS industry consortium, based upon the XML-based file format originally created by OpenOffice.org, and ODF was approved as an OASIS standard on May 1, 2005.Wikipedia
- PC Paintbrush
Graphics editing software created by the ZSoft Corporation in 1984 for computers running the MS-DOS operating system. Originally developed as a response to the first paintbrush program for the IBM PC, PCPaint, which had been released the prior year by Mouse Systems, the company responsible for bringing the mouse to the IBM PC for the first time.Wikipedia
- Context MBA
The first integrated software application for personal computers, providing five functions in one program: spreadsheet, database, charting, word processing, and communication software. First released in 1981 by Context Management Systems for the Apple III computer, but was later ported to the Hewlett Packard 9000 / 200 series computers running Rocky Mountain BASIC and IBM PC platform as well.Wikipedia
- RagTime (software)
Frame-oriented business publishing software which combines word processing, spreadsheets, simple drawings, image processing, and charts, in a single document/program. Often used to create forms, reports, documentation, desktop publishing, and in office environments.Wikipedia
- As-Easy-As
Shareware 32-bit spreadsheet program developed in the mid-1980s for MS-DOS and later for MS Windows. Play on the phrase 'as easy as 1-2-3', a reference to the dominant MS-DOS spreadsheet at that time, Lotus 1-2-3 with which it competed for a fraction of the contender's price.Wikipedia
- Framework (office suite)
The first office suite to run on the IBM PC and compatibles with the MS-DOS operating system. Even earlier integrated suite, actually comparable to the original Macintosh of 1984 and Apple Lisa of 1982 was produced by Epson, a complete integrated work station based on the previous Zilog Z80 processor and CP/M operating system with GUI and 'WYSIWYG' typography on the monitor and printing.Wikipedia
- OpenDocument
ZIP-compressed XML-based file format for spreadsheets, charts, presentations and word processing documents. Developed with the aim of providing an open, XML-based file format specification for office applications.Wikipedia
- Spreadsheet
Interactive computer application for organization, analysis and storage of data in tabular form. Spreadsheets were developed as computerized analogs of paper accounting worksheets.Wikipedia
- List of spreadsheet software
List of spreadsheets. * As-Easy-As – from Trius, Inc.; unsupported; last MS-DOS and Windows versions available with free full license key.Wikipedia
- LibreOffice Calc
Spreadsheet component of the LibreOffice software package. After forking from OpenOffice.org in 2010, LibreOffice Calc underwent a massive re-work of external reference handling to fix many defects in formula calculations involving external references, and to boost data caching performance, especially when referencing large data ranges.Wikipedia
- Lotus Magellan
MS-DOS desktop search package, conceived and developed by Bill Gross and released in 1989 by Lotus Development Corporation, most famous for Lotus 1-2-3. Lotus sold 500,000 copies of Magellan.Wikipedia
- Lucid 3-D
Spreadsheet package that began in the MS-DOS era; Windows support came later. Sam Redman and Michael Stanford incorporated as PCSG corporation (Portable Computer Support Group).Wikipedia
- Siag Office
Tightly integrated free software office package for Unix-like operating systems. It consists of the spreadsheet SIAG ('Scheme In A Grid'), the word processor Pathetic Writer (PW), the animation program Egon Animator, the text editor XedPlus, the file manager Xfiler and the previewer Gvu.Wikipedia
- History of Apple Inc.
Multinational corporation that creates consumer electronics, personal computers, servers, and computer software, and is a digital distributor of media content. The company also has a chain of retail stores known as Apple Stores.Wikipedia
- Microsoft Excel
Spreadsheet developed by Microsoft for Windows, macOS, Android and iOS. It features calculation, graphing tools, pivot tables, and a macro programming language called Visual Basic for Applications.Wikipedia
- Comparison of spreadsheet software
Class of application software design to analyze tabular data called 'worksheets'. Called a 'workbook'.Wikipedia
- GNU Oleo
Lightweight free software spreadsheet originally designed as a text-based spreadsheet using the curses library. Released in 2001.Wikipedia
- MS-DOS
Operating system for x86-based personal computers mostly developed by Microsoft. Collectively, MS-DOS, its rebranding as IBM PC DOS, and some operating systems attempting to be compatible with MS-DOS, are sometimes referred to as 'DOS' (which is also the generic acronym for disk operating system).Wikipedia
- XyWrite
Word processor for MS-DOS and Windows modeled on the mainframe-based ATEX typesetting system. In its heyday the house word processor in many editorial offices, including the New York Times from 1989 to 1993.Wikipedia
- Timeline of DOS operating systems
This article presents a timeline of events in the history of 16-bit x86 DOS disk operating systems from 1980 to 2016. Other operating systems named 'DOS' are generally not part of the scope of this timeline.Wikipedia
- List of office suites
Office suite is a collection of productivity software usually containing a word processor, spreadsheet and a presentation program. There are many different brands and types of office suites.Wikipedia
- Exe2bin
Post-compilation utility program available on MS-DOS and other operating systems. Early compilers and linkers for the MS-DOS platform could not produce a COM file executable directly.Wikipedia
- ChiWriter
Commercial scientific text editor for MS-DOS, created by Cay Horstmann in 1986. One of the first WYSIWYG editors that could write mathematical formulas, even on IBM PC XT computers that were then common.Wikipedia
- Ability Plus
Integrated software package written for DOS in the early 1980s. Development ceased in 1995 with the last build made in November 1997.Wikipedia
- Cullinet
Software company whose products included the database management system IDMS and the integrated software package Goldengate. Bought by Computer Associates.Wikipedia
- IBM Lotus SmartSuite
Office suite from Lotus Software. The company made versions of its office suite for IBM OS/2 and Microsoft Windows.Wikipedia
- Recover (command)
Primitive file system error recovery utility included in MS-DOS / IBM PC DOS versions prior to DOS 6.0 and a number of other operating systems. Typing at the DOS command-line invoked the program file RECOVER.COM or RECOVER.EXE (depending on the DOS version).Wikipedia
Sentences forLotus Symphony (MS-DOS)
- 1-2-3's intended successor, Lotus Symphony, was Lotus' entry into the anticipated 'integrated software' market.Lotus 1-2-3-Wikipedia
- First released in 2007, the suite has a name similar to the 1980s DOS Lotus Symphony suite, but the two software suites are otherwise unrelated.IBM Lotus Symphony-Wikipedia
- Framework eventually got locked into an industry battle, primarily with Lotus Symphony, and later with Microsoft Works.Ashton-Tate-Wikipedia
- Lotus introduced other office products such as Ray Ozzie's Symphony in 1984 and the Jazz office suite for the Apple Macintosh computer in 1985.Lotus Software-Wikipedia
- Shortly thereafter, he was recruited by Sachs and Mitch Kapor to work for Lotus Development to develop what became Lotus Symphony.Ray Ozzie-Wikipedia
- In 2007, IBM introduced a new office suite called IBM Lotus Symphony, unrelated to the Lotus Symphony integrated application suite that Lotus previously released.IBM Lotus SmartSuite-Wikipedia
- Microsoft stated that using multiple applications with Switcher was preferable to a single integrated software application like Lotus Symphony.MultiFinder-Wikipedia
- Perhaps Framework and Symphony represented the peak of integrated software products, amid questions about the genre's viability under the new graphical user interfaces.Integrated software-Wikipedia
- This team developed Goldengate, a Lotus Symphony-like PC product.Cullinet-Wikipedia
- It was preceded by a few months by its close rival Lotus Symphony.Framework (office suite)-Wikipedia
- It had a proprietary operating environment called Just Window (ジャストウィンドウ), like Lotus Symphony.Ichitaro (word processor)-Wikipedia
- The original version could import data from Lotus 1-2-3 or Lotus Symphony, charts created in Symphony or PFS Graph, and ASCII text.Harvard Graphics-Wikipedia
- These programs were more than simple menu systems—as alternate operating environments they were substitutes for integrated programs such as Framework and Symphony, that allowed switching, windowing, and cut-and-paste operations among dedicated applications.Operating environment-Wikipedia
- Commercially, LMBCS was first introduced as the default character set of Lotus 1-2-3 Release 3 for DOS in March 1989 and Lotus 1-2-3/G Release 1 for OS/2 in 1990 replacing the 8-bit Lotus International Character Set (LICS) and ASCII used in earlier DOS-only versions of Lotus 1-2-3 and Symphony.Lotus Multi-Byte Character Set-Wikipedia
- In its turn, the machine's headline 640x400 graphics mode received a moderate level of support from software developers, mostly for 'serious' applications such as Lotus 1-2-3 and Symphony (Earl Weaver Baseball is however an example of a game that can use it), and was for a time both supported and emulated (as well as extended to e.g. 752x410) by various 'Super EGA'/'any mode on any monitor' cards such as the ATI EGA Wonder.Olivetti M24-Wikipedia
- Software support included Lotus 1-2-3 v2, Symphony 1.1, Framework II and Microsoft Word 3.Hercules Graphics Card Plus-Wikipedia
- It is also utilized by 2.01, 2.2, 2.3 and 2.4 as well as by Symphony.Lotus International Character Set-Wikipedia
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