The Microsoft Excel Viewer was retired in April, 2018. It no longer is available for download or receives security updates. To continue viewing Excel files for free, we recommend that you install the Excel mobile app or store documents on OneDrive or Dropbox, from which Excel Online can open the files in your browser. For the Excel mobile app, go tothe appropriate store for your device:
Excel Viewer Download For Mac
Download File: https://urlca.com/2vI5IU
Is there an Excel viewer for Mac OS X? I understand that the OS X developer tools are free and the Excel format is documented and I can teach myself Objective C on the web and set "write Excel viewer" as my first assignment, but I am hoping for a solution with a lower activation energy.
Microsoft recently discontinued the older versions of Office viewers. Microsoft will not provide hotfix, service pack, or security update support for these products. The discontinued Office viewers are as follows:
The Word Viewer, PowerPoint Viewer and Excel Viewer have been retired. These Viewers will no longer be available for download or receive security updates. To continue viewing Office files for free, we recommend installing the Office apps or storing documents in OneDrive or Dropbox, where Word Online, Excel Online or PowerPoint Online opens them in your browser. For the mobile apps, visit the store for your device.
The federal Rehabilitation Act Section 508 requires that the above free viewers must themselves comply with the accessibility guidelines. Below are links to the Voluntary Product Accessibility Templates (VPATs) for these products:
The instructions below provide assistance for downloading several file types housed on the MEPS Web site. This gives you the opportunity to save many documents directly to your computer, including .txt, .pdf, .html, .shtml, .jsp, .ssp, .dat, .xls, .csv, and .ppt files. Image files associated with these files will not be included in the downloaded version. ASCII files We do not recommend viewing public use data files in ASCII format. To view SAS programming statements in ASCII format, left-click on the file link. To download an ASCII file while using Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox, right-click to bring up a menu and then left-click on "Save Target As" or "Save Link As" to bring up the "Save As" window. CSV files
SAS files We do not recommend viewing SAS files. To download a SAS file while using Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox, right-click to bring up a menu and then left-click on "Save Target As" or "Save Link As" to bring up the "Save As" window.
SAS transport files We do not recommend viewing SAS transport files. To download a SAS transport file while using Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox, right-click to bring up a menu and then left-click on "Save Target As" or "Save Link As" to bring up the "Save As" window.
TXT files To view files in TXT format, left-click on the file link. To download a TXT file while using Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox, right-click to bring up menu, then left-click on "Save Target As" or "Save Link As" to bring up the "Save As" window.
Zipped and self-extracting files We do not recommend viewing zipped files or self-extracting files. Downloading data files in the compressed format (designated by the extension .zip or .exe) will significantly reduce download times. To uncompress and download, while using either Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox, right-click to bring up a menu. Then, left -click on "Save Target As" or "Save Link As," which will bring up the "Save As" window, and follow the directions of your zip file utility to download the file. Compressed files greatly reduce download times. Files in zipped format can be uncompressed using a zip utility (see below). Files in self-extracting format have Windows zip utility software built in; the data may be uncompressed by running (i.e., double-clicking) the downloaded executable.If you do not have a zip file utility already installed on your computer, there are many vendors on the Internet who can provide zip file format utilities for Windows, Mac, Linux, and Unix.
Origin 2018 introduced a new Unicode-compliant (UTF-8) project file type -- the OPJU file. These files cannot be opened in pre-2018 versions of Origin (Origin 2018 and newer versions retain the ability to save files in the older OPJ format). For backward compatibility, Origin users and non-users alike will appreciate that the free Viewer can convert OPJU files to the older OPJ format. If you have been given an OPJU file and cannot open it in your older version of Origin, (1) download and run this Viewer (no installation needed!), (2) drop your OPJU file onto the Viewer and (3) choose File: Save Project As and save as OPJ.
The Viewer cannot be used to copy data created with the Evaluation (Demo) version, nor will it copy data from Origin projects created with versions previous to Origin 8.1. Q: When I try to view some of the graph windows in my Origin project, I see the following message: "Image support missing. Visit for more information." What is this about?A: To view matrix images or image plots with the Windows Viewer, go to the Origin Viewer download page and download the correct ImagePack zip file for your Windows OS. Unzip the contents to the folder where you are running your Origin Viewer. Close and re-launch the Viewer, then open your Origin project file. You should now be able to view matrix images and image plots.
Q: If I wanted to send an Origin project to a colleague who does not have Origin, what is the best way to include the Viewer? A: The downloaded Viewer and any needed support files can be sent along with your Origin project, to your colleague. Your colleague can then copy the Viewer and files to his or her hard drive and run the application without an installation process. Of course, you can always direct your colleague to the Origin Viewer download page. Your colleague can then download and install the Viewer on his/her own.
Q: Can I install the Viewer on a shared machine and let everyone in my group run it?A: Yes. The Viewer can run without installation. Simply share the installation folder to share the Viewer with your group.
Q: Can I copy the Viewer to a USB stick together with my Origin project files and show them to people even though they haven't installed the Viewer on their machines?A: Yes, in most cases. This is similar to running the Viewer from a remote drive. More details, including some limitations, are available in the ReadMe.TXT included with the Viewer application.
Q: Does the Origin Viewer support the latest Origin graph types, including the OpenGL 3D graphs?A: The Origin Viewer supports viewing any Origin graph created with OpenGL. It does NOT support some of the "infographic" plot types introduced in recent versions of Origin (e.g. Sunburst, Pie Map, Doughnut, etc).
Q: Does the Origin Viewer 9.9.5 have Windows 64-bit support?A: The Origin Viewer 9.9.5 is available for the 64-bit Windows OS (32-bit Windows is no longer supported).
Q: When I run the Origin Viewer EXE (Windows OS), I get an error "mfc140.dll not found".A: MFC140.dll is an MFCDLL Shared Library developed by Microsoft Corporation. If you get this error, please download and install the MS redistributable EXE file for your OS:For 64-bit Windows, download vcredist_x64-2015-2019.exe.
Q: Can I write my own code to create Origin project files and open them using the free Viewer?A: Yes, you can use the free Orglab component from OriginLab to create your own project files, using C#, VB, etc.
Q: Can I pose questions about the Viewer on the OriginLab forum?A: Yes, in fact there is a forum specifically for users of the Viewer and Orglab applications.
Developer Notes (Windows Platform)The Origin Viewer is distributed only as an EXE file and is not made available for customization. OriginLab does provide a download of interest to software developers and instrument manufacturers. The Orglab component (pronounced "org" like the web domain), is a free application, available to those involved in custom application development. Orglab is available for 64-bit Windows, only.
30 August 2022: 333,333,333+ Downloads of Apache OpenOffice 22 July 2022: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.13 4 May 2022: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.12 6 October 2021: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.11 4 May 2021: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.10 7 February 2021: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.9 6 January 2021: New release for Apple's macOS 11 (Big Sur) - Also with fixes for Linux and Windows 10 November 2020: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.8 29 October 2020: 300 Million Downloads of Apache OpenOffice 15 October 2020: The Apache Software Foundation Celebrates 20 Years of OpenOffice 17 May 2020: Apache OpenOffice needs your help 15 October 2020: The Apache Software Foundation Celebrates 20 Years of OpenOffice 22 October 2019: 1.6 million downloads of Apache OpenOffice 4.1.7 21 September 2019: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.7 18 November 2018: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.6 31 January 2018: Over 3.2 million downloads of Apache OpenOffice 4.1.5 30 December 2017: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.5 19 October 2017: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.4 28 November 2016: Over 200 million downloads of Apache OpenOffice 12 October 2016: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.3 28 October 2015: Announcing Apache OpenOffice 4.1.2 27 September 2015: Coming soon... Apache OpenOffice 4.1.2 13 May 2015: Authoring e-Books in Apache OpenOffice 13 April 2015: Collaboration is in our DNA 2ff7e9595c
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