About Converting Microsoft Office Documents /text/shared/guide/ms_import_export_limitations.xhp Microsoft Office;document import restrictions import restrictions for Microsoft Office Microsoft Office;importing password protected files MW moved "Microsoft Office;" from shared/guide/protection.xhp About Converting Microsoft Office Documents $[officename] can automatically open Microsoft Office 97/2000/XP documents. However, some layout features and formatting attributes in more complex Microsoft Office documents are handled differently in $[officename] or are unsupported. As a result, converted files require some degree of manual reformatting. The amount of reformatting that can be expected is proportional to the complexity of the structure and formatting of the source document. $[officename] cannot run Visual Basic Scripts, but can load them for you to analyze. The most recent versions of %PRODUCTNAME can load and save the Microsoft Office Open XML document formats with the extensions docx, xlsx, and pptx. The same versions can also run some Excel Visual Basic scripts, if you enable this feature at %PRODUCTNAME - PreferencesTools - Options - Load/Save - VBA Properties. The following lists provide a general overview of Microsoft Office features that may cause conversion challenges. These will not affect your ability to use or work with the content of the converted document. Microsoft Word AutoShapes Revision marks OLE objects Certain controls and Microsoft Office form fields Indexes Tables, frames, and multi-column formatting Hyperlinks and bookmarks Microsoft WordArt graphics Animated characters/text Microsoft PowerPoint AutoShapes Tab, line, and paragraph spacing Master background graphics Grouped objects Certain multimedia effects Microsoft Excel AutoShapes OLE objects Certain controls and Microsoft Office form fields Pivot tables New chart types Conditional formatting Some functions/formulas (see below) One example of differences between Calc and Excel is the handling of boolean values. Enter TRUE to cells A1 and A2. In Calc, the formula =A1+A2 returns the value 2, and the formula =SUM(A1;A2) returns 2. In Excel, the formula =A1+A2 returns 2, but the formula =SUM(A1,A2) returns 0.in SUM(A1<limiter>A2), use the Excel limiter comma , in English and semicolon ; in German For a detailed overview about converting documents to and from Microsoft Office format, see the Migration Guide. Opening Microsoft Office Documents That Are Protected With a Password %PRODUCTNAME can open the following Microsoft Office document types that are protected by a password. Microsoft Office format Supported encryption method Word 6.0, Word 95 Weak XOR encryption Word 97, Word 2000, Word XP, Word 2003 Office 97/2000 compatible encryption Word XP, Word 2003 Weak XOR encryption from older Word versions Excel 2.1, Excel 3.0, Excel 4.0, Excel 5.0, Excel 95 Weak XOR encryption Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel XP, Excel 2003 Office 97/2000 compatible encryption Excel XP, Excel 2003 Weak XOR encryption from older Excel versions
Microsoft Office files that are encrypted by AES128 can be opened. Other encryption methods are not supported.
Setting the default file format