Screenshots
- When you first launch Gnumeric, it looks like this
- The new cell format dialog has been much improved, some pictures here show the background, border, font, and number pages.
- Gnumeric has a number of Analysis tools, once you select a tool, you get to run it with your own data as shown here. Of course we do have a Goal seek feature.
- You can see how Gnumeric supports the various excel patterns and border types. Of course, the coloring there is terrible, but that just proves that we were not born with a clear idea of good visual composition.
- You can customize the printing options in a number of ways: Page setup, headers and footers, margins, page details.
- Printing is achieved using the GNOME printing architecture which provides a unified API to print. Here you can see the print preview in action. Gnome Print uses Type1 fonts and supports fully anti-aliasing of them, so you get a high quality printing, you can see a detail here after the preview has been zoomed in.
- We do support many usability features found on other spreadsheets, here you can see a formula being entered