Mac Os X Microsoft Publisher

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Microsoft publisher has been around for a long time but it has never been able to run on Apple computers. If you’re like me you probably have friends who have Microsoft publisher files they occasionally email you. Sadly there is no way to open a Microsoft publisher file on a Mac, until now…

You have choices when it comes to choosing Microsoft Office for Mac. You can either select Office 365 Mac, which is a cloud-based subscription service with many collaborative features, or Mac Office 2019, which is a one-time purchase geared more towards personal and small businesses use. MS Office for Mac 2019 can be used on a single Mac, with no ongoing annual fee. Microsoft office for mac os free download - Apple Mac OS Update 8.1, Apple Mac OS X Snow Leopard, ThinkFree Desktop for Mac OS X, and many more programs. LibreOffice is a free, open-source alternative to Microsoft Office for Mac and is based on the popular free Office suite OpenOffice. As of version 4.0, LibreOffice is the only program to both open and edit Microsoft Publisher files for free although you can’t export to Publisher format.

Here are two websites that can convert Microsoft publisher files to PDF.

You can then open, read and print the pdf file on your Mac. You can even edit them.

I have tested both of these conversion sites and they both work pretty well. They are both free.

Site one is easier, to use, just read the instructions below, but I’ve included two sites just in case one of them goes down or doesn’t work for you.

CONTINUE READING >

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How to print a PDF booklet.How to copy a fontHow to Share a Pages file with a Windows user.How to find things with SpotlightMake your own keyboard shortcuts« Older CommentsMaussays:August 21, 2019 at 10:44 pm

So grateful for this info. I used the second recommended site without problems. Thank you.

ReplyLaurensays:August 27, 2019 at 3:55 pm

Thanks so much! I don’t understand why Publisher isn’t Mac-compatible when most Office products are.

ReplyDarlenesays:September 16, 2019 at 8:07 pm

Oh, my goodness! I am so grateful for this! I have so many Publisher files that I haven’t been able to see since I bought my Mac in 2017; most of them being poems I’ve written. This will make it so easy to see them once again. Thank you, thank you!!!

ReplyGordonsays:September 29, 2019 at 5:11 pm

Lauren,

The office suite is molded to the Mac by the Mac Business Unit at MS. They do so because those tools have little competition in the marketplace. When it comes to design functions, most of those on the mac are far surpassed by the Adobe product line – InDesign, Photoshop, and Illustrator. So MS doesn’t bother porting Publisher to the mac because it can’t compete. Simple cost-benefit analysis.

ReplyMichaelsays:September 24, 2019 at 9:08 am

Thank you so much! Online2pdf worked like a charm.

ReplyGORDONsays:September 29, 2019 at 8:24 pm

In looking at the two sites offered here, both seem to have file size limitations. One actually states it at 100MB while the other just fails to work (I was parsing a 142MB file to PDF from PUB).

A better working site, for me, has turned out to be https://www.zamzar.com/
It actually appears to be a better site all the way around as it easily parsed my larger files and offers several conversion file types.

ReplyWaynesays:October 2, 2019 at 3:35 pm

Great tip thanks Gordon

ReplyBethsays:October 8, 2019 at 2:06 pm

Question – Our Creative department works on Mac’s but one of our clients needs files in Publisher (they work on PC’s) Is there any Mac software that will let you save as a Publisher file?

ReplyMicrosoft publisher mac os xWaynesays:October 16, 2019 at 9:19 pm

Not that I know of.

ReplyPatsysays:November 29, 2019 at 5:15 pm

Thank you – this is very helpful – the second listed site worked for me

ReplySamsays:February 2, 2020 at 10:58 am

Another good site that has less restrictions is https://www.filezigzag.com/online-converter . Bulk conversions available as well.

ReplyNeilsays:February 3, 2020 at 9:41 am

This is brilliant. Thanks very much.

ReplyGladyssays:February 24, 2020 at 8:38 pm

Many thanks! Option 1 worked like a charm.

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Microsoft

A lot of people ask me whether it is possible to get Microsoft publisher for the Macintosh computer, or whether there is an equivalent piece of software. Unfortunately the answer is no, there has never been a Macintosh version of publisher, and this article tries to explain why, and what the options are.

Microsoft Publisher is a very popular piece of software for Windows computers. It fills of a gap on Windows computers because Microsoft Office does not have the capability to do page layout like Apple Pages does. As you think about more alternatives to Microsoft publisher for a window computer, Adobe PageMaker and InDesign are too expensive and complex for most everyday users. So when people want to do a simple newsletter, but one that’s too complicated for Microsoft Word, Microsoft Publisher fills the gap nicely. Microsoft Word documents tend to look pretty bland whereas publisher allows you to spruce them up a bit.

Microsoft publisher fills a gap on Windows computers that does not exist in OSX

Now let’s think about the Macintosh computer, there is no such gap. Apple Pages can do pretty much everything Publisher can do! So a Macintosh user has no need for Microsoft Publisher. Apple Pages can produce some quite spectacular documents very simply, and unless you are a professional publisher there’s really not the need to step up to PageMaker or InDesign. This does not really leave a market for Microsoft Publisher on the Macintosh computer, except for Macintosh users to be able to read a publisher document that was created on a PC! So while this would be a nice convenience for Macintosh users, I don’t imagine it is a large market for Microsoft Publisher.

Microsoft Word is a different story though. Microsoft Word was first released for Apple Computer back in 1984. Microsoft Word is a professional word-processing application that in many ways is superior to Apple pages, and was superior to Apple works and Claris Works. If you are writing large or complex documents there is and always has been a huge market for Microsoft Word on the Apple Computer.

If you are waiting for a version of Microsoft Publisher to appear for Macintosh computer, I would not be holding your breath.

If you want to access a Microsoft publisher document there are a couple of options.

The first one is to use Libre Office. Libre Office

Mac os x microsoft publisher software

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The other option is to use one of these solutions I have described in this article. This will give you a PDF version of the Microsoft Publisher document that retains all its original formatting. You can’t really do anything with the PDF version unless you own Adobe Pagemaker, but you will be able to accurately view and print the Microsoft publisher document.

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Autosave, file recovery and finding old deleted files in Microsoft Word 2016 for OS XHow to improve the appearance of Microsoft Word 2016 on OS XHow to match the colours on your monitor to your printer.Gary Ware

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says:August 28, 2018 at 1:04 am

Finally used boot camp to set up windows partition on MacBook to pretty much purely run Publisher.
Couldn’t believe I didn’t do it years ago.
Can move between one or the other in under a minute or so.
It’s more a utility of neither Publisher or Pages being able to be used on the other operating system that has been the issue for us. Our office runs windows, I use Mac.

ReplyWaynesays:August 30, 2018 at 4:43 pm

Thanks Gary – that’s a good solution if you are caught needing to use both.

ReplyKensays:April 4, 2019 at 7:17 pm

I’m sorry but I use Pages almost daily, and there is no comparison to what Publisher can do. I run bootcamp like Gary because I can never get documents that consistently look as good as they do on Publisher.

ReplyKeithsays:May 6, 2019 at 2:16 pm

I have similar issues trying to open .pub files on LibreOffice. Supposedly you can simply open those files in that particular office suite, but it won’t populate the graphics. That just makes the whole process senseless without them. Anyone have an idea?

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Mac Os X Microsoft Publishers

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