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- TidBITS#129/ClarisWorks
- =======================
-
- If you're a power user and won't use anything but high-end
- software tools or ResEdit, don't read this review. If you have
- more modest needs and you're interested in being able to use a
- number of different types of software packages, read on for an
- excellent discussion of ClarisWorks, perhaps the best of the new
- breed of integrated packages.
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
- publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- Copyright 1992 Matthew Wall -- wall@cc.swarthmore.edu
- Swarthmore College Academic Computing
- This review may be reproduced in part or entirety without
- permission providing proper citation is included. The author
- would appreciate a copy of any reproduction or citation.
-
- For information send email to info@tidbits.com or ace@tidbits.com
- CIS: 72511,306 -- AppleLink: ace@tidbits.com@internet#
- AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- ClarisWorks Review
- Basic Facts
- Integration
- Page Layout Capabilities
- Import/Export Features
- Macros
- Word Processing
- Graphics
- Spreadsheet and Charting
- Database and Mail Merge
- Communications
- Learning ClarisWorks
- What's Not There
- The Bottom Line
- ClarisWorks Details
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-129.etx; 29K]
-
-
- ClarisWorks Review
- ------------------
- by Matthew Wall -- wall@cc.swarthmore.edu
-
- This review does not compare different works programs, but it will
- give you a good understanding of how ClarisWorks integrates
- different types of software into one functional package. In my
- opinion, ClarisWorks is the best overall of the three new works
- programs (BeagleWorks and GreatWorks being the others). Whether
- ClarisWorks is right for you depends on three factors:
-
- * The importance of easy integration and consistency of interface
- between different modules/applications.
-
- * The relative need for certain features in each module.
-
- * The cost and efficacy of ClarisWorks compared to shareware and
- commercial alternatives.
-
-
- Basic Facts
- -----------
- ClarisWorks requires at least System 6.0.5 and 1 MB of RAM. Under
- System 7, like everything else, it requires 2 MB of RAM.
-
- The manuals include installation instructions appropriate for
- floppy-based Macs and hard drive systems. The application itself
- occupies 562K on disk. The application memory partition defaults
- to 900K, but it can be set as low as 768K. ClarisWorks can work
- easily on a Mac with two 800K floppies, and it's possible with
- some finagling to place the application on a single 800K floppy
- disk along with a bootable System 6 or a bootable high-density
- System 7 disk. One must do without the spelling, file translator,
- and thesaurus functions under these configurations, but these can
- be kept on separate floppy disks. I would still recommend a Plus-
- level machine with at least 2.5 MB of RAM and a hard drive as the
- preferred entry point for using ClarisWorks, but if you're stuck
- with something less, it's a usable and attractive option. The
- communications documents require a hard drive, however, since they
- require installation of the Mac Communications toolbox under
- System 6.
-
-
- Integration
- -----------
- Works programs typically divide their functions into modules
- traditionally corresponding to simplified versions of high-end
- applications. ClarisWorks eschews the whole module idea for the
- concept of "document type." ClarisWorks has five basic document
- types: Word Processing, Graphics, Spreadsheet, Database, and
- Communications. ClarisWorks also uses tools, frames, views, and
- windows (including split windows) as different means of performing
- different operations.
-
- As an experienced Mac user, I found this plethora of methods for
- creating documents initially confusing. However, when I approached
- it from a fresh perspective and bothered to read a few pages of
- the manual, these many methods began to make logical sense. To a
- less-experienced Mac user, ClarisWorks should be an intuitive and
- extremely easy way of integrating different computing tasks - much
- more so than the minefield of differing file import and export
- formats. It's important to understand the philosophy of
- integration underlying ClarisWorks, and the documentation presents
- the basic concepts very well.
-
- To be frank, none of the basic document types offer anything
- significantly new or innovative. Although Claris wrote the code
- from scratch, they tried to emulate its existing programs, notably
- MacWrite II and FileMaker Plus. If you desire full-featured,
- high-end programs, look elsewhere.
-
- It may be better to consider ClarisWorks in terms of
- functionality. From this perspective, ClarisWorks is also a
- powerful low-end page layout program, an acceptable charting
- program, an excellent, easy mail-merge system, and a good tool for
- note taking and later export to high-end applications. The
- traditional buyers of works programs, students and low-end office
- users, are extremely well served by ClarisWorks and should be
- joined by legions of PowerBook users.
-
- The integration of the various tools - the text, spreadsheet, and
- graphics tools in particular - is quite well done. The same menus
- and tools are available for the same tasks no matter what document
- type you're in. You can word process in a database, drop database
- fields into a spreadsheet, and drop a spreadsheet into a word
- processing document. The document type might be better considered
- as a framework for organizing a document rather than a fundamental
- unit of a ClarisWorks document.
-
- ClarisWorks employs the concept of a "frame," an object of a
- certain document type. Frames are "windows" into another data and
- tool type that can be arranged and edited within a document type.
- A ClarisWorks document could have a word processing frame and a
- spreadsheet frame and graphics objects, which aren't technically
- frames, but can be moved around as in a normal draw-type program.
- ClarisWorks has the initially-strange characteristic that a
- certain document type can have one or more frames of the _same_
- type, so a word processing document can also have a word
- processing frame. This feature enables the powerful page layout
- capabilities described below. Spreadsheet frames can include
- charts generated from spreadsheet data. A tools palette can be
- displayed in every document, which allows a quick switch between
- different tools. Frames can be picked up and re-arranged with the
- arrow tool and those that rely on common data update one another,
- so changing the data in a spreadsheet automatically alters a chart
- based on those figures. The glaring exception is the database
- document type, which requires cutting and pasting of data into the
- other document types. The Communications document type works
- differently, as described below.
-
- Once you understand the basic mechanics of frames vs. windows vs.
- document types, the power of ClarisWorks lies in its document
- design capabilities. I initially made the mistake of trying to use
- ClarisWorks like I would use separate applications under
- MultiFinder - copying and pasting data between different documents
- as I composed. When one pastes data directly in this manner, it
- becomes "dead" - an update of the original document won't update
- the target document. If instead a given document type is viewed as
- the base document, then other data can be imported in whatever
- manner is the most convenient - as a live linked frame, as a
- movable but unlinked frame, or as plain text.
-
-
- Page Layout Capabilities
- ------------------------
- The most amazing feature of ClarisWorks is the least touted in the
- advertising and packaging: page layout. The combination of three
- elements makes ClarisWorks one of the better low-end page layout
- buys to date on the Mac: flexible and editable views, the frames
- concept, and the object-oriented graphics document type.
-
- All document types and frames allow completely flexible and
- editable views of the document from 3.13% all the way up to 3200%.
- The surprising thing is how quickly ClarisWorks rescales the view.
- Only with a complicated set of graphics, spreadsheet, and word
- processing frames in a single longish document is any significant
- delay during rescaling noticeable. TrueType makes scaling over
- 100% extremely legible, and 12-point type is legible down to about
- 50% reduction.
-
- Another innovative viewing feature is the ability to change how
- the pages scroll across the screen. They can be re-arranged to not
- only go side by side but also across pages horizontally up to a
- nine page-wide grid - in other words, nine pages across as you
- click the horizontal scroll bar.
-
- Combine the live editing, excellent legibility, and multiple page
- layout views, and you have an amazing page layout tool. Layout
- tasks that are normally a struggle in Word and Word Perfect are
- truly a pleasure in ClarisWorks. I've even reduced a document view
- down to 3.13% and effectively used this view to rearrange
- paragraphs and charts.
-
- The page layout power doesn't stop there, though. Because any
- frame or graphic can be rearranged with the arrow tool, you can
- achieve fairly professional effects with a little work. This can
- be done in the word processing, database, and spreadsheet document
- types, but is best accomplished via a graphics document, which
- provides grouping and ungrouping, the ability to lock objects
- and/or anchor them to other objects, a lockable grid, and full
- access to frame and view features. Further, ClarisWorks has an
- innovative feature in that frames and graphical objects can
- actually be broken over page breaks, if you wanted to do that for
- some bizarre reason.
-
- The results are fantastically useful. You can flow graphics, text,
- and charts around one another simply by rearranging things with
- the arrow tool. While the linked text frames can take a bit of
- getting used to, once understood they make a variety of otherwise-
- difficult tasks easy, such as adjusting text to flow around a
- diagram. Text and graphics can rotate in 90 degree increments
- (although rotating a resized or linked object or frame breaks the
- links). Objects can be moved backwards and forwards in layers, so
- that one can get any combination of overlays. Sure, you don't have
- all the bells and whistles of real page layout programs, but you
- do get one of the snappiest document formatters around.
-
-
- Import/Export Features
- ----------------------
- ClarisWorks really suffers in file import and export. Using
- numerous translators and the XTND system, ClarisWorks can import
- and export a fairly impressive range of word processing and
- graphics documents for a low-end program. However, it can't
- directly import most spreadsheet and database formats, and
- disappointingly it cannot even import or export to Claris's own
- products, FileMaker Pro, Resolve, or MacDraw II. Claris says that
- improving import/export, along with System 7-savvy features, would
- have significantly delayed release, so they decided to leave those
- features for the future.
-
- The Standard File dialogs do have the nice feature of being able
- to look at known imports of only certain types (e.g. only word
- processing, only graphics, etc.) or all ClarisWorks or all
- possible imports at once. Text-only documents are readable as any
- document type and are treated appropriately - tabbed data is put
- in the appropriate column when read into a spreadsheet, put into
- fields in a database, etc.
-
- Here's a complete list of import and export options currently
- available, as shown in the SFDialog box:
-
-
- Word Processing
- Import:
- Acta 3.0, AppleWorks, AppleWorks GS, MacWrite, MacWrite II, Word
- 3.0, Word 4.0, Word PC, Microsoft Works 1.1 and 2.0, Microsoft
- Write, RTF, Text, WordPerfect Mac 1.0, WordPerfect PC 4.2,
- WordPerfect PC 5.0, WriteNow, WriteNow NeXT
-
- Export:
- all the above with the exception of Acta, plain AppleWorks, oldest
- MacWrite, and WordPerfect PC 5.0, and with the addition of
- WriteNow 1.1-2.0, MacWrite 5.0, and AppleWorks 2.0.
-
-
- Graphics:
- Import: EPSF, MacPaint, MacPaint 2.0, TIFF, PICT
- Export: PICT only.
-
-
- Spreadsheet:
- Import: ASCII, DIF, SYLK, AppleWorks SS, Microsoft Works 2.0 SS
- Export: ASCII, DIF, SYLK
-
-
- Database:
- Import: ASCII, DIF, SYLK, AppleWorks DB, Microsoft Works 2.0 DB
- Export: ASCII, DIF, SYLK
-
-
- Communications:
- Export terminal session as a text-only or ClarisWorks word
- processing document.
-
-
- Macros
- ------
- Another plus for ClarisWorks is its simple macro feature,
- available in every document type. These are record-only macros;
- there are no scripts to save or edit via a command language.
- Macros can be saved in separate ClarisWorks files and used, when
- appropriate, in different document types than the one they were
- created in. You have to assign every macro an command-option-key
- keystroke or a function key, a feature which allows the creation
- of keyboard equivalents for virtually any menu item, tool, or
- operation. (I quickly found this particularly appropriate for
- switching between custom scaled views.) One nice feature of the
- macro implementation is the ability to record pauses for
- communications sequences, and to make macros wait for certain
- tasks to finish before proceeding.
-
-
- Word Processing
- ---------------
- The word processing tool/document type/frame is essentially a
- slight reworking of MacWrite II, with a few features missing and a
- few added. If you're unfamiliar with MacWrite II, it's a capable
- entry-level word processor with enough features for most people.
- The ruler, format, font, size, and style systems are basically
- unchanged from MacWrite II. ClarisWorks also includes sub and
- superscripts, user-definable point sizes, a WYSIWYG font menu, and
- copy-able and apply-able rulers. Other features parallel MacWrite
- II but are arranged in a more intelligent manner with hierarchical
- menus. The hoary Microlytics thesaurus is available via the
- Spelling menu. Any graphics file (MacPaint, PICT, or TIFF) or
- compatible word processing file can be inserted directly into a
- ClarisWorks document with the Insert... command.
-
- What's missing: the most annoying thing I found by far was the
- lack of a "Show Invisibles" feature. The ability to see the space,
- tab, and paragraph markers would have been welcome. There's no
- hyphenation capability, nor can one make footnotes anywhere except
- at the bottom of the page. The "spell word" and auto-spell
- features are gone. Custom rulers have been excised, although the
- macro functions can provide the equivalent with a little more
- futzing. I also noticed a slight performance hit in scrolling text
- once a document got to be a certain length, but this seemed
- intermittent and was not serious.
-
- Such missing items are mostly quibbles. The addition of the page
- layout capabilities described above make the word processing tools
- more than the equivalent of MacWrite II, and for the novice user
- probably simplify the task of learning word processing. [One
- additional feature missing from the ClarisWorks that some people
- might bemoan is the lack of any user definable styles. -Adam]
-
-
- Graphics
- --------
- The graphics layer is the only part of ClarisWorks that can be
- described as truly disappointing. Although it supports color fills
- and lines, it's otherwise a generic draw program. Other than the
- text and spreadsheet frames, it has only straight line (with or
- without arrows), rectangle, oblong, circle, arc, polygon,
- irregular polygon, and fill tools. The oblong tool does have a
- nice corner smoothing algorithm, as does the irregular polygon.
- The graphics document layer has the sophistication of the original
- MacDraw.
-
- It's a mystery to me why the company that publishes MacPaint
- couldn't come up with just a few painting tools. ClarisWorks has
- no painting capabilities, despite the misleading use of clip art
- in the tutorials and manuals. Given that draw/paint and word
- processing are the most heavily used modules in most works
- environments, it's a serious design mistake. If you rely on paint-
- level graphics, you'll have to buy another program to supplement
- ClarisWorks. However, the draw graphics should suffice for many
- student compositions or general lab reports.
-
-
- Spreadsheet and Charting
- ------------------------
- In many ways, the spreadsheet document type/tool is the best part
- of the ClarisWorks package.
-
- The spreadsheet is a fully functional - and fairly friendly -
- number crunching and presentation tool. It's at about the Excel
- 2.0-2.1 level without any of Microsoft's funky interface
- weirdness. Although the macro feature does not allow true
- scripting, the recordable macros combined with the 101 built-in
- functions will more than suffice for most office work and student
- work in the social sciences or in introductory natural science
- classes. It's not quite as powerful as the shareware BiPlane
- spreadsheet, but its linking features and smooth interface make it
- a better bet.
-
- ClarisWorks smoothly integrates spreadsheet frames throughout the
- whole application. Frames can be linked to one another like text
- frames, and ClarisWorks automatically links them to any included
- charts. Creating a chart is simply a matter of selecting the data
- and choosing from one of seven chart types (pie, bar/histogram,
- stacked bar/histogram, line with multiple graphs, scatter, x-y
- scatter, and x-y line). All charts can be done in color and
- several in 3D. The charting dialog is simple and easy to use -
- almost too simple for those accustomed to describing graphing
- options by name. Limited legend and axis options can be accessed
- for each graph from a single dialog box. ClarisWorks displays all
- chart types graphically rather than via menus. Changing linked
- spreadsheet data quickly updates dependent charts, and charts
- automatically turn into graphics objects, ready for annotation.
- The charting features resemble those of CricketGraph without the
- lousy Cricket interface.
-
-
- Database and Mail Merge
- -----------------------
- The database document type/tool, although not fully integrated
- into the other modules, is a real treat. It's another seeming
- retread - basically FileMaker Plus. But what a retread! FileMaker
- Plus was a terrific flat file database that went through several
- generations to become FileMaker Pro. It had easy field design and
- flexible layouts, allowed inclusion of graphics, and was easily
- modifiable at any point. ClarisWorks updates only a few menus and
- incorporates the common ClarisWorks features - text and
- spreadsheet frames - within the overall graphical-object
- ClarisWorks framework. You'd be hard-pressed to find a much better
- low-end database.
-
- There's not much integration of the database to the other document
- types, however. Data copied from the database pastes directly into
- spreadsheet and word processing frames as tab delimited text, but
- fields and layouts can't be integrated with charting and graphics.
-
- Claris did integrate the database into the word processing
- document type in the most important way, or at least in the way in
- which most people will use it: the mail merge. When a database
- document is opened, any word processing document or frame can be
- used as a "model" letter for a mail merge. Selecting Mail Merge
- from the File menu automatically brings up a dialog box with all
- possible databases listed. Double-clicking a database brings up
- all the fields in the database. Double-clicking a field name
- inserts the field marker at the insertion point. The whole
- database can then be merged with a click of the OK button. I have
- yet to see a less painful way of doing a mail merge.
-
-
- Communications
- --------------
- The communications document type is only barely integrated with
- the rest of ClarisWorks, but it's also the closest to a state of
- the art application. Based on the Communications Toolbox, the
- communications module provides basic terminal connections and file
- transfer. There are some catches, though.
-
- First the good news: this is about the easiest communications
- program you could imagine. Even abstruse items such as the
- communications settings, terminal and keyboard layout, and local
- echo are easy to configure. Balloon help and use of graphical cues
- and icons to explain the set-ups should make using the program
- itself a snap. Pop-up menus provide graphical numeric keypads and
- cursor keys to users without these options on their keyboards. A
- saved communications document can be configured to automatically
- connect via a modem or a direct serial line as soon as it's
- opened, so distribution of connection information can be very
- simple. File transfer is almost entirely automated, with only the
- steps on the host computer left out - and those can be automated
- with a macro. Well-executed file and screen capture routines
- should make downloading data to the Mac a breeze. One really nice
- feature is the ability to copy data from a host computer terminal
- session as if it were a table and paste it directly into word
- processing and spreadsheet documents as a tab-delimited grid.
-
- Now the bad news. Claris, in its infinite wisdom, saw fit to
- provide only TTY and VT102 terminals, only serial and modem
- connection tools, and only XMODEM and TEXT file transfer methods.
- Claris perhaps thought ClarisWorks users would be able to get
- other connection, terminal, and file transfer tools from other
- sources, but I find their lack of inclusion of at least a VT240
- and MacTCP tools quite puzzling. Apple has stated over and over
- its commitment to MacTCP, and an obvious target for ClarisWorks
- users are students and PowerBook-using faculty, yet TCP is not
- even mentioned in the Communications Handbook. Nor is there any
- provision for TEK graphics, the cutting and pasting of which from
- a mainframe host would be a boon to any student or office worker
- forced to use behemoths like SPSS and Minitab.
-
- Still, I rate the communications module an overall winner - its
- ease of use is unsurpassed, the errors Claris made are not
- insurmountable, and correcting the problems won't require
- rewriting the program.
-
-
- Learning ClarisWorks
- --------------------
- ClarisWorks has a fantastic and easy-to-use overall feel. However,
- the basic frames and links concepts and a number of details
- require study before you can use them effectively. Here's an
- overview of ClarisWorks's help tools.
-
- The online help can be found by typing command-?, looking under
- the Apple menu, or in balloon help under System 7. The online help
- is OK, and emphasizes examples over exhaustive reference. Its
- context-guessing feature is nicely implemented. I found myself
- referring to it far more frequently than any other source of help.
-
- HyperTour - this stack is a good starting point, and allows
- limited trials of some features. It's far too simple-minded to be
- of serious help to anyone but a novice user.
-
- Documentation - There are three manuals - but no reference manual.
- "Getting Started" is an excellent tutorial linked to sample
- documents included in the ClarisWorks distribution disks. The
- "ClarisWorks Handbook" is a user's guide to each tool, with task-
- oriented directions about integrating the tools. The
- "Communications Handbook" is a separate user's guide for the
- communications tool and the Apple Comm Toolbox.
-
-
- What's Not There
- ----------------
- ClarisWorks has a most disappointing lack of System 7-savvy
- features - no Publish & Subscribe, no use of AppleEvents, no
- nothing that's not in System 6 except for balloon help. Claris
- also missed an excellent opportunity to exploit the "linked
- frames" feature. This could easily have been made into a simple
- outline tool or even a basic hypertext system. I'm disappointed
- that ClarisWorks has absolutely no integration with HyperCard.
- Given the obvious slant of ClarisWorks towards the educational
- market, it's baffling why Claris ignored any mention, hook, or
- other use of HyperCard. I see it as further proof that the
- HyperCard group at Claris is in a different time and space warp
- than the other developers.
-
- In its manuals and promotions, Claris conveys the message that
- they see ClarisWorks as a gateway to "specialized" high-end
- products such as FileMaker Pro and Resolve. This makes it almost
- bizarre that ClarisWorks won't read or write to these file
- formats.
-
- In these days of integrated applications, Claris has deferred
- integrating electronic mail - perhaps in anticipation of Apple's
- OCE project bearing fruit later in '92. I'm not sure they should
- have. Even a simple Mac-to-Mac mail utility would have
- significantly increased the gee-whiz quality of ClarisWorks, and
- would have helped integrate the Communications module into the
- rest of the application.
-
-
- The Bottom Line
- ---------------
- The line between different types of applications has begun to
- gray. Word processors such as Nisus, WordPerfect, and Word now
- have graphics layers or modules, spreadsheets have presentation
- and text tools, and databases have object-oriented layouts - in
- the next five years we'll see more and more features added to
- programs so they effectively become integrated high-end works
- programs.
-
- In the meantime, ClarisWorks isn't a perfect product, but it comes
- pretty close for a first effort. Given Claris's excellent history
- of upgrades and support during its short history, going in at the
- beginning should be worth the potential hazards of using a brand-
- new product.
-
- For those in the education market, ClarisWorks is an excellent
- candidate for a first piece of software to go on a Macintosh. It
- will suffice for most K-12 uses by students and teachers. In
- higher education, most users will want to supplement it with other
- tools, but it makes an excellent choice for bundling with new
- computers or as a basic laboratory tool. With the introduction of
- QuickTime, live linked documents in ClarisWorks have intriguing
- possibilities for "live" reports and papers containing graphical
- demonstrations of the text.
-
- In the office environment, ClarisWorks should satisfy most users
- who wish to produce simple memos and letters, and who need to
- share data between spreadsheets and databases. It's a good pick
- for a smallish department or one looking for lots of different
- functions at a small cost. ClarisWorks especially shines at mail
- merges. If you often create mail merges from databases of a few
- thousand records or less, I can't recommend ClarisWorks highly
- enough - it's a peach.
-
- For home use, it's a good pick if you don't want to pay a bundle
- for unnecessarily high-powered software and don't trust shareware
- alternatives.
-
- For PowerBook owners - especially PowerBook 100 users - it's a
- must. ClarisWorks does 90% of even high-end-user's work in a lean
- and mean disk and RAM budget.
-
- All in all, if you're in one of the situations mentioned above,
- take a serious look at ClarisWorks before you buy a more
- expensive - and maybe unnecessarily complicated - alternative.
-
-
- ClarisWorks Details
- -------------------
-
- ClarisWorks 1.0v2
-
- Claris Corporation
- 5201 Patrick Henry Drive
- Santa Clara CA 95052-8168
- 408/987-7000
- CLARIS.TECH@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Price and Availability:
- ClarisWorks lists for $299, and is available for under $200 from
- mail order companies. Education users should get an even cheaper
- price, around $120. (Note that some educational resellers may
- still offer MacWrite II, MacPaint 2.0, and Resolve, with a free
- upgrade to MacWrite Pro, at a special bundle price of $99: if you
- only need word processing, graphics, and a spreadsheet and you
- have a Mac with at least 4 MB of RAM, this is a better deal.)
- Sidegrades for $99 are available if you already own another
- integrated package. Contact Claris or a dealer for more
- information.
-
-
- ..
-
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-