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Not to mention that sheets is far from a replacement for excel.


May I ask what you do with Excel that you cannot do with sheets?


Libreoffice and Sheets are both dead in the water non starters for all of the finance guys that I know.

The ability to open a million line csv file with 75 columns and execute a search and replace without leaking battery acid out of every orifice in your machine.

The hundreds of long complex well vetted plug ins that are drop and play with Excel which serve niche hard to reason about corners of regulation legalese. There has been so much cross pollination between the major firms that everybody has these tools and implements their own little tweaks.

The ability to quickly spin up a VBA macro to do some heavy lifting in a client provided 250 worksheet workbook each with 50000 line items (none escape quoted so every address with a comma in it malformed the data on client export).


The CSV support in Excel is a nightmare. And it still does moronic destructive things if it mistakes anything you're doing for a date.


That is my experience too, and I also find LibreOffice to be much faster than Excel for huge datasets. The biggest difference for me is clearly file compatibility and that is why I still use mostly Excel.


WHAT? CSV support in Excel is just completely broken. Million line CSVs are the only reason I have LO on my machine.

If LO would just make .xlsx a native format, they could probably take some market share from Excel. But, as long as there are little issues with interoperability, 100% of the world will be on Excel. Alas.


For me personally, sheets is fine although slow. For our finance people, vba and dynamics GP integration is a requirement.

We switched from o365 to gsuite in the last year, and have run into some things that make it feel like gsuite isn’t quite polished as a business product. Examples off the top of my head:

- Can’t share individual folders from a team drive. Not a dealbreaker, but hobbles g drive as a Dropbox replacement.

- Email to a suspended user bounces. In exchange, the mail goes through but access is cut off.

- inviting a google group to a meeting doesn’t work as smoothly as inviting an exchange group

- can’t delegate account access administratively, need to do it from the user account

There are big pluses too, and overall I’m not sad we switched. But it feels like MS has a much better handle on what corporate IT needs.


I'm sure the actual list is long, but I'd be happy if I could tweak graphs appearance, or do polynomial regression.


Plotting an X/Y scatter chart with lines linking the points.

Fit a polynomial trendline to a chart.

Choose the number of decimal places when showing a trendline's equation. Copy that equation, without re-typing it yourself.

Apply the solver to a nonlinear-but-continuously-differentiable system of equations.

You know, the stuff I could do in Office '95 on a 120MHz Pentium.




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