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We gather data from the best available sources, including vendor and retailer listings as well as other relevant and independent reviews sites. But then it can commandline- and batch-convert to PDF various MS Office-based file formats, including XLS(X), PPT(X), DOC(X), VSD(X) and PUB as well as Libre/OpenOffice-based ODT, ODS and ODC files.ZDNET's recommendations are based on many hours of testing, research, and comparison shopping. It requires a working Office 2013, Office 2010 or Office 2007 installation. It is hosted on CodePlex, licensed with the Apache 2.0 License and available in binary and in source code. If you are working on Windows, you may also want to consider OfficeToPDF.exe. Are the page dimensions as you expect? Did you set them up how you prefer? The margins like you want them? etc.pp. Does it look like you expect it to look? Or are some formatting options looking weird?Įxport the PDF from there (with the GUI). Open the XLS file with LibreOffice in a GUI. If the result does not look like you expect (not similar enough to Excel's native PDF export), then start with debugging the first step from above: Import the XLS into LibreOffice (even if started with -headless).If you use LibreOffice to convert Microsoft Excel (XLS) files to PDF documents, this is a two-step process (even if your command does look like it is a one-step process):
