Android Advisor

Office for Android

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Price: Free (in-app purchases £5.99 to £7.99 per item)

Microsoft’s mobile version of Office for Android is distinctly unlike the Office app for Windows 10. While the latter seems little more than a gateway to your recently-used documents, our handson time with the mobile app shows an intelligen­t use of the smartphone’s capabiliti­es. Its road map of upcoming features is even more promising.

Microsoft’s Office app was announced in November at its Ignite conference, and has lived

in public preview since then. Google accidental­ly published the Office app early over the President’s Day holiday (17 February).

The mobile Office app actually replaces separate mobile apps such as Excel – you can uninstall them, and the Office app will still let you open and edit documents. Once a separate app, the Office Lens capabiliti­es for scanning whiteboard­s and other documents and converting them to editable text are now integrated. You can also create and sign PDFs directly from your phone. The Office app is available for Android phones and for Android tablets with ‘limited support’; a ‘fully optimized’ tablet experience for Android tablets is due soon.

Three key features are being added to the Office app in the next few months: the ability to pull out a row of data within Excel and edit it in a card format; the ability to create a PowerPoint presentati­on using just an outline, while tapping Microsoft’s AI to create formatting and background­s; and dictation within Word, something that’s been overdue for some time.

“This is the gateway to Office on mobile,” said Nithya Sampathkum­ar, principal group product manager for the mobile Office app, in an interview. “We want you to come here, feel like this is your content hub, and see all the content you work with here. And it’s a full-fledged app... you should be able to come here and get everything done.”

Hands on with the Office app for Android

The Office app starts off like the Office app for Windows 10, with a list of ‘recommende­d’ documents

for you to work on, based upon your recent history, presumably. Older documents can be found further down. There’s a search box to root out everything else, as well as a folder option to open documents from various places.

If you open a document authored in Word, you’ll be able to edit it using the mobile Word app – ditto for Excel and PowerPoint. Editing a document on a mobile phone takes some experiment­ation. You’ll need to realize that the stylus icon at the top right opens up editing mode, for example, as opposed to scrawling e-ink on the top of the document. Editing blocks of test requires a ‘long press’ to select it. And, of course, there’s really no way to hover over an icon and see what it does, so you’ll sometimes have to experiment and then use the back button to undo a mistake.

Tapping the ‘+’ button in the lower centre of the screen reveals that you can add a Sticky Note (that should sync with Windows 10), author a new

document, as well as access the Office Lens portion of the app.

Office Lens is worth a few moments of your time. Lens ‘looks’ at a whiteboard or printed document, intelligen­tly aligns it, and then scans it into your phone – just like a document scanner.

The interface conceals some of its depth; the automatic border that appears to show you the boundaries of what the app is ‘seeing’ is a bit faint, and by default the app saves whatever it sees as a photo. If you save what Office Lens sees as a ‘document’ and tap the file format

icon to save it as a Word file, the Office Lens app uses OCR scanning and converts it to text, and rather well.

From the home screen within the Office app, you can click the ‘action’ button near the bottom of the screen to enable a few more nifty options, including extracting text from a new (or saved) picture. You can create PDF files from photos, and even apply signatures.

As a parent, I can see the value of this solution: you can use the mobile Office app to take a photo of a permission slip (even those with more than one page) and save it as a PDF. The Office app allows you to sign them, though you’ll need to scrawl your signature on the screen, then add it to the document. It shouldn’t take you too long to figure out.

What’s coming in the future

As someone who chats to Cortana frequently from my home office, the ability to dictate text via the

Word app within the mobile Office applicatio­n should be useful. Naturally, accuracy will depend on how well the phone understand­s you; even Sampathkum­ar’s own demo wasn’t perfect, and you’ll still need to edit punctuatio­n anyway.

He also demonstrat­ed how a PowerPoint presentati­on could be made on the fly by typing a bulleted outline across several slides within PowerPoint. By relying on Microsoft’s own designer services for background, themes, and other niceties, a marketer on the go can create a fairly rich slide deck just from the back of a cab.

The third upcoming feature, the Excel ‘card view’, appears to be equally useful, if a bit nonintuiti­ve. Because of the limited screen space on a phone, all of the informatio­n stored in an Excel spreadshee­t row usually isn’t visible. Card view helps solve that by placing all of the row as a series of editable ‘cards’ that

form their own column down your phone. Card view doesn’t necessaril­y solve the problem of editing large spreadshee­ts within the constraint­s of a small phone, but it does make reading them easier.

It may be hard for some veteran Office users to conceive of doing real work on a phone. But others increasing­ly expect to do everything on their smartphone­s, and Microsoft needs to respond. Building out the capabiliti­es of the Office app seems like a good first start. Mark Hachman

System requiremen­ts

• Size varies with device • Android 6.0 or later

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 ??  ?? The Office app opens with a list of ‘recommende­d’ documents
The Office app opens with a list of ‘recommende­d’ documents
 ??  ?? Office allows you to create three types of files within the app: a typical Office document, a Sticky Note, and an Office document using the Office Lens capability
Office allows you to create three types of files within the app: a typical Office document, a Sticky Note, and an Office document using the Office Lens capability
 ??  ?? You can use Office Lens to scan a printed document, such as this page from a magazine
You can use Office Lens to scan a printed document, such as this page from a magazine
 ??  ?? The Office Lens output isn’t bad, although some of the formatting ended up jumbled
The Office Lens output isn’t bad, although some of the formatting ended up jumbled
 ??  ?? The ‘More actions’ menu hides a wealth of rather convenient utility functions, including the ability to scan images as a PDF and then later add a signature
The ‘More actions’ menu hides a wealth of rather convenient utility functions, including the ability to scan images as a PDF and then later add a signature

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