I didn't had to work with office documents for few years, so I can't tell how it looks like now, but what parts of text formatting does not work? They use to convert it pretty decently before. As I remember it was usually if forms and scripts and graphics were involved that it didn't work well, but simple text formatting worked well. I never wanted to pay for MS Office, so I used at home open/libre office and was rarely founding a troublesome file. I have no opinion on what should be done first at all. I was just reflecting on "unpleasant to work with". ODT might be easier to work with sure. Problem with ooxml is that MS is not really sticking to the specification and is doing things differently themselves, so Libre has to emulate parts that are different then the standard MS specified themselves. ________________________________ Från: Stefan Monnier Skickat: den 25 december 2020 22:08 Till: arthur miller Kopia: Tomas Hlavaty ; emacs-devel@gnu.org Ämne: Re: Sv: Emacs as a word processor (ways to convert Word/RTF proprietary files) > LibreOffice does quite good job of translating docx stuff you wrote about. Last I checked, LibreOffice still wasn't able to edit a "docx" file without losing significant formatting information in real-life cases. And I don't mean it as a criticism of LibreOffice. The "docx" format is not nearly as "documented" as you think it is. As for the original problem: I'm pretty sure it'd be hard enough to solve the problem for ODT documents, so I'd focus on that first (and leave the compatibility with formats that are actively designed to be hard to support (like docx) to other tools). Stefan