-
MacWrite is a
discontinued WYSIWYG word
processor released along with the
first Apple Macintosh systems in 1984.
Together with
MacPaint, it was one of...
- and
copyrights to
several programs that were
owned by Apple,
notably MacWrite and
MacPaint, in
order to
separate Apple's
application software activities...
- Lisa
Write and
MacWrite, Word for
Mac OS
added true
WYSIWYG features. It
fulfilled a need for a word
processor that was more
capable than
MacWrite. After...
- was sold
separately for US$195 with its word
processing counterpart,
MacWrite.
MacPaint was
notable because it
could generate graphics that
could be used...
-
eventually became WriteNow.
Members of the
WriteNow team knew
about MacWrite, but
members of the
MacWrite team did not know
about WriteNow.[citation needed]...
-
appear in more po****r computers,
including Lisa
Write for the
Apple Lisa,
released in 1983, and
MacWrite for the
Apple Macintosh,
released in 1984. The...
-
collaboration with
MacWrite. It was
eventually adapted by
Claris and, in the
early 1990s,
MacDraw Pro was
released with
color support.
MacDraw was the vector-based...
- difficult. Mind
Write could read
files from
MacWrite and ThinkTank, as well as
plain ASCII text. It
could write MacWrite and ASCII. Mind
Write 2.0
added Microsoft...
-
versions of
WordPad before Windows 7,
Write could justify a paragraph.
Write is
comparable to
early versions of
MacWrite. Nistor,
Codrut (October 8, 2024)...
-
bundled with two
applications designed to show off its interface:
MacWrite and
MacPaint. The
Macintosh was the
first successful m****-market all-in-one...