2/21/2026 at 1:36:10 PM
I am not an MS Office user, but I have seen the effect of format lock-in with Google Sheets. A few months back I began a project to de-Google my life, which went pretty smoothly until I tried to download my spouse's accounting spreadsheet from Google Sheets to Excel format. Both LibreOffice and Excel could open it, but nothing worked correctly. So for several months, I kept that one Google Sheet live until I could come up with an alternative. When I created the original file in Sheets, I was blindly using all sorts of features and capabilities (including Google Forms) that simply have no direct analog in other products.A couple of days ago I bit the bullet and dug into the Excel file and figured out how to redesign everything and get it going again. Yay me. I'll admit I don't like the UI in LibreOffice, but I didn't like it very much when I first tried using it (as Star Office) back in the 90s either. Yet I keep coming back to it.
If I'm going to be locked into a format or app, I'd rather it be something like LibreOffice.
by vertnerd
2/21/2026 at 2:06:20 PM
Your use case (specifically with Forms) seems aligned with Grist, which is also open source and has been adopted by the French government.In my experience, it’s much stricter than a standard spreadsheet though. It feels a bit like moving from Python to Java.
by maxloh
2/21/2026 at 2:02:50 PM
Did you try exporting it in the OpenDocument (.ods) format?by 1e1a