MacTech Releases Office Scripting Advisor Document
- Interview style advisor guides users to best scripting solution
- Options include Office 2004, 2007 under virtualization, and 2008
May 13, 2008 -- WESTLAKE VILLAGE, Calif. -- MacTech today released the
MacTech Office Scripting Advisor -- a set of guidelines, and questions
designed to guide readers to the best scripting options for Microsoft
Office. Hot on the heels of today's Microsoft announcement that VBA will be
returning to the Mac, the scripting advisor gives any type of script user
the answers they need.
"The choices for scripting Microsoft Office took another big jump today.
It's important for people to make the right choices, as they are choices
they will have to live with for a while," said Neil Ticktin,
Editor-in-Chief/Publisher, MacTech Magazine. "MacTech has been the
authoritative source on VBA transitions on the Mac, and today that
continues with the MacTech Office Scripting Advisor."
The full analysis and results will be published in the July 2008 issue of
MacTech Magazine. The MacTech Office Scripting Advisor is available
immediately at:
(http://www.mactech.com/articles/mactech/Vol.24/24.07/OfficeScriptingAdvi...)
For those that are making the transition from Microsoft Office VBA to
AppleScript, MacTech published last year the VBA to AppleScript Transition
Guide. The guide is available online, as a PDF, and in print while supplies
last. See (http://www.mactech.com/vba-transition-guide/) for more
information.
About MacTech Magazine
Established in 1984, MacTech Magazine is the only monthly magazine focused
on Macintosh at the technical level. Each month, MacTech and MacTech.com is
read by over 150,000 technical Macintosh users in over 175 countries ...
from network administrators to programmers, from solution providers to
Enterprise, and in general anyone that's interested in the Macintosh beyond
the user level. MacTech's approach has always been that of "How-to" as
opposed to the "You can do this" articles in many publications.
MacTech's web site includes not only the magazine's extensive archives and
open source projects for the Mac (http://www.macforge.net), but also a
community search engine and a news aggregator to keep readers up to date
with one look across the community. (http://www.mactech.com)