Found 5 records for the .PCT file extension name

There are 4 other file types using the PCT file extension:

pct file icon.pct - NIST ihdr image

pct file icon.pct - Apple Macintosh QuickDraw/PICT bitmap graphics format

pct file icon.pct - PC Paint bitmap file

pct file icon.pct - Honeywell GUS display builder file

file extension PCT - ClarisWorks clipart file

File type specification:

Graphics file type icon Graphics file type

Extension icon: pct file icon.PCT

File extension PCT description:

AppleWorks refers to two different office suite products, both of which are now discontinued. Originally, AppleWorks was an integrated software package for the Apple II platform, released in 1984 by Apple Computer. In 1998, the name AppleWorks was repurposed by Apple following its elimination of its Claris subsidiary, which marketed a software package for Macintosh and Windows named ClarisWorks. At one time, AppleWorks was bundled with all consumer level Macs sold by Apple.

As of August 15, 2007, AppleWorks has reached end-of-life status, and will no longer be sold.

Associated applications to file extension PCT:

ClarisWorks picture

Apple, Inc. logoClarisWorks

Company / developer:
  Apple, Inc.

The modern incarnation of AppleWorks started life as ClarisWorks, written by Bob Hearn and Scott Holdaway and published by Claris (a spin-off from Apple, today known as File Maker Inc). The file extension of AppleWorks and ClarisWorks documents is .cwk. ClarisWorks combined

* a word processor,
* a drawing program,
* a painting program,
* a spreadsheet,
* a database program,
* and a terminal program for communications.


All the components were integrated to provide a seamless suite that worked in concert; for example, spreadsheet frames could be embedded in a word processing document, or formatted text into drawings, etc. A common misconception is that the components were derived from the existing Claris programs MacWrite and MacDraw. In fact, ClarisWorks was written from scratch and then redesigned to match other Claris programs after the purchase by Claris.

ClarisWorks 1.0 shipped for the Macintosh in 1991 and subsequently ported to the Windows platform, shipping as ClarisWorks 1.0 for Windows in 1993. When the Claris company was disbanded and absorbed back into Apple, the product was renamed AppleWorks. In fact, version 5 of the software was first called ClarisWorks 5, before being renamed AppleWorks 5 following the company's return to Apple.



The last version, AppleWorks 6, replaced the communications feature with a presentation feature (in prior versions there was only rudimentary support for presentations through the other features). It was also ported to the Carbon API to work on Mac OS X, but it did not take advantage of many of the newer features of Mac OS X.

AppleWorks could create, open, and save files in a number of file formats. For example, word processor documents could be saved in Microsoft Word format, and spreadsheet files could be saved in Microsoft Excel format.

The software received good reviews during the course of its lifespan for its interface and the tight integration of its modules. For example, a drawing "frame" could be placed in a spreadsheet document, a paint frame could be placed in a drawing document, etc. This allowed for very elaborate and data-rich layouts. However, the limitations of the product (such as its confusing and cumbersome stylesheet feature) became more apparent as the product aged. In August, 2007, Apple declared AppleWorks "end of life" and stated that they will no longer sell the package. The iWork package, which includes a word processing program, a spreadsheet, and a presentation graphics program, is intended to be its replacement. While much more feature-rich, iWork still lacks some of the modules and the tight integration of AppleWorks.

There is a "known issue" with Appleworks 6 when typing long documents. When typing somewhere into page 42, all the text disappears. This may be an easter egg which references that the answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything in Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series is "42". There is a remedy to this.

"Do not panic. The text has only changed to the color white. Simply 'Select All' (Command-A) then change the text color to black. Save immediately, then immediately past [sic] in enough text to get beyond page 42. Save again."

 

Previous file extension
File extension PCS

Next file extension
File extension PCX

 

Help how to open PCT files:

No information how to open PCT available yet.

How to convert file with extension PCT:

No additional information how to convert PCT available yet.

Enter file extension without a dot (e.g. rar).
Search for file extension details or associated programs.