The Google Docs text editor lets you write, edit, format, and share text documents through your web browser, for free.
- Download Video From Google Docs To Ipad
- Download Videos From Google Chrome
- Download Videos From Google Docs To Word
- Download Videos From Youtube
A very brief video about getting around a minor annoyance of Google Docs. How to Upload Videos to Google Docs. Google Docs is a free online application that allows users to create, store, and share spreadsheets, documents, presentations, forms and charts on the web browser.
Pros
It's free: Just like Sheets, Slides, Gmail, Photos, and other Google consumer apps, Google Docs is free to use across popular browsers, from Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox to Apple Safari.
Editing tools: Google Docs comes with the basic editing tools you'd expect from a text editor. You can enter and change text. You can undo and redo edits as you work. And you can copy and paste text and images within a file or between files. And you can search through a document, find and replace text elements, spell check your document, and check word, page, and character count.
Style and format: Docs comes with a broad collection of document-formatting tools that help you organize your text and add polish to your docs. For paragraph-level control, you set line spacing and align a paragraph to the left or right, center it, or justify the text. You can create columns, numbered lists, and bulleted lists. And you can increase or decrease the indent of a paragraph. You can hyperlink text, insert images you are storing in Drive or from Google Photos, and insert charts and tables you build in Sheets.
To help organize your document, you can assign paragraph styles through Paragraph styles on the Format menu. You can assign a title, subtitle, and subheadings to a paragraph, and design your own paragraph styles if you want to override Google's default settings. You can also view an outline of your document and create a table of contents that links to your headings and title.
For fonts, you can change which font a document uses from the Font menu and add fonts to the menu by selecting More fonts from the menu. You can, of course, bold, italicize, and underline your text; apply strikethrough, superscript, or subscript; and change font size.
To simplify reapplying a style, the Paint Format tool lets you copy formatting between text.
Templates: Docs comes with two dozen Google-designed templates for giving your document an attractive look. Pick from resume, personal and business letter, recipe, newsletter, and meeting notes templates. You can also use third-party templates that cover a range of document types from privacy policy to sale quotes.
Share, edit, and chat in real time: You can share a doc by tapping the Share button in the top-right corner of the Docs window and then adding collaborators by name or email. You can set whether they can edit, comment, or just view the file. Users can add comments to a file and address comments made by others. You can view collaborator edits in real time, and by selecting File > Version history, you can see earlier versions of the file and view changes with timestamps. If you want to revert edit, you can restore an earlier version of the file. You can also chat with others working in the doc by tapping the Show chat icon.
Works with Word: You can import and convert Office files to Google Docs files. Through the Chrome browser version of the apps, you can use Office Compatibility Mode (OCM) to work on Office files in their native formats.
Live in the cloud: All your Google files are stored in Google's Drive cloud service. Out of the box, you get 15GB of storage for free to store your Gmail email, Google Photos images, and anything you keep in your drive. Every change to a Docs file is automatically saved to the cloud. If you hit the limit of your free allowance, you can move to 100GB of storage for $19.99 per year or 1TB for $99.99 per year. And if it still feels cramped, for $199.99 a month you can get 20TB of Drive cloud storage.
By default, you need to be connected to Google's cloud service to work on your files, but you can install a Google Docs Chrome extension to turn on offline access to your files when you're not connected. You can also turn on the ability to create, edit, and open your files while offline in settings for each app. You need to be using the Chrome browser to work with your files offline.
![Docs Docs](https://sites.google.com/site/overlandtechnologylab/_/rsrc/1366744042336/home/pd-2013/googles/videos/Screen%20shot%202013-04-23%20at%2010.52.36%20AM.png)
Add-ons: Through add-ons you can extend the functionality of Docs. Focused on business and education uses, add-ons can help with anything from creating charts and graphs to building bibliographies.
Companion apps: In addition to Docs, Google has companion apps that work side by side with the text-editing tool: Sheets to create, edit, and format a spreadsheet; Slides for building compelling presentations; Keep for taking notes; Drawings for creating charts and diagrams; and Forms for building surveys and forms.
And mobile apps: Google has Docs apps for iOS and Android devices. While the mobile version of Docs lets you do much of what you can with the web version, more complicated tasks are a bit harder to perform on a phone or tablet's touch screen.
Cons
Download Video From Google Docs To Ipad
Few advanced tools: Google Docs lacks some high-end capabilities found in a paid productivity suite such as Microsoft Office. If you need to index hundreds of pages of a report or need more sophisticated track-changes tools, you might need to look elsewhere.
Privacy concerns: Google relies in part on a user's settings and web-browsing history to serve ads to its users. Through your user settings, you have control over which information you share with Google. But in the end, the company monetizes your Google-related activities.
Bottom Line
Unless you are writing the next great American novel, Google Docs' free and collaborative text-editing tools should be more than up to the task.
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What do you need to know about free software?
Google Docs is one of the best cloud software alternatives to desktop word processors. This is a cloud app with which you can draft documents that include tables, charts, hyperlinks, YouTube videos and images. Sure, it might still have fewer text formatting options and tools than MS Word; but Google Docs is getting better and better. Yet, there’s still one notable option missing from its picture context menu. Where’s the Save image as option in Google Docs?
Alas, Google Docs doesn’t have a Save image as option to download selected pictures with when you right-click on them. As such, there is seemingly no way to select and download a few pictures directly from a docs document. That option would certainly be a handy addition to the cloud app’s context menu. Nevertheless, there are still a few ways that you can download selected pictures from documents open in Google Docs.
Publish the Document to Web
Google Docs does have a Publish to the web option that enables you to open a document in a browser tab. So that gives you a way to download the images directly from the document’s page tab instead. You can select that option by clicking File > Publish to the web, and that will open the dialog directly below.
Press the Publish button there and click OK to confirm. Then you can select a hyperlink to copy with the Ctrl + C hotkey. Open a new tab in your browser, and press Ctrl + V to paste the hyperlink in the URL bar. Press Enter to open the document in a new page tab as shown directly below.
Now you can right-click a picture on that page and select a Save image as option on the context menu. That opens as Save As window where you can enter a file title for the image. Press the Save button to download the image to the folder you selected for it.
Save the Images to Google Keep
Google Keep is a handy note-taking app that is now integrated with Google Docs. This means you can open a Notes from Keep sidebar in Google Docs. Furthermore, that also means you can save docs document images directly to the sidebar; from which you can directly download them!
To save a picture to Keeps, you should select and right-click an image in a docs document. Then you can select a Save to Keepnotepad option from the context menu. Select that option to save the picture to the sidebar as in the snapshot below.
![Download videos from google drive iphone Download videos from google drive iphone](https://www.wikihow.com/images/thumb/6/60/Upload-Videos-to-Google-Docs-Step-3.jpg/aid6367695-v4-728px-Upload-Videos-to-Google-Docs-Step-3.jpg)
Now you can right-click the picture in the Notes from Keep sidebar and select a Save image as option. Click that option, enter a file title for the picture and choose a folder to save it to. Press the Save button to download the image.
Download the Document in HTML Format
If you need to download lots of images, it might be better to download the document in HTML format. If you select to download the file as HTML format, it saves as Zip folder. Then you can extract the compressed folder and open an images subfolder that includes all the pictures in the document.
To download as HTML, open the document in Google Docs. Select File > Downloadas to open the submenu shown directly below. Then you can select Web Page from the submenu.
A File Explorer window opens with the HTML document’s Zip folder tab. Press the Extract all button to open an Extract Compressed Folders window. Press the Browse button on that window to choose a path for the decompressed folder. Then click the Extract button. A new folder tab will open in File Explorer from which you can open an images subfolder. That includes all the document’s pictures.
Extract Pictures From Documents with Add-ons
Download Videos From Google Chrome
Or you can install an add-on that extracts pictures from documents open in Google Docs. Image Extractor is one extension that adds an Image Extractor sidebar to Google Docs. Open this page to add Image Extractor to Google Docs.
Download Videos From Google Docs To Word
Once installed, open a document in Google Docs. Click Add-ons > Image Extractor > Start to open the sidebar shown in the screenshot below. Then select a picture to extract from the document.
Download Videos From Youtube
Enter a file title in the Image Extractor text box. Press the Download image button on the sidebar to save the picture to HDD. The picture saves to your browser’s download folder.
So that’s how you can download images from documents open in Google Docs. You can save selected images in docs documents to your hard drive with Image Extractor, Keeps or the Publish to the web option. Alternatively, save your documents in HTML format to download all their pictures.