Description: Libreoffice released the version 7 which makes the compatibility with docx better, but the format name still is "word 2007-365". Which is confusing, nothing said that I had to use this format for the better compatibility mode of Libreoffice 7. Steps to Reproduce: 1.try to save a file 2.select the format and there it is the "word 2007-365 (docx)" 3. Actual Results: The format name is word 2007-365 which is confisung Expected Results: Should be less confusing Reproducible: Always User Profile Reset: No Additional Info: file format name is the same as libreoffice 6.4.5 and maybe older.
The file format did not change (and will not, unless *Microsoft* changes that format). Why should its name change in LibreOffice dialog? This specific format should be improved - which happens constantly; which means *this specific format* should be created in a better way. This is NOTABUG.
Our default document formats are OpenDocument ODF--think of that as our native format. Anything else is an export/import "filter" as selected when converting--or as assigned when reopening an existing document. The filter for Microsoft's current Word formats, as found in Office 2007, 2010, 2013, 2019, & Office 365 programs, is simply labeled: "Word 2007-365 (.docx)" -- last adjusted in [1]. As compared to the filters for: "Word 97-2003 (.doc)", or "Office Open XML (transitional) (.docx)" Rather obvious and best description for the role these alternate/non-native format filters play. Self documenting in context with a look at the filter choices. No need to change. =-ref-= [1] https://cgit.freedesktop.org/libreoffice/core/commit/?id=77ae0abe21f672cf4b7d2e069f1d40d20edc49a7
This simply a fact of misunderstanding/ communication issue. DOCX export has been optimized, but user expects a new file type ENHANCED comp-ability file format next to they (legacy) old version. Similar to "transitional" docx. However the existing DOCX filter has been improved with 7.0. More or less an side-effect of communicating technical file format changes in the release notes to the general public.