Editing Collaboration and revision history Google Docs and the other apps in the
Google Drive suite serve as a tool for
collaborative editing of documents in real time. Documents can be shared, opened, and edited by multiple users simultaneously, and users can see character-by-character changes as other collaborators make edits. Changes are automatically saved to
Google's servers, and a revision history is automatically kept so past edits may be viewed and reverted. To resolve concurrent edits from different users, Google Docs uses an
operational transformation method based on the Jupiter algorithm, where the document is stored as a
list of changes. An editor's current position is represented with an editor-specific color/cursor, so if another editor happens to be viewing that part of the document, they can see edits as they occur. A sidebar chat functionality allows collaborators to discuss edits. The revision history allows users to see the additions made to a document, with each author distinguished by color. Only adjacent revisions can be compared, and users cannot control how frequently revisions are saved. Files can be exported to a user's local computer in a variety of formats (
ODF,
HTML,
PDF,
RTF,
Text,
Office Open XML).
Explore In March 2013, Google introduced add-ons, new tools from third-party developers that add more features to Google Docs. To view and edit documents offline on a computer, users need to use the Google Chrome web browser. A
Chrome extension, Google Docs Offline, allows users to enable offline support for Docs files on the Google Drive website. The Android and iOS apps natively support offline editing. In June 2014, Google introduced "Suggested edits" in Google Docs; as part of the "commenting access" permission, participants can come up with suggestions for edits that the author can accept or reject, in contrast to full editing ability. A basic research tool was introduced in 2012. This was expanded into "Explore" in September 2016, which has additional functionality through
machine learning. In Google Docs, Explore shows relevant Google search results based on information in the document, simplifying information gathering. Users can also mark specific document text, press Explore, and see search results based on the marked text only. In December 2016, Google introduced a quick citations feature to Google Docs. The quick citation tool allows users to "insert citations as footnotes with the click of a button" on the web through the Explore feature introduced in September. The citation feature also marked the launch of the Explore functionalities in G Suite for Education accounts.
Files Supported file formats • For formatted text documents:
OpenDocument,
Rich text format,
zipped
HTML,
Unicode plain text,
Microsoft Word.
File limits Limits to insertable file sizes, overall document length, and size are listed below: • Up to 1.02 million characters, regardless of the number of pages or font size. Document files converted to .gdoc (Docs) format cannot be larger than 50 MB. Images inserted cannot be larger than 50 MB and must be in either .jpg, .png, or .gif formats.
Google Workspace Google Docs and the
Google Docs Editors suite are free of charge for use by individuals but are also available as part of Google's business-centered
Google Workspace, enabling additional business-focused functionality on payment of a monthly subscription.
Other functionality A simple find-and-replace tool is available. Google offers an extension for the Google Chrome web browser called
Office editing for Docs, Sheets and Slides that enables users to view and edit Microsoft Word documents on Google Chrome via the Docs app. The extension can be used for opening Office files stored on the computer using Chrome, as well as for opening Office files encountered on the web (in the form of email attachments, web search results, etc.) without having to download them. The extension is installed on ChromeOS by default.
Google Cloud Connect was a plug-in for
Microsoft Office 2003, 2007, and 2010 that could automatically store and synchronize any
Word document to Google Docs (before the introduction of Drive) in Google Docs or Microsoft Office formats. The online copy was automatically updated each time the Microsoft Word document was saved. Microsoft Word documents could be edited offline and synchronized later when online. Google Cloud Connect maintained previous Microsoft Word document versions and allowed multiple users to collaborate by working on the same document at the same time. Google Cloud Connect was discontinued in April 2013 as, according to Google, Google Drive achieves all of the above tasks, "with better results". In January 2022, Google announced the
text watermark feature to the word processor, allowing users to create or import watermarks to a document. In addition to text watermarks, image watermarks can also be added to the document. In July 2024, Google announced that Google Docs would begin fully supporting
Markdown syntax. This built on Google's announcement in March 2022 that it had added an opt-in feature to automatically detect Markdown within Google Docs. == Reception ==