: Many users in the 2014–2017 period sought "patches" to keep the 2009 versions running on newer hardware because the newer versions (v5.0 and beyond) initially lacked features like linked text boxes or advanced mail merge.
November brought a significant update to iWork for iCloud, adding 50 new fonts to bring the total to 72—more than doubling the available typefaces. New handwriting fonts were added for users who preferred a more informal style. All three apps also gained the ability to drag a wedge out of a pie chart, a subtle but useful data‑visualization enhancement. all apple iwork 20142017 patched
: This minor update added professionally-drawn shapes to all iWork apps, enhanced collaboration functions, and made further improvements to the stock and currency functions in Numbers. : Many users in the 2014–2017 period sought
| Tool Name | Supports | Difficulty | |-----------|----------|-------------| | | Pages 6.0–7.0, Numbers 4.0–5.0, Keynote 7.0–8.0 | Easy (GUI) | | PatchCert | All 2014–2017 builds | Moderate (Terminal) | | iWork Legacy Enabler | Pages 5.5, Numbers 3.5, Keynote 6.5 | Advanced (manual) | All three apps also gained the ability to
: Following the ambitious 2013 redesign, Apple spent 2014 and early 2015 restoring missing features like custom toolbars, vertical rulers, and advanced presenter display options.
Patched calculation engine buffer overflows and spreadsheet macro exploits. Versions 6.2 through 7.x OS X Mavericks to macOS Sierra
The structural changes deployed across the three major applications span several historical release baselines: Application Vulnerable Release Era Baseline Native OS Key Patch Resolution Versions 5.2 through 6.x OS X Mavericks to macOS Sierra