Comment by Hizonner

15 days ago

> Spreadsheets are a fundamentally important tool

It's nice to know that you use spreadsheets all the time.

I use them rarely, and often end up regretting that I didn't write a real program instead. And I'd definitely never see myself using one on a phone; it's too painful to type, and the screen is usually too small.

I'd guess that maybe one percent of mobile phone users have spreadsheets of any kind installed, or would want them. Maybe.

What I'm getting at here is that you seem to have a pretty skewed idea of "fundamentally important".

Admittedly an awful lot of mobile users do have a lot of game and eye candy apps that have no F-Droid counterparts. And some users have professional apps that also don't have F-Droid counterparts. But spreadsheets aren't the center of the Universe.

As I showed in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45413633, which I hadn't posted when you posted your comment, about 10–25% of mobile phone users have the Google Sheets app installed, because it has over a billion downloads. So it seems like your atypical personal experience is leading you into orders-of-magnitude errors.

I also use spreadsheets rarely, most recently three weeks ago, and often end up regretting it, but I do occasionally find them very valuable. I would find them even more valuable if I didn't know more powerful programming languages, which presumably is what you are alluding to with "write a real program".

I agree that cellphone screen input methods are clumsy. On the other hand, I've written probably ten thousand words of prose on this one, plus a fair bit of Python, Lua, and C, so a few spreadsheet formulas would hardly be an obstacle.

  • To be frank, Google Sheets came installed on my phone, don't think it's ever been opened though... Easy way to inflate numbers there.

    • That's the download count from the Google Play Store. I don't think it counts preinstalls. If it's preinstalled on many phones, the number of Google Sheets users could be much larger than my number suggests.