How to open doc, ppt, or xls files with Google Drive with double clicks from my desktop?











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Google Docs is handy for editing documents online, and can serve as a complete MS Office alternative.



However if you don't have MS Office installed you can't view those files without right click it then > google drive > View on the web



I tried to associate it with Google Drive program using the .exe I found (googledrivesync.exe) and Google Chrome but won't work.



How to open them in Google chrome easily by double clicking? System is Windows 7 x64










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migrated from webapps.stackexchange.com Feb 11 '16 at 23:52


This question came from our site for power users of web applications.



















    up vote
    4
    down vote

    favorite












    Google Docs is handy for editing documents online, and can serve as a complete MS Office alternative.



    However if you don't have MS Office installed you can't view those files without right click it then > google drive > View on the web



    I tried to associate it with Google Drive program using the .exe I found (googledrivesync.exe) and Google Chrome but won't work.



    How to open them in Google chrome easily by double clicking? System is Windows 7 x64










    share|improve this question















    migrated from webapps.stackexchange.com Feb 11 '16 at 23:52


    This question came from our site for power users of web applications.

















      up vote
      4
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      4
      down vote

      favorite











      Google Docs is handy for editing documents online, and can serve as a complete MS Office alternative.



      However if you don't have MS Office installed you can't view those files without right click it then > google drive > View on the web



      I tried to associate it with Google Drive program using the .exe I found (googledrivesync.exe) and Google Chrome but won't work.



      How to open them in Google chrome easily by double clicking? System is Windows 7 x64










      share|improve this question















      Google Docs is handy for editing documents online, and can serve as a complete MS Office alternative.



      However if you don't have MS Office installed you can't view those files without right click it then > google drive > View on the web



      I tried to associate it with Google Drive program using the .exe I found (googledrivesync.exe) and Google Chrome but won't work.



      How to open them in Google chrome easily by double clicking? System is Windows 7 x64







      google-drive






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      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Feb 18 '16 at 2:25

























      asked Feb 11 '16 at 8:30









      Freedo

      193115




      193115




      migrated from webapps.stackexchange.com Feb 11 '16 at 23:52


      This question came from our site for power users of web applications.






      migrated from webapps.stackexchange.com Feb 11 '16 at 23:52


      This question came from our site for power users of web applications.
























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

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          up vote
          6
          down vote



          accepted










          You need to download the Office Editing for Docs, Sheets & Slides extension by Google.



          After downloading it and installing it:




          • Right-click the file you want to open ( .ppt, .doc, .xls )


          • Click "Open with" then "Choose default program" and associate it with Google Chrome and enjoy it ( it should be in the "Other programs" tabs without requiring you to manually find the .exe)



          This is the process for Windows 7.






          share|improve this answer






























            up vote
            1
            down vote













            2018-08-01: The answer by Freedo still works in Windows 10.



            One thing to note is if you are opening legacy .doc files it will prompt you to "Save as" in a compatible format (OpenOffice XML) aka .docx if you make any changes to the file. Instead of changing the file you can use "Convert to Google Docs format" from the File menu, but by default this ends up in the root of your Drive.



            To have the Google Doc version of the file saved next to the original (if the original file was already in Drive), install Google Backup and Sync and enable the Google Drive "folder" from Setting, then you should be able to browse to and right click a file and "Show on web" and then "Open in Google Docs" and this will preserve the folder path of the original file when you save instead of dumping the file into the root of your Drive.






            share|improve this answer





















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              2 Answers
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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

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              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes








              up vote
              6
              down vote



              accepted










              You need to download the Office Editing for Docs, Sheets & Slides extension by Google.



              After downloading it and installing it:




              • Right-click the file you want to open ( .ppt, .doc, .xls )


              • Click "Open with" then "Choose default program" and associate it with Google Chrome and enjoy it ( it should be in the "Other programs" tabs without requiring you to manually find the .exe)



              This is the process for Windows 7.






              share|improve this answer



























                up vote
                6
                down vote



                accepted










                You need to download the Office Editing for Docs, Sheets & Slides extension by Google.



                After downloading it and installing it:




                • Right-click the file you want to open ( .ppt, .doc, .xls )


                • Click "Open with" then "Choose default program" and associate it with Google Chrome and enjoy it ( it should be in the "Other programs" tabs without requiring you to manually find the .exe)



                This is the process for Windows 7.






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  6
                  down vote



                  accepted







                  up vote
                  6
                  down vote



                  accepted






                  You need to download the Office Editing for Docs, Sheets & Slides extension by Google.



                  After downloading it and installing it:




                  • Right-click the file you want to open ( .ppt, .doc, .xls )


                  • Click "Open with" then "Choose default program" and associate it with Google Chrome and enjoy it ( it should be in the "Other programs" tabs without requiring you to manually find the .exe)



                  This is the process for Windows 7.






                  share|improve this answer














                  You need to download the Office Editing for Docs, Sheets & Slides extension by Google.



                  After downloading it and installing it:




                  • Right-click the file you want to open ( .ppt, .doc, .xls )


                  • Click "Open with" then "Choose default program" and associate it with Google Chrome and enjoy it ( it should be in the "Other programs" tabs without requiring you to manually find the .exe)



                  This is the process for Windows 7.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Feb 18 '16 at 2:24

























                  answered Feb 18 '16 at 2:14









                  Freedo

                  193115




                  193115
























                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote













                      2018-08-01: The answer by Freedo still works in Windows 10.



                      One thing to note is if you are opening legacy .doc files it will prompt you to "Save as" in a compatible format (OpenOffice XML) aka .docx if you make any changes to the file. Instead of changing the file you can use "Convert to Google Docs format" from the File menu, but by default this ends up in the root of your Drive.



                      To have the Google Doc version of the file saved next to the original (if the original file was already in Drive), install Google Backup and Sync and enable the Google Drive "folder" from Setting, then you should be able to browse to and right click a file and "Show on web" and then "Open in Google Docs" and this will preserve the folder path of the original file when you save instead of dumping the file into the root of your Drive.






                      share|improve this answer

























                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote













                        2018-08-01: The answer by Freedo still works in Windows 10.



                        One thing to note is if you are opening legacy .doc files it will prompt you to "Save as" in a compatible format (OpenOffice XML) aka .docx if you make any changes to the file. Instead of changing the file you can use "Convert to Google Docs format" from the File menu, but by default this ends up in the root of your Drive.



                        To have the Google Doc version of the file saved next to the original (if the original file was already in Drive), install Google Backup and Sync and enable the Google Drive "folder" from Setting, then you should be able to browse to and right click a file and "Show on web" and then "Open in Google Docs" and this will preserve the folder path of the original file when you save instead of dumping the file into the root of your Drive.






                        share|improve this answer























                          up vote
                          1
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          1
                          down vote









                          2018-08-01: The answer by Freedo still works in Windows 10.



                          One thing to note is if you are opening legacy .doc files it will prompt you to "Save as" in a compatible format (OpenOffice XML) aka .docx if you make any changes to the file. Instead of changing the file you can use "Convert to Google Docs format" from the File menu, but by default this ends up in the root of your Drive.



                          To have the Google Doc version of the file saved next to the original (if the original file was already in Drive), install Google Backup and Sync and enable the Google Drive "folder" from Setting, then you should be able to browse to and right click a file and "Show on web" and then "Open in Google Docs" and this will preserve the folder path of the original file when you save instead of dumping the file into the root of your Drive.






                          share|improve this answer












                          2018-08-01: The answer by Freedo still works in Windows 10.



                          One thing to note is if you are opening legacy .doc files it will prompt you to "Save as" in a compatible format (OpenOffice XML) aka .docx if you make any changes to the file. Instead of changing the file you can use "Convert to Google Docs format" from the File menu, but by default this ends up in the root of your Drive.



                          To have the Google Doc version of the file saved next to the original (if the original file was already in Drive), install Google Backup and Sync and enable the Google Drive "folder" from Setting, then you should be able to browse to and right click a file and "Show on web" and then "Open in Google Docs" and this will preserve the folder path of the original file when you save instead of dumping the file into the root of your Drive.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Aug 2 at 20:23









                          dragon788

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