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JLatham JLatham is offline
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Default Can Excel be use to a limited degree without the full program

But that implies that Excel is available on the recipient's system. When you
embed an object (as the Excel workbook within the Word document) the object
is inoperative unless the creating application is available. The actual
Excel application does not get embedded into the document along with the
workbook - the basic core of Excel 2007 is 16.8MB in size, for Excel 2003
it's 9+MB. Files of that size won't even make it through most email systems
these days.

Since the OP has said they don't have Excel, it's back to the Viewer for a
solution. Another drawback might be that if they don't have Excel they very
well may not have Word either, since both Word and Excel are contained in all
versions of Office. Although they could have Word as a stand alone
application or as part of the Works suite.

"Kate G." wrote:

Remember that in Microsoft Word you can insert a Microsoft Excel worksheet
that requires double clicking to "get into".

But once into it, you have full Excel functionality. So you could set up
your worksheet... then use the protection feature so that only the cells you
wish folks to have access to... can be accessed and changed.

Not sure if that will help or not... but another idea anyway.

--
Kathryn Groves



"Doug Sanders" wrote in message
ink.net...
Can an Excel spreadsheet be distributed that allows only limited values be
changed, not formulas, to users without Excel?

Sort of mortgage amortization tables, etc. as example.

User can plug in some numbers, see results, but can not change the core
algorithms.

If s, how would this be done?

Thanks,

Doug Sanders