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how to protect master spreadsheet from corruption?
I have a master spreadsheet that I make multiple (10-50) changes to
cells per day. I sort and filter it every which way as well as cut and paste from similar spreadsheets. I've been backing up the sheet on a thumb drive and on a separate computer every night but I'm concerned about corrupting the spreadsheet by user error then overwriting the saved copies only to find out days later that I left one column out of the sort or pasted from one sheet to another without copying all the info. The only way I can think to protect against this is to save maybe 5 separate days backups and overwriting the first day on the 6th day etc. So if I do notice 2 or 3 days later that I made a mistake that threw everything off by one column or row I can at least salvage the master with the correct formatting while trying to piece together the corrupt info from the day or two since. My question: Is there a standard (easier) way of doing this or does everyone just backup their master spreadsheet the best way they see fit? |
how to protect master spreadsheet from corruption?
Sounds like you're doing a lot more than most people, actually. There
are really very few ways to damage a spreadsheet, the only way it happens for me is when the workbook is shared, and there are tons of formulas. The file just keeps growing on its own until suddenly it's unmanageable and must be rebuilt. If you are copying the *entire file* to the thumb drive, why do you think there will be a problem with the sort or only partially copying the workbook? HTH, JP On Apr 10, 10:53*pm, Joe wrote: I have a master spreadsheet that I make multiple (10-50) changes to cells per day. I sort and filter it every which way as well as cut and paste from similar spreadsheets. I've been backing up the sheet on a thumb drive and on a separate computer every night but I'm concerned about corrupting the spreadsheet by user error then overwriting the saved copies only to find out days later that I left one column out of the sort or pasted from one sheet to another without copying all the info. The only way I can think to protect against this is to save maybe 5 separate days backups and overwriting the first day on the 6th day etc. So if I do notice 2 or 3 days later that I made a mistake that threw everything off by one column or row I can at least salvage the master with the correct formatting while trying to piece together the corrupt info from the day or two since. My question: Is there a standard (easier) way of doing this or does everyone just backup their master spreadsheet the best way they see fit? |
how to protect master spreadsheet from corruption?
what I'm worried about is making a careless error - like sorting a
column without highlighting the entire spreadsheet - then saving it and not having a backup two days later when I find out what I did. |
how to protect master spreadsheet from corruption?
Hi Joe,
You could just save it with todays date in the file name using the format yy-mm-dd so that it will stack properly in the directory, something like 08-04-12 My File.xls, would be todays version, you can stack these files in Folders with a similar naming procedure i,e. 04 April 2008 05 May 2008 etc. These folders can then be stored under another folder called simply 2008, 2007 etc. That is the way I store my daily timesheets and dissection sheets, I can call up a timesheet from 4 years ago in a couple of seconds. Hard disk space is so plentiful and cheap these days that there is no need to be miserly with it any more. If it is an issue, due to a very large file size, then a regular weekly or monthly cleanout is all that is required. HTH Martin "Joe" wrote in message ... what I'm worried about is making a careless error - like sorting a column without highlighting the entire spreadsheet - then saving it and not having a backup two days later when I find out what I did. |
how to protect master spreadsheet from corruption?
We're all worried about that. I don't know what to suggest, Joe. Other
than some pretty complicated VBA event code, there's no way to really protect your worksheet from user malfeasance (without causing major inconvenience). What if someone deletes the entire network? The list of possibilities is endless. Work slowly and double check your work, and make regular backups, that's what I do to keep careless mistakes to a minimum. If it fits your needs, you might want to check out MS Access, my understanding is that the security is much better than with Excel. HTH, JP On Apr 11, 12:42*am, Joe wrote: what I'm worried about is making a careless error - like sorting a column without highlighting the entire spreadsheet - then saving it and not having a backup two days later when I find out what I did. |
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