Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello there.
I feel for you in trying to maintain so many important Excel workbooks. I have a natural love for Excel 2003 and every other version since 1995 but now after using Excel 2007 for over a month now, I have developed a natural hate for any of the 2007 Office products. My boss just paid $300 dollars to have office 2007 taken out and 2003 put into a new work laptop because we do not have the time to have to relearn a program(s) we have mastered now for over 10 years. But, to get back to your questions,.... 1)I believe you are using the right program. Based on the value you put into the worksheets you have already used, you may want to bite the bullet and redevelop them based on your "End sight" knowledge of what you know now. That might be easier said then done however! 2) To my knowledge, there will be no easy way out to do this. Accuracy of information is paramount and wouldnt trust such a thing to a macro to do this for you. 3) Again, only redesigning your information based on knowing how it will end up (as opposed to when you first started this project of yours you had no idea it would develop into this monster of links and associations), other then reworking it. Good luck and keep at it! -Imonit On May 21, 2:36*pm, niceguyneedshelp wrote: Basic Explanation: I use excel to break down stock market data into charts for analysis. *Over time I have linked many spread sheets in an extremely tangled web of mixed up data. *I have many charts in one spread sheet that may have been created and have source data from another work book. *I have many formulas that are computing other formula results from other workbooks. *In some cases I have to open ten workbooks in order to update all of the charts that were centralized into one workbook. * Problem: 1) *In order to update information in one file I may to have wait several minutes as I open, close and save many large excel files. 2) *I wish to buy a new computer but I am concerned that my excel links will not work without the exact same directory and file names on the new computer. *I actually bought Excel 2007 but continue to use Excel 2003 because the new file name of 2007 was causing problems with my linked workbooks. 3) *Some of the larger files are 380MB and they take around 5 minutes to save and close down. Questions: 1) *Am I using the right program for what I am trying to do? *Is excel the right program for this type of analysis or should I be using a data base program such as Sequel Server? *Unfortunately I do not have experience with another program. 2) *Is there a way to transfer these excel files and create new links on a new computer automatically? *Will they have to be re-linked individually when the file is opened on the new computer? *Is there an easy way to link the workbooks if I were to switch to 2007? 3) *Do you have any quick thoughts or suggestions to point me in the right direction? Any help would be appreciated. *Thank you for reading my post and I hope to hear from someone. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Linking work books on criteria? | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Validation note to comment note | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
linking multiple books (source.xls) to a single book (destination. | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
problems switching speadsheets in excel 2000 using windows xp | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Linking two sheets in different books | Links and Linking in Excel |