![]() |
Excel autosave replacement - Autobackup
Excel autosave is very limited and annoyng since one is always having
to choose between saving or not the file at the middle of the work. Please find in this link an autosave replacement which do the job of keeping you safe from loosing your excel work. It is a very small and easy to install program. It is freeware. See it in http://filzef.googlepages.com/ |
Excel autosave replacement - Autobackup
You must be using an early version of Excel, in the latest versions (2002 and
later I believe) Auto Save does not prompt you, is automatic, saves to a different file than the original, and can be set to save with any interval you choose. What extra features does one need that this free add in provides? -- Thanks, Shane Devenshire "filzef" wrote: Excel autosave is very limited and annoyng since one is always having to choose between saving or not the file at the middle of the work. Please find in this link an autosave replacement which do the job of keeping you safe from loosing your excel work. It is a very small and easy to install program. It is freeware. See it in http://filzef.googlepages.com/ |
Excel autosave replacement - Autobackup
Shane
Excel 2002 and later does not have an AutoSave. It has an AutoRecovery feature that is useful only if Excel or your workbook crashes. Otherwise, the temp saved file is deleted when Excel is closed. No incremental saves are made as occured with the older AutoSave add-in. Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Sat, 23 Aug 2008 17:42:01 -0700, ShaneDevenshire wrote: You must be using an early version of Excel, in the latest versions (2002 and later I believe) Auto Save does not prompt you, is automatic, saves to a different file than the original, and can be set to save with any interval you choose. What extra features does one need that this free add in provides? |
Excel autosave replacement - Autobackup
Thanks for your reply.
I understand your point of view, but to me is much more pratical and safe to have several copies of my work saved automatically in a folder i specify and with a time interval I specifiy. You can in fact rely in autorecovery (not autosave, as it overwrites the original file), but I already experienced crashes and then tried to find the temp file and was not sucessful. Maybe it was something I made wrong, but i honestly don't like to have my backup copies as a temp file that excel creates or deletes whenever it wants. If it is my work that is being protected, I prefer to have control of the process. As this program keeps several backup copies in the disc, sometimes I use it as a kind of "undo button" that allows me to go back in time for example half an our, if my last changes to the file were not very inspired. There are several programs that try to do this job, but I didn't found any with freeware license. You also have for example AutosaveXL, but it's shareware. On 24 Ago, 04:59, Gord Dibben <gorddibbATshawDOTca wrote: Shane Excel2002 and later does not have anAutoSave. It has an AutoRecovery feature that is useful only ifExcelor your workbook crashes. Otherwise, the temp saved file is deleted whenExcelis closed. No incremental saves are made as occured with the olderAutoSaveadd-in. Gord Dibben *MSExcelMVP On Sat, 23 Aug 2008 17:42:01 -0700, ShaneDevenshire wrote: You must be using an early version ofExcel, in the latest versions (2002 and later I believe) Auto Save does not prompt you, is automatic, saves to a different file than the original, and can be set to save with any interval you choose. What extra features does one need that this free add in provides?- Ocultar texto citado - - Mostrar texto citado - |
Excel autosave replacement - Autobackup
For free the closest you can get would be an add-in.
Jan Karel Pieterse has an addin called AutoSafe which doen't alert before saving. http://www.jkp-ads.com/download.asp (look for AutoSafe.zip) It doesn't overwrite the existing workbook when it saves. It saves to a user selectable folder. And when it's done, it either deletes these backups (or puts them in the recycle bin). And the user can always restore the backups from the recycle bin. Gord On Tue, 2 Sep 2008 16:06:29 -0700 (PDT), filzef wrote: Thanks for your reply. I understand your point of view, but to me is much more pratical and safe to have several copies of my work saved automatically in a folder i specify and with a time interval I specifiy. You can in fact rely in autorecovery (not autosave, as it overwrites the original file), but I already experienced crashes and then tried to find the temp file and was not sucessful. Maybe it was something I made wrong, but i honestly don't like to have my backup copies as a temp file that excel creates or deletes whenever it wants. If it is my work that is being protected, I prefer to have control of the process. As this program keeps several backup copies in the disc, sometimes I use it as a kind of "undo button" that allows me to go back in time for example half an our, if my last changes to the file were not very inspired. There are several programs that try to do this job, but I didn't found any with freeware license. You also have for example AutosaveXL, but it's shareware. On 24 Ago, 04:59, Gord Dibben <gorddibbATshawDOTca wrote: Shane Excel2002 and later does not have anAutoSave. It has an AutoRecovery feature that is useful only ifExcelor your workbook crashes. Otherwise, the temp saved file is deleted whenExcelis closed. No incremental saves are made as occured with the olderAutoSaveadd-in. Gord Dibben *MSExcelMVP On Sat, 23 Aug 2008 17:42:01 -0700, ShaneDevenshire wrote: You must be using an early version ofExcel, in the latest versions (2002 and later I believe) Auto Save does not prompt you, is automatic, saves to a different file than the original, and can be set to save with any interval you choose. What extra features does one need that this free add in provides?- Ocultar texto citado - - Mostrar texto citado - |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:52 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com