![]() |
Link behavior with changing data set
Excel 2000
I would like to get rid of the following error message. The workbook you opened contains automatic links to information in another workbook. Do you want to update this workbook with changes made to the other workbook? . To update all linked information, click Yes. . To keep the existing information, click No. The desired links are _always_ to named ranges (cells) in another worksheet in the current workbook, never to an external workbook. The links were originally generated/programmed to a second worksheet in the current workbook. The links have never been explicitly to another workbook, and the linked formulae just contain the range (cell) name, and do not contain any filename of any external workbook. The problem (arose) is generated by the fact that I need to delete the "data" worksheet with the named ranges, and then import, into the workbook with the "report," a different data worksheet with the same set of named ranges (cells), but different data (for a different accounting period). The data worksheet with the named ranges (cells) is a linear dump of the Trial Balance into an Excel worksheet/workbook by an accounting application. The report worksheet which references the named ranges is a financial report in an explicitly desired format that the accounting application doesn't seem to be able to produce. As long as I click "no," everything is fine, but if I give this to someone else to run, there will be problems. Is there, perhaps, any way to auto- answer this Msg Box with "No"? Thanks Fred Holmes |
Link behavior with changing data set
If excel thinks you have links, then you have links.
I'd use Bill Manville's FindLink program: http://www.oaltd.co.uk/MVP/Default.htm Fred Holmes wrote: Excel 2000 I would like to get rid of the following error message. The workbook you opened contains automatic links to information in another workbook. Do you want to update this workbook with changes made to the other workbook? . To update all linked information, click Yes. . To keep the existing information, click No. The desired links are _always_ to named ranges (cells) in another worksheet in the current workbook, never to an external workbook. The links were originally generated/programmed to a second worksheet in the current workbook. The links have never been explicitly to another workbook, and the linked formulae just contain the range (cell) name, and do not contain any filename of any external workbook. The problem (arose) is generated by the fact that I need to delete the "data" worksheet with the named ranges, and then import, into the workbook with the "report," a different data worksheet with the same set of named ranges (cells), but different data (for a different accounting period). The data worksheet with the named ranges (cells) is a linear dump of the Trial Balance into an Excel worksheet/workbook by an accounting application. The report worksheet which references the named ranges is a financial report in an explicitly desired format that the accounting application doesn't seem to be able to produce. As long as I click "no," everything is fine, but if I give this to someone else to run, there will be problems. Is there, perhaps, any way to auto- answer this Msg Box with "No"? Thanks Fred Holmes -- Dave Peterson |
Link behavior with changing data set
Worked like a charm.
Apparently external links (any links that are changed) aren't removed from the workbook when they are deleted from/as a cell formula and a new link written into the cell/formula? Many thanks, Fred Holmes On Wed, 17 Jun 2009 15:26:16 -0500, Dave Peterson wrote: If excel thinks you have links, then you have links. I'd use Bill Manville's FindLink program: http://www.oaltd.co.uk/MVP/Default.htm Fred Holmes wrote: Excel 2000 I would like to get rid of the following error message. The workbook you opened contains automatic links to information in another workbook. Do you want to update this workbook with changes made to the other workbook? . To update all linked information, click Yes. . To keep the existing information, click No. The desired links are _always_ to named ranges (cells) in another worksheet in the current workbook, never to an external workbook. The links were originally generated/programmed to a second worksheet in the current workbook. The links have never been explicitly to another workbook, and the linked formulae just contain the range (cell) name, and do not contain any filename of any external workbook. The problem (arose) is generated by the fact that I need to delete the "data" worksheet with the named ranges, and then import, into the workbook with the "report," a different data worksheet with the same set of named ranges (cells), but different data (for a different accounting period). The data worksheet with the named ranges (cells) is a linear dump of the Trial Balance into an Excel worksheet/workbook by an accounting application. The report worksheet which references the named ranges is a financial report in an explicitly desired format that the accounting application doesn't seem to be able to produce. As long as I click "no," everything is fine, but if I give this to someone else to run, there will be problems. Is there, perhaps, any way to auto- answer this Msg Box with "No"? Thanks Fred Holmes -- Dave Peterson |
Link behavior with changing data set
Glad it worked for you.
But if you replaced the existing external link with a "link" to a worksheet in the same workbook, then that external link is gone. My bet is that you just missed one. Or you had links in those hard to find places--like names, or charts or ... Fred Holmes wrote: Worked like a charm. Apparently external links (any links that are changed) aren't removed from the workbook when they are deleted from/as a cell formula and a new link written into the cell/formula? Many thanks, Fred Holmes On Wed, 17 Jun 2009 15:26:16 -0500, Dave Peterson wrote: If excel thinks you have links, then you have links. I'd use Bill Manville's FindLink program: http://www.oaltd.co.uk/MVP/Default.htm Fred Holmes wrote: Excel 2000 I would like to get rid of the following error message. The workbook you opened contains automatic links to information in another workbook. Do you want to update this workbook with changes made to the other workbook? . To update all linked information, click Yes. . To keep the existing information, click No. The desired links are _always_ to named ranges (cells) in another worksheet in the current workbook, never to an external workbook. The links were originally generated/programmed to a second worksheet in the current workbook. The links have never been explicitly to another workbook, and the linked formulae just contain the range (cell) name, and do not contain any filename of any external workbook. The problem (arose) is generated by the fact that I need to delete the "data" worksheet with the named ranges, and then import, into the workbook with the "report," a different data worksheet with the same set of named ranges (cells), but different data (for a different accounting period). The data worksheet with the named ranges (cells) is a linear dump of the Trial Balance into an Excel worksheet/workbook by an accounting application. The report worksheet which references the named ranges is a financial report in an explicitly desired format that the accounting application doesn't seem to be able to produce. As long as I click "no," everything is fine, but if I give this to someone else to run, there will be problems. Is there, perhaps, any way to auto- answer this Msg Box with "No"? Thanks Fred Holmes -- Dave Peterson -- Dave Peterson |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:57 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com