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how to open in windows a macintosh excel file
I have copied a file that I created in windows excell to a floppy disk (that
has only windows word files on it) and tried to open the excell file on another computer running Windows XP excell. The windows XP machine said the disc was not formatted or was formatted as a macintosh excell file. WHAT in the world do I do? |
First, you should NEVER open an Office file on a floppy. Doing so
invites corruption. Copy the file to your hard drive first. MacOS can read either Windows or Mac formatted floppies. Windows, without third-party software, can only read Windows format. If you formatted the floppy on a Mac, make sure you formatted it as a Windows disk. MacXL 98/01/v.X/2004 files have exactly the same format as WinXL 97/00/02/03 files, so there shouldn't be any problem using them interchangeably. Note that Mac OS will write an additional file to the disk with resource information. If your file is named MyFile.xls, you may, if your settings allow you to see "hidden" files, see a file called .MyFile.xls when you browse the disk in Windows. XL won't know what to make of *that* file, since it's not an XL file. Open the XL file instead... In article , macmai wrote: I have copied a file that I created in windows excell to a floppy disk (that has only windows word files on it) and tried to open the excell file on another computer running Windows XP excell. The windows XP machine said the disc was not formatted or was formatted as a macintosh excell file. WHAT in the world do I do? |
First, you should NEVER open an Office file on a floppy. Doing so
invites corruption. Copy the file to your hard drive first. MacOS can read either Windows or Mac formatted floppies. Windows, without third-party software, can only read Windows format. If you formatted the floppy on a Mac, make sure you formatted it as a Windows disk. MacXL 98/01/v.X/2004 files have exactly the same format as WinXL 97/00/02/03 files, so there shouldn't be any problem using them interchangeably. Note that Mac OS will write an additional file to the disk with resource information. If your file is named MyFile.xls, you may, if your settings allow you to see "hidden" files, see a file called .MyFile.xls when you browse the disk in Windows. XL won't know what to make of *that* file, since it's not an XL file. Open the XL file instead... In article , macmai wrote: I have copied a file that I created in windows excell to a floppy disk (that has only windows word files on it) and tried to open the excell file on another computer running Windows XP excell. The windows XP machine said the disc was not formatted or was formatted as a macintosh excell file. WHAT in the world do I do? |
Sorry for the double post...
In article , JE McGimpsey wrote: First, you should NEVER open an Office file on a floppy. Doing so invites corruption. Copy the file to your hard drive first. |
From someone who almost cried when I tried to use a Mac (before Windows,
though), is that how mac's know what program the file is associated with? (And how much memory to allocate???) Just curious (for no apparent reason). JE McGimpsey wrote: First, you should NEVER open an Office file on a floppy. Doing so invites corruption. Copy the file to your hard drive first. MacOS can read either Windows or Mac formatted floppies. Windows, without third-party software, can only read Windows format. If you formatted the floppy on a Mac, make sure you formatted it as a Windows disk. MacXL 98/01/v.X/2004 files have exactly the same format as WinXL 97/00/02/03 files, so there shouldn't be any problem using them interchangeably. Note that Mac OS will write an additional file to the disk with resource information. If your file is named MyFile.xls, you may, if your settings allow you to see "hidden" files, see a file called .MyFile.xls when you browse the disk in Windows. XL won't know what to make of *that* file, since it's not an XL file. Open the XL file instead... In article , macmai wrote: I have copied a file that I created in windows excell to a floppy disk (that has only windows word files on it) and tried to open the excell file on another computer running Windows XP excell. The windows XP machine said the disc was not formatted or was formatted as a macintosh excell file. WHAT in the world do I do? -- Dave Peterson |
Mac files have two "forks" - the data fork and the resource fork. For
data files, the resource fork contains a File Creator code and a File Type code that older MacOSes use to determine which application is used. With MacOS X, that fork is still created, but the OS can also use extensions. In older MacOSes, memory allocation is done at the application level. Mac OS X dynamically allocates memory to apps as necessary, the same as any other Unix-based OS. In article , Dave Peterson wrote: From someone who almost cried when I tried to use a Mac (before Windows, though), is that how mac's know what program the file is associated with? (And how much memory to allocate???) Just curious (for no apparent reason). |
Thanks for the info.
JE McGimpsey wrote: Mac files have two "forks" - the data fork and the resource fork. For data files, the resource fork contains a File Creator code and a File Type code that older MacOSes use to determine which application is used. With MacOS X, that fork is still created, but the OS can also use extensions. In older MacOSes, memory allocation is done at the application level. Mac OS X dynamically allocates memory to apps as necessary, the same as any other Unix-based OS. In article , Dave Peterson wrote: From someone who almost cried when I tried to use a Mac (before Windows, though), is that how mac's know what program the file is associated with? (And how much memory to allocate???) Just curious (for no apparent reason). -- Dave Peterson |
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