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You missed my point he
There are lots of cases where I open a file as readonly--not because I don't want to save my changes, but because I want to protect the existing workbook. Precisely. Read only is read only. No saving, because there's no changes. My point was that I want to save my changes to a different workbook. And I (and I think most people) appreciate that warning. But maybe MS will agree with you in a future version. Aaron Oxford wrote: Bah, we are going nowhere. But to finish the discussion. "Dave Peterson" wrote: There are lots of cases where I open a file as readonly--not because I don't want to save my changes, but because I want to protect the existing workbook. Precisely. Read only is read only. No saving, because there's no changes. I want to make tons of changes and then save as a new name. By opening the existing file as readonly, I know that I won't screw that one up. And if I weren't prompted, I may forget to save as the new name. It seems like a very reasonable approach to me. Basically it comes under the heading of dialog fatigue. If Excel bugs me to save changes whether or not they've occurred, I might tell it not to save as usual when in fact I wanted to this time. If I forget to save changes because I forgot, that's my problem. If I automatically answer that annoying dialog box the way I always do and lose changes I was making, *then* I blame Excel for my loss. Thanks for the discussion, maybe someone at MS will take it into account for the next version. -- Dave Peterson |
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