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How do I fix . . remove formatting to avoid corruption . .
How do I find the formatting that's causing this error to appear when opening
an excel file " Excel encountered an error and had to remove some formatting to avoid corrupting the workbook. . ." |
How do I fix . . remove formatting to avoid corruption . .
You're probably not going to like my answer. First, if you can remember what
everything was supposed to look like and how it was all supposed to be formatted, then a visual examination may reveal it to you by its absence. The alternative is almost as bad and requires some memory effort also. You could open the workbook and remove all formatting (choose all cells on each sheet, used Edit | Clear | Format) and starting from scratch. But that is likely to produce undesired results, especially with formatted dates. The problem is that you aren't given a chance to open the workbook with the guilty formats present so you can make any kind of comparison. It seems to be one of those questions whose answer is "you can't get there from here". Going to Excel Help and search for Excel Specifications and Limits and examining that topic may give you some clues - it tells about the limits for number of cell formats, colors, and similar things. Perhaps one of those will ring a bell - like "oh, Excel can only have 4000 cell formats - and I'm guessing I've probably formatted twice that many individual cells" , but again that's a very uncertain situation. I wish I could offer more help. I waited for someone else who might have had a better answer to chime in here before posting my rather gloomy view of things. But I'm not all knowing, so perhaps someone else will come along and come up with a better idea. "jostlund" wrote: How do I find the formatting that's causing this error to appear when opening an excel file " Excel encountered an error and had to remove some formatting to avoid corrupting the workbook. . ." |
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