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When I open a an existing excel worksheet, it duplicates itself a.
When I open an existing excel worksheet, it automatically duplicates itself.
It shows on the bottom of the screen the same worksheet name with a 1 and then another worksheet with the same name but with a 2. How do I stop that from happening. Also, when I make changes in the orignal worksheet, the same changes take place in the second worksheet as well. |
When I open a an existing excel worksheet, it duplicates itself a.
"Gotoperson" wrote:
When I open an existing excel worksheet, it automatically duplicates itself. It shows on the bottom of the screen the same worksheet name with a 1 and then another worksheet with the same name but with a 2. How do I stop that from happening. Also, when I make changes in the orignal worksheet, the same changes take place in the second worksheet as well. The above just means an extra window(s) was opened for the same workbook (via Window New Window) Try the steps below to restore things to "normal" Click Window Arrange Tiled OK Now click the "x" button in the top right corner of one window to close it (if more than one window, just "x" until you are left with only one) Then click the "maximise" button to the left of the "x" to maximise this last one. Save the file. -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 xdemechanik --- |
When I open a an existing excel worksheet, it duplicates itself a.
That would be like workbook: 1, workbook: 2 on the title bar.
The OP indicated his sheet tabs were being duplicated. Something is causing a sheet to be copied each time you open the workbook. That would *probably* be an Event Macro see http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel....htm#event.htm See if you have code in the the following: Right click on the icon to the left of the menu bar, then View Code is there anything in there. If so try to figure out why it is there. Also take a look at the following that I'm pretty sure is not what you see You receive an "An error occurred while loading 'Sheet1111111111111...' " error message when you open a file in Excel 2000 http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;236299 --- HTH, David McRitchie, Microsoft MVP - Excel [site changed Nov. 2001] My Excel Pages: http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/excel.htm Search Page: http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/search.htm "Max" wrote in message ... "Gotoperson" wrote: When I open an existing excel worksheet, it automatically duplicates itself. It shows on the bottom of the screen the same worksheet name with a 1 and then another worksheet with the same name but with a 2. How do I stop that from happening. Also, when I make changes in the orignal worksheet, the same changes take place in the second worksheet as well. The above just means an extra window(s) was opened for the same workbook (via Window New Window) Try the steps below to restore things to "normal" Click Window Arrange Tiled OK Now click the "x" button in the top right corner of one window to close it (if more than one window, just "x" until you are left with only one) Then click the "maximise" button to the left of the "x" to maximise this last one. Save the file. -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 xdemechanik --- |
When I open a an existing excel worksheet, it duplicates itself a.
David
My interpretation was that OP was seeing two workbooks open on the Taskbar, not that the sheet tabs were duplicated. If two windows open, both will be shown on taskbar as filename.xls:1 and filename.xls:2 Of course, Windows in Taskbar must be enabled. Gord On Sat, 15 Jul 2006 21:10:23 -0400, "David McRitchie" wrote: That would be like workbook: 1, workbook: 2 on the title bar. The OP indicated his sheet tabs were being duplicated. Something is causing a sheet to be copied each time you open the workbook. That would *probably* be an Event Macro see http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel....htm#event.htm See if you have code in the the following: Right click on the icon to the left of the menu bar, then View Code is there anything in there. If so try to figure out why it is there. Also take a look at the following that I'm pretty sure is not what you see You receive an "An error occurred while loading 'Sheet1111111111111...' " error message when you open a file in Excel 2000 http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;236299 --- HTH, David McRitchie, Microsoft MVP - Excel [site changed Nov. 2001] My Excel Pages: http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/excel.htm Search Page: http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/search.htm "Max" wrote in message ... "Gotoperson" wrote: When I open an existing excel worksheet, it automatically duplicates itself. It shows on the bottom of the screen the same worksheet name with a 1 and then another worksheet with the same name but with a 2. How do I stop that from happening. Also, when I make changes in the orignal worksheet, the same changes take place in the second worksheet as well. The above just means an extra window(s) was opened for the same workbook (via Window New Window) Try the steps below to restore things to "normal" Click Window Arrange Tiled OK Now click the "x" button in the top right corner of one window to close it (if more than one window, just "x" until you are left with only one) Then click the "maximise" button to the left of the "x" to maximise this last one. Save the file. -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 xdemechanik --- Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP |
When I open a an existing excel worksheet, it duplicates itsel
... Also, when I make changes in the orignal worksheet, the same
changes take place in the second worksheet as well. From the above lines, I guessed OP's file had 2 windows opened and apparently the same sheet (the "original" worksheet) was simultaneously tiled on-screen. That could explain why the changes he effected on one tile showed up immediately on the other. Just my take on the post. -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 xdemechanik --- |
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