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I've written a small macro which includes the following two commands:
varVer=Application.Version varBld=Application.Build When I run this macro on a machine with Excel 2000 (fully patched with Office Updates) running on a Windows XP (U.S. installation) the version is returned as 9 and the build is 8924. When I run this macro on a machine with Excel 2000 (fully patched with Office Updates) running on a Windows XP (German installation) the version is returned as 9 and the build is 90 and the build is 2719. I guess I would have presumed that the OS language would not affect the build number. And most definitely would not have affected the version number. Can anyone tell me . . . 1. Can I safely anticipate that all non-U.S. language versions of Windows XP running Excel 2000 will return a version of 90, versus 9 when using a U.S. language OS? Would this be the same for other versions of Excel (v10/v100 or v11/v110)? 2. Can I safely anticipate that all non-U.S. language versions of Windows XP running Excel version x will have the same build number? 3. Is there a definitive chart anywhere showing current versions and builds for Excel 9 (Office 2000), Excel 10 (Office XP), and Excel 11 (Office 2003)? Thanks to anyone who can give me some pointers. |
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