Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works!
Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hurray !!
Krgrds, Perry wrote in message ups.com... Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
#3
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You can also take the help of third party VBA password remover tool to unlock your protected file. One such tool I found on internet is: http://www.vbapasswordremover.com/
|
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
¿ --- ?
|
#5
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You say simple editor, but I think it has to be a hex editor.
It won't for example work if you do this in Wordpad. I have tried it with MadEdit and in that it works indeed. I knew it was easy to crack these passwords, but I didn't know it was this easy. RBS wrote in message ups.com... Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
#6
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
i had tried with maxedit and when i open the file, the below error display
An error occured when initialising vba libraries Microsoft Office Excel File Repair Log Errors were detected in file 'C:\Documents and Settings\user\Desktop\E2004_04.xls' The following is a list of repairs: Lost Visual Basic project. Lost ActiveX controls. pls advise EggHeadCafe.com - .NET Developer Portal of Choice http://www.eggheadcafe.com |
#7
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Use your backup file.
Talk to the developer and get the password. abelard wrote: i had tried with maxedit and when i open the file, the below error display An error occured when initialising vba libraries Microsoft Office Excel File Repair Log Errors were detected in file 'C:\Documents and Settings\user\Desktop\E2004_04.xls' The following is a list of repairs: Lost Visual Basic project. Lost ActiveX controls. pls advise EggHeadCafe.com - .NET Developer Portal of Choice http://www.eggheadcafe.com -- Dave Peterson |
#8
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Locks are made to keep honest people honest. The dishonest will always find
a way to foil the lock. " wrote: Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
#9
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Alen,
I have followed the steps. I have used Notepad as the editor. I copy the lines from the dummy file on top of the same lines of the file I need the password for (target file). Then I save this file with Notepad using Ctrl+S (not save as) My problem is that when I try to open this file in Excel I get "book2.xls" cannot be accessed. The file may be read only. Or you may be trying to access a read only location. Or the server the document is stored on may not be responding. What am I doing wrong? Thanks, Antonio " wrote: Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
#10
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You have to do this in a HEX editor.
Hopefully you didn't need that file or made a copy of it (or it was just a play/test file). I think you can assume it is ruined. -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Antonio" wrote in message ... Hi Alen, I have followed the steps. I have used Notepad as the editor. I copy the lines from the dummy file on top of the same lines of the file I need the password for (target file). Then I save this file with Notepad using Ctrl+S (not save as) My problem is that when I try to open this file in Excel I get "book2.xls" cannot be accessed. The file may be read only. Or you may be trying to access a read only location. Or the server the document is stored on may not be responding. What am I doing wrong? Thanks, Antonio " wrote: Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
#11
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thank you.
I did try on a test file. It works. Quite handy. "Tom Ogilvy" wrote: You have to do this in a HEX editor. Hopefully you didn't need that file or made a copy of it (or it was just a play/test file). I think you can assume it is ruined. -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Antonio" wrote in message ... Hi Alen, I have followed the steps. I have used Notepad as the editor. I copy the lines from the dummy file on top of the same lines of the file I need the password for (target file). Then I save this file with Notepad using Ctrl+S (not save as) My problem is that when I try to open this file in Excel I get "book2.xls" cannot be accessed. The file may be read only. Or you may be trying to access a read only location. Or the server the document is stored on may not be responding. What am I doing wrong? Thanks, Antonio " wrote: Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
#12
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 4, 11:55 am, "Tom Ogilvy" wrote:
You have to do this in a HEX editor. OK, but why? Naively I would think that a string of characters (copied into the clipboard in Notepad) = stream of bytes = stream of hex values. How does the clipboard succeed in mangling these values? The only thing I can think of is that maybe it inserts some padding bytes here and there in a way that you have no control over. That, or maybe the entire block is somehow misaligned. Just curious -John Coleman Hopefully you didn't need that file or made a copy of it (or it was just a play/test file). I think you can assume it is ruined. -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Antonio" wrote in message ... Hi Alen, I have followed the steps. I have used Notepad as the editor. I copy the lines from the dummy file on top of the same lines of the file I need the password for (target file). Then I save this file with Notepad using Ctrl+S (not save as) My problem is that when I try to open this file in Excel I get "book2.xls" cannot be accessed. The file may be read only. Or you may be trying to access a read only location. Or the server the document is stored on may not be responding. What am I doing wrong? Thanks, Antonio " wrote: Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#13
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
A text editor like Notepad is expecting a textfile and therefore interprets
certain characters as control characters - such as vbLF, vbCR, EOF, new page, tab and some of the other characters less than ASCII code 32. Encountering the EOF indicator will cause the file to be terminated. This usually happens well before the end of the file when reading in a binary file. More than likely one reason why the OP could not find the target strings and if he had found them and written them to another file, good chance that file would be corrupted because the whole file wasn't read in and subsequently saved. A hex editor doesn't try to interpret and act on any characters. It give no meaning to the characters - just displays them and allows you to change them and write the file back out. Open an excel file in notepad. Change a recognizable character or even do nothing. Save it over itself using saveas. See if you can open it in Excel. In most cases, I would expect not - at least an not get the original file. . -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "John Coleman" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 4, 11:55 am, "Tom Ogilvy" wrote: You have to do this in a HEX editor. OK, but why? Naively I would think that a string of characters (copied into the clipboard in Notepad) = stream of bytes = stream of hex values. How does the clipboard succeed in mangling these values? The only thing I can think of is that maybe it inserts some padding bytes here and there in a way that you have no control over. That, or maybe the entire block is somehow misaligned. Just curious -John Coleman Hopefully you didn't need that file or made a copy of it (or it was just a play/test file). I think you can assume it is ruined. -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Antonio" wrote in message ... Hi Alen, I have followed the steps. I have used Notepad as the editor. I copy the lines from the dummy file on top of the same lines of the file I need the password for (target file). Then I save this file with Notepad using Ctrl+S (not save as) My problem is that when I try to open this file in Excel I get "book2.xls" cannot be accessed. The file may be read only. Or you may be trying to access a read only location. Or the server the document is stored on may not be responding. What am I doing wrong? Thanks, Antonio " wrote: Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#14
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You will need a hex editor.
Try the free MadEdit. RBS "Antonio" wrote in message ... Hi Alen, I have followed the steps. I have used Notepad as the editor. I copy the lines from the dummy file on top of the same lines of the file I need the password for (target file). Then I save this file with Notepad using Ctrl+S (not save as) My problem is that when I try to open this file in Excel I get "book2.xls" cannot be accessed. The file may be read only. Or you may be trying to access a read only location. Or the server the document is stored on may not be responding. What am I doing wrong? Thanks, Antonio " wrote: Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
#15
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 4, 8:00 pm, wrote:
Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen D/ALLEN First of all my appreciation for your genorosity in sharing with ur find. First time it was all greek. I read it over and over again to ustand a bit. Now i got the hex editor xvi32. I ran it and did as u told. When i opened the excel file in the hex editor-- there was three screens, one small to the left, and next two big ones. in the thrid one only ascii characters. But i did not find what u said like CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... Then i clicked on the tools on xvi32 and opened the editor. i got only four characters. So can u adopt the approach - ALLEN STEPS FOR DUMMIES--. Pls explain it in little more detail especially since I cant find the CMG=.... DPB=... GC=.... I think I am not opening it in the right screen. Pls advice |
#16
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 4, 8:00 pm, wrote:
Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen AND I MISSED TO INFORM-- Still i went ahead and opened the excel file in xvi32 and copied the whole thing and opned MY OLD FILE WHICH I WANTED TO FIND THE VBA CODE. The rude shock was it GOT OVER WRITTEN BY THIS SIMPLE EXCEL FILE. LUCKILY I DO HAVE A COPY OF THE OVERWRITTEN FILE. So pls give me a bit more elaborate steps. |
#17
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I also donot understand where to paste the copied data. to find on the same
cmg/dpb/gc and paste the lines? pl explaina little bit elaoborate? |
#18
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Does this work with Office 2007?
" wrote: Unbelivibale, but I found a very simple way that really works! Do the follwoing: 1. Create a new simple excel file. 2. In the VBA part, set a simple password (say - 1234). 3. Save the file and exit. 4. Open the file you just created with a simple editor. 5. Copy the lines starting with the following keys: CMG=.... DPB=... GC=... 6. with a simple editor (again), open the excel file you don;t know the VBA password for, and paste the above copied lines from the dummy file. 7. save the excel file and exit. 8. Now, open the excel file you need to see the VBA code in. The password for the VBA code will simply be 1234 (as in the example I'm showing here). Simply works... Enjoy! Alen |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Password Crack | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Password crack in Excel FileVB Editor | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
How can I Crack Excel File Password? | Excel Programming | |||
excel password crack | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Crack a VBA password? | Excel Programming |