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Excel 2007 - Workbook.Open Question
I have the following line that works in PowerPoint 2003, but doesn't in
PowerPoint 2007. I'm asking here because I think it's more of an Excel question. Set XLBook = XLApp.Workbooks.Open(sFile, UpdateLinks:=False) I have everything dimensioned as needed. The error I'm getting is as follows: Run-time error '1004': Excel cannot open the file 'FILENAME.xlsm' because the file format or file extension is not valid. Verify that the file has not been corrupted and that the file extension matches the format of the file. Thanks, Barb Reinhardt |
Excel 2007 - Workbook.Open Question
FWIW, I don't have a problem opening a .xls file when testing the code on
Office 2007. Thanks, Barb Reinhardt "Barb Reinhardt" wrote: I have the following line that works in PowerPoint 2003, but doesn't in PowerPoint 2007. I'm asking here because I think it's more of an Excel question. Set XLBook = XLApp.Workbooks.Open(sFile, UpdateLinks:=False) I have everything dimensioned as needed. The error I'm getting is as follows: Run-time error '1004': Excel cannot open the file 'FILENAME.xlsm' because the file format or file extension is not valid. Verify that the file has not been corrupted and that the file extension matches the format of the file. Thanks, Barb Reinhardt |
Excel 2007 - Workbook.Open Question
I'm begining to think that the file I was opening was corrupted. I can open
and close other file.xlsm files. Barb Reinhardt "Barb Reinhardt" wrote: I have the following line that works in PowerPoint 2003, but doesn't in PowerPoint 2007. I'm asking here because I think it's more of an Excel question. Set XLBook = XLApp.Workbooks.Open(sFile, UpdateLinks:=False) I have everything dimensioned as needed. The error I'm getting is as follows: Run-time error '1004': Excel cannot open the file 'FILENAME.xlsm' because the file format or file extension is not valid. Verify that the file has not been corrupted and that the file extension matches the format of the file. Thanks, Barb Reinhardt |
Excel 2007 - Workbook.Open Question
You will get that error message if a file is not a true XLSM, for instance
if an XLS is renamed. Of course it could be something else. -- Jim "Barb Reinhardt" wrote in message ... | I'm begining to think that the file I was opening was corrupted. I can open | and close other file.xlsm files. | | Barb Reinhardt | | "Barb Reinhardt" wrote: | | I have the following line that works in PowerPoint 2003, but doesn't in | PowerPoint 2007. I'm asking here because I think it's more of an Excel | question. | | Set XLBook = XLApp.Workbooks.Open(sFile, UpdateLinks:=False) | | I have everything dimensioned as needed. The error I'm getting is as | follows: | | Run-time error '1004': | | Excel cannot open the file 'FILENAME.xlsm' | because the file format or file extension is not valid. Verify that the file | has not been corrupted and that the file extension matches the format | of the file. | | Thanks, | | Barb Reinhardt | | |
Excel 2007 - Workbook.Open Question
I've discovered part of my problem. If I save a workbook as a .xlsm with
Workbook_SaveAs code (I think that's it) AND there are named ranges that Excel 2007 does not like, I get no error and am unable to open the workbook again. Ain't life grand? Barb Reinhardt "Jim Rech" wrote: You will get that error message if a file is not a true XLSM, for instance if an XLS is renamed. Of course it could be something else. -- Jim "Barb Reinhardt" wrote in message ... | I'm begining to think that the file I was opening was corrupted. I can open | and close other file.xlsm files. | | Barb Reinhardt | | "Barb Reinhardt" wrote: | | I have the following line that works in PowerPoint 2003, but doesn't in | PowerPoint 2007. I'm asking here because I think it's more of an Excel | question. | | Set XLBook = XLApp.Workbooks.Open(sFile, UpdateLinks:=False) | | I have everything dimensioned as needed. The error I'm getting is as | follows: | | Run-time error '1004': | | Excel cannot open the file 'FILENAME.xlsm' | because the file format or file extension is not valid. Verify that the file | has not been corrupted and that the file extension matches the format | of the file. | | Thanks, | | Barb Reinhardt | | |
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