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Versions of workbooks- Excel 2007
Is it possible to save versions of a workbook in order to be able you to go
back to a previous version of the spreadsheet? I know that you can save as another filename. A delegate told me that there was a way to do this, I know that it is possible in the word but never heard of it in Excel. Any help would be appreciated Thanks Diane |
Versions of workbooks- Excel 2007
I use File | Save as with a different filename - usually I add "_a",
"_b", "_c" etc to the end of the filename. This is for earlier versions than XL2007 - perhaps that has some newer features to automatically allow you to increment the filename saved. Pete On Oct 29, 11:22*am, DianeG wrote: Is it possible to save versions of a workbook in order to be able you to go back to a previous version of the spreadsheet? *I know that you can save as another filename. *A delegate told me that there was a way to do this, I know that it is possible in the word but never heard of it in Excel. *Any help would be appreciated Thanks Diane |
Versions of workbooks- Excel 2007
If your file is on a network drive running under Windows XP, then if you
select the file and look under Properties, there should be a right-hand tab labelled "Previous versions". -- David Biddulph "DianeG" wrote in message ... Is it possible to save versions of a workbook in order to be able you to go back to a previous version of the spreadsheet? I know that you can save as another filename. A delegate told me that there was a way to do this, I know that it is possible in the word but never heard of it in Excel. Any help would be appreciated Thanks Diane |
Versions of workbooks- Excel 2007
Many people are starting to use SharePoint as a substitute for file shares.
Within SharePoint you can save major and minor versions of Office files. Perhaps that is what was described to you "DianeG" wrote: Is it possible to save versions of a workbook in order to be able you to go back to a previous version of the spreadsheet? I know that you can save as another filename. A delegate told me that there was a way to do this, I know that it is possible in the word but never heard of it in Excel. Any help would be appreciated Thanks Diane |
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