Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
We have an excel spreadsheet that needs to be accessed by several users.
Currently, only one person can access at a time to input information. Can several users access the spreadsheet and input information simultaneously? |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Yes. Choose Tools | Share Workbook and fill the Allow checkbox on the
Editing tab. There are some additional options to set. Of course, the workbook needs to be accessible to all the users in something such as a shared folder. But be aware that there are various things that you can't do once you share a workbook, until you un-share it. And when you get enough data (I'm talking thousands of rows and a few columns) in it, I've found that they have a disconcerting tendency to freeze. I won't share out workbooks anymo I'd much rather my users enter and edit data in a true database that was designed from the ground up to be a multi-user application, and then bring the data into Excel for analysis using either an external data range or a pivot table. -- C^2 Conrad Carlberg Excel Sales Forecasting for Dummies, Wiley, 2005 "Vindell" wrote in message ... We have an excel spreadsheet that needs to be accessed by several users. Currently, only one person can access at a time to input information. Can several users access the spreadsheet and input information simultaneously? |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thank you Conrad. However, I had additional problems. For instance, one of
the workbooks that I wanted to share kept giving me a "open as read only" box. My only thought is that that particular workbook has been saved to be a read only file, however I could not figure that out. Excel Help suggested that I save the workbook again and then share it but I was a little hesitant. Also, is there a way where I can see the work that is being input into the Excel file in real time. Let me explain: We create contracts and then use the Excel workbook to record the contract number and several other pieces of information. It's helpful to see what contracts have been created so that we can avoid creating duplicate contracts. Any insight that you can give me would be greatly appreciated. "Conrad Carlberg" wrote: Yes. Choose Tools | Share Workbook and fill the Allow checkbox on the Editing tab. There are some additional options to set. Of course, the workbook needs to be accessible to all the users in something such as a shared folder. But be aware that there are various things that you can't do once you share a workbook, until you un-share it. And when you get enough data (I'm talking thousands of rows and a few columns) in it, I've found that they have a disconcerting tendency to freeze. I won't share out workbooks anymo I'd much rather my users enter and edit data in a true database that was designed from the ground up to be a multi-user application, and then bring the data into Excel for analysis using either an external data range or a pivot table. -- C^2 Conrad Carlberg Excel Sales Forecasting for Dummies, Wiley, 2005 "Vindell" wrote in message ... We have an excel spreadsheet that needs to be accessed by several users. Currently, only one person can access at a time to input information. Can several users access the spreadsheet and input information simultaneously? |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Vindell" wrote in message
... Thank you Conrad. However, I had additional problems. For instance, one of the workbooks that I wanted to share kept giving me a "open as read only" box. My only thought is that that particular workbook has been saved to be a read only file, however I could not figure that out. In my experience, one sees that "open as read only" message when another user has the file open, and it's not been shared. In that case, Excel will not allow a subsequent user to save the file with the same filename and to the same path (IMHO, the "read only" message is misleading). So I suspect that another user had already opened the (unshared) workbook. Also, is there a way where I can see the work that is being input into the Excel file in real time. Not that I know of -- not without re-opening the workbook, which doesn't classify as "real time.". The problems you describe are among the reasons I avoid sharing workbooks and use a combination of a database and Excel instead. -- C^2 Conrad Carlberg Excel Sales Forecasting for Dummies, Wiley, 2005 |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
There's an option on the tools|share workbook|advanced tab
that can be used to update changes--but the other users have to save the workbook for those to be seen. (So it's not real time either.) (and I, too, have never used Shared workbooks in real life.) There's a big list under "Features that are unavailable in shared workbooks" in excel's help. Conrad Carlberg wrote: "Vindell" wrote in message ... Thank you Conrad. However, I had additional problems. For instance, one of the workbooks that I wanted to share kept giving me a "open as read only" box. My only thought is that that particular workbook has been saved to be a read only file, however I could not figure that out. In my experience, one sees that "open as read only" message when another user has the file open, and it's not been shared. In that case, Excel will not allow a subsequent user to save the file with the same filename and to the same path (IMHO, the "read only" message is misleading). So I suspect that another user had already opened the (unshared) workbook. Also, is there a way where I can see the work that is being input into the Excel file in real time. Not that I know of -- not without re-opening the workbook, which doesn't classify as "real time.". The problems you describe are among the reasons I avoid sharing workbooks and use a combination of a database and Excel instead. -- C^2 Conrad Carlberg Excel Sales Forecasting for Dummies, Wiley, 2005 -- Dave Peterson |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
calling a C++ program from Excel 2000 and passing a result from C++ back to an excel spreadsheet | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Delay to startup excel spreadsheet | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
create excel spreadsheet to display data from filled text forms | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Is there a way to insert a formula, password or macro in an excel spreadsheet that will automatically delete the spreadsheet? | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Excel prompt inaccessible to users | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) |