Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.links
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
can i link a cell in an excel workbook on one PC to a cell in an excel
workbook on another PC? i have a spreadsheet with realtime stock quotes on one PC and want to share the realtime quotes with other PCs without downloading the realtime software onto the secondary PCs. Can anybody help? |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.links
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
confused wrote:
can i link a cell in an excel workbook on one PC to a cell in an excel workbook on another PC? i have a spreadsheet with realtime stock quotes on one PC and want to share the realtime quotes with other PCs without downloading the realtime software onto the secondary PCs. Can anybody help? Yes 1. You will want to have both workbooks open and tiled on your screen to make the following steps easier. 2. Select the data in the source workbook & copy the data to the clip board. 3. Select the are to receive the data in the destination workbook, click Edit, Paste Special, Paste Link. The destination workbook can be on another machine or you can be on the other machine, in the destination workbook, and viewing the shared workbook while performing the steps from the destination. The source file, folder, or drive, may have to be mapped first depending on the version on Excel & OS being used. You can also set the links to update when the file is opened on the destination machine or do the update manually. If there is little activity on your lan keeping the link alive while the destination is open may not be a problem but if there is a lot of other activity you may want to set it to manual or update only when opened as there will be a lot of "chatter" between the two machines when on automatic. Hope this helps. BTW Prentice-Hall has some very good training manuals covering various office versions for very reasonable prices. The link to the Office XP manual is http://phcatalog.pearson.com/program...rogram_id=6235 or for Office 2000 http://phcatalog.pearson.com/program...rogram_id=6236 From time to time I have seen them available at Sam's Club in the Los Angeles area for about $15. I don't know if PH will sell direct or not. These basic steps are from the excel portion of their XP office manual page 281. Its been a long time since I did this so I wanted a refresher before providing the steps. James |
#3
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.links
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The solution described only works if the linked workbooks are both open on
the same PC. I want to have the source workbook open on one pc and the destination workbook open on a different pc. Thanks to james for the effort. "James" wrote: confused wrote: can i link a cell in an excel workbook on one PC to a cell in an excel workbook on another PC? i have a spreadsheet with realtime stock quotes on one PC and want to share the realtime quotes with other PCs without downloading the realtime software onto the secondary PCs. Can anybody help? Yes 1. You will want to have both workbooks open and tiled on your screen to make the following steps easier. 2. Select the data in the source workbook & copy the data to the clip board. 3. Select the are to receive the data in the destination workbook, click Edit, Paste Special, Paste Link. The destination workbook can be on another machine or you can be on the other machine, in the destination workbook, and viewing the shared workbook while performing the steps from the destination. The source file, folder, or drive, may have to be mapped first depending on the version on Excel & OS being used. You can also set the links to update when the file is opened on the destination machine or do the update manually. If there is little activity on your lan keeping the link alive while the destination is open may not be a problem but if there is a lot of other activity you may want to set it to manual or update only when opened as there will be a lot of "chatter" between the two machines when on automatic. Hope this helps. BTW Prentice-Hall has some very good training manuals covering various office versions for very reasonable prices. The link to the Office XP manual is http://phcatalog.pearson.com/program...rogram_id=6235 or for Office 2000 http://phcatalog.pearson.com/program...rogram_id=6236 From time to time I have seen them available at Sam's Club in the Los Angeles area for about $15. I don't know if PH will sell direct or not. These basic steps are from the excel portion of their XP office manual page 281. Its been a long time since I did this so I wanted a refresher before providing the steps. James |
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.links
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
confused wrote:
The solution described only works if the linked workbooks are both open on the same PC. I want to have the source workbook open on one pc and the destination workbook open on a different pc. Thanks to james for the effort. "James" wrote: confused wrote: can i link a cell in an excel workbook on one PC to a cell in an excel workbook on another PC? i have a spreadsheet with realtime stock quotes on one PC and want to share the realtime quotes with other PCs without downloading the realtime software onto the secondary PCs. Can anybody help? Yes 1. You will want to have both workbooks open and tiled on your screen to make the following steps easier. 2. Select the data in the source workbook & copy the data to the clip board. 3. Select the are to receive the data in the destination workbook, click Edit, Paste Special, Paste Link. The destination workbook can be on another machine or you can be on the other machine, in the destination workbook, and viewing the shared workbook while performing the steps from the destination. The source file, folder, or drive, may have to be mapped first depending on the version on Excel & OS being used. You can also set the links to update when the file is opened on the destination machine or do the update manually. If there is little activity on your lan keeping the link alive while the destination is open may not be a problem but if there is a lot of other activity you may want to set it to manual or update only when opened as there will be a lot of "chatter" between the two machines when on automatic. Hope this helps. BTW Prentice-Hall has some very good training manuals covering various office versions for very reasonable prices. The link to the Office XP manual is http://phcatalog.pearson.com/program...rogram_id=6235 or for Office 2000 http://phcatalog.pearson.com/program...rogram_id=6236 From time to time I have seen them available at Sam's Club in the Los Angeles area for about $15. I don't know if PH will sell direct or not. These basic steps are from the excel portion of their XP office manual page 281. Its been a long time since I did this so I wanted a refresher before providing the steps. James Did you share the folders & map them as a drive on the local machines? I have done this in the past with no problems. James |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Workbooks run on foreign language computers | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
link workbooks | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
How can I move multiple linked workbooks between computers | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
How workbooks link to other workbooks | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
How can I link excel spreadsheets that work on other computers | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) |