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I get a "Disk full" message,what disk?
I am not using a disk but an excel program created by someone else and given
to me by e-mail. |
I get a "Disk full" message,what disk?
"Deputydog" wrote in message
... I am not using a disk Well you must be, unless you are using Excel on a mobile phone.... but an excel program created by someone else and given to me by e-mail. You mean an Excel WORKBOOK, not a "program". So what are you doing when this message comes up? |
I get a "Disk full" message,what disk?
Yes, It is a workbook. I had entered all the info, alt 4 , save, and the
message came up. I mentioned it to another person, and she said the IT person knows the file is getting full and will fix it this afternoon, create more space. thanks for responding,. "Gordon" wrote: "Deputydog" wrote in message ... I am not using a disk Well you must be, unless you are using Excel on a mobile phone.... but an excel program created by someone else and given to me by e-mail. You mean an Excel WORKBOOK, not a "program". So what are you doing when this message comes up? |
I get a "Disk full" message,what disk?
Yes, it is a worksheet
"Deputydog" wrote: I am not using a disk but an excel program created by someone else and given to me by e-mail. |
I get a "Disk full" message,what disk?
When excel saves the file, it saves it as a temporary file with a funny name (8
characters--no extension) in the same folder. If the save is successful, xl will delete the original (or rename it to its backup name (like "backup of book1.xlk)) and if that's successful, xl will rename the funny named file to the original's name. So for an instant, excel needs about twice as much space as the file takes. If you saved the file attachment to your C: drive, then your c: could be close to full. If you saved the attachment to any other drive, check that drive for space. If you opened the file from your email client, then I bet your email client saves (without you knowing it) to a special folder on your C: drive. So it could be your c: drive is getting full. If you open the workbook from the email again, you can click on: File|Properties|General Tab and look at the location to see where that special folder is. Or you could put this in an empty cell: =cell("Filename",a1) don't change anything in that formula Deputydog wrote: Yes, It is a workbook. I had entered all the info, alt 4 , save, and the message came up. I mentioned it to another person, and she said the IT person knows the file is getting full and will fix it this afternoon, create more space. thanks for responding,. "Gordon" wrote: "Deputydog" wrote in message ... I am not using a disk Well you must be, unless you are using Excel on a mobile phone.... but an excel program created by someone else and given to me by e-mail. You mean an Excel WORKBOOK, not a "program". So what are you doing when this message comes up? -- Dave Peterson |
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