![]() |
default blank excel document??
Hello all.
I am trying to find out what the default Excel document is. Word has the default.dat but what does Excel have? I have a user who had a problem and the tech who "fixed" the problem replaced the default document with two other documents. I have cleared out the XLSTART folder and that didnt work. Please, any and all replies welcome and appreciated. |
MSWord has Normal.dot.
Excel has book.xlt. It's a workbook that's set up the way you want and saved as a template in your XLStart folder. Excel also has a sheet.xlt template workbook. It's used when you add a new worksheet to an existing workbook. If you want to find out where that folder is: Open excel hit alt-f11 to get to the VBE (where macros live) hit ctrl-g to see the immediate window. type this and hit enter: ?application.StartupPath For me (winXP and xl2003), I get: C:\Documents and Settings\(username)\Application Data\Microsoft\Excel\XLSTART Scott wrote: Hello all. I am trying to find out what the default Excel document is. Word has the default.dat but what does Excel have? I have a user who had a problem and the tech who "fixed" the problem replaced the default document with two other documents. I have cleared out the XLSTART folder and that didnt work. Please, any and all replies welcome and appreciated. -- Dave Peterson |
Ooppss... it is normal.dot.. I had a brainfart when I did typed that.
What would I do to get a regular blank excel spreadsheet book to replace those templates? Do I have to go in and edit the book that is in there and save it as a book.xlt? Then place it in the XLSTART folder? Or can I find one on a default machine that I can copy and put on his machine? Please let me know when you get a chance. All help and advise is appreciated. Scott "Dave Peterson" wrote: MSWord has Normal.dot. Excel has book.xlt. It's a workbook that's set up the way you want and saved as a template in your XLStart folder. Excel also has a sheet.xlt template workbook. It's used when you add a new worksheet to an existing workbook. If you want to find out where that folder is: Open excel hit alt-f11 to get to the VBE (where macros live) hit ctrl-g to see the immediate window. type this and hit enter: ?application.StartupPath For me (winXP and xl2003), I get: C:\Documents and Settings\(username)\Application Data\Microsoft\Excel\XLSTART Scott wrote: Hello all. I am trying to find out what the default Excel document is. Word has the default.dat but what does Excel have? I have a user who had a problem and the tech who "fixed" the problem replaced the default document with two other documents. I have cleared out the XLSTART folder and that didnt work. Please, any and all replies welcome and appreciated. -- Dave Peterson |
You can just start a new workbook and modify it the way you want.
Then save to that XLStart folder. (You could copy from another pc if you want, too. Whichever is easiest.) Scott wrote: Ooppss... it is normal.dot.. I had a brainfart when I did typed that. What would I do to get a regular blank excel spreadsheet book to replace those templates? Do I have to go in and edit the book that is in there and save it as a book.xlt? Then place it in the XLSTART folder? Or can I find one on a default machine that I can copy and put on his machine? Please let me know when you get a chance. All help and advise is appreciated. Scott "Dave Peterson" wrote: MSWord has Normal.dot. Excel has book.xlt. It's a workbook that's set up the way you want and saved as a template in your XLStart folder. Excel also has a sheet.xlt template workbook. It's used when you add a new worksheet to an existing workbook. If you want to find out where that folder is: Open excel hit alt-f11 to get to the VBE (where macros live) hit ctrl-g to see the immediate window. type this and hit enter: ?application.StartupPath For me (winXP and xl2003), I get: C:\Documents and Settings\(username)\Application Data\Microsoft\Excel\XLSTART Scott wrote: Hello all. I am trying to find out what the default Excel document is. Word has the default.dat but what does Excel have? I have a user who had a problem and the tech who "fixed" the problem replaced the default document with two other documents. I have cleared out the XLSTART folder and that didnt work. Please, any and all replies welcome and appreciated. -- Dave Peterson -- Dave Peterson |
Unlike Word, Excel has built-in defaults that it uses *unless* Book.xlt or
Sheet.xlt exist. In other words, if you find & delete those files, Excel should return to something more like an out-of-the box state (Excel does not require those files to operate, unlike Word and Normal.Dot) -- George Nicholson Remove 'Junk' from return address. "Scott" wrote in message ... Ooppss... it is normal.dot.. I had a brainfart when I did typed that. What would I do to get a regular blank excel spreadsheet book to replace those templates? Do I have to go in and edit the book that is in there and save it as a book.xlt? Then place it in the XLSTART folder? Or can I find one on a default machine that I can copy and put on his machine? Please let me know when you get a chance. All help and advise is appreciated. Scott "Dave Peterson" wrote: MSWord has Normal.dot. Excel has book.xlt. It's a workbook that's set up the way you want and saved as a template in your XLStart folder. Excel also has a sheet.xlt template workbook. It's used when you add a new worksheet to an existing workbook. If you want to find out where that folder is: Open excel hit alt-f11 to get to the VBE (where macros live) hit ctrl-g to see the immediate window. type this and hit enter: ?application.StartupPath For me (winXP and xl2003), I get: C:\Documents and Settings\(username)\Application Data\Microsoft\Excel\XLSTART Scott wrote: Hello all. I am trying to find out what the default Excel document is. Word has the default.dat but what does Excel have? I have a user who had a problem and the tech who "fixed" the problem replaced the default document with two other documents. I have cleared out the XLSTART folder and that didnt work. Please, any and all replies welcome and appreciated. -- Dave Peterson |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:53 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com