Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Bruce
 
Posts: n/a
Default Open Excel Files as Separate Windows

In Word, you can open 2 documents that act as completely separate programs,
being allowed to more one to a second display, etc. In Excel, how do you do
that? I don't want to have 2 files open inside of Excel, but I want to have
two totally separate instances of Excel open. Please help?!
  #2   Report Post  
Dave Peterson
 
Posts: n/a
Default Open Excel Files as Separate Windows

Open the first workbook any way you want.

Start a second instance of excel.
either put a shortcut to excel.exe on your desktop and use that
or
windows start button|run
type:
excel
and hit enter

Then file|open the second workbook.

Bruce wrote:

In Word, you can open 2 documents that act as completely separate programs,
being allowed to more one to a second display, etc. In Excel, how do you do
that? I don't want to have 2 files open inside of Excel, but I want to have
two totally separate instances of Excel open. Please help?!


--

Dave Peterson
  #3   Report Post  
Bruce
 
Posts: n/a
Default Open Excel Files as Separate Windows

Yes. That works. Is there a simplier way?
-----------------

"Dave Peterson" wrote:

Open the first workbook any way you want.

Start a second instance of excel.
either put a shortcut to excel.exe on your desktop and use that
or
windows start button|run
type:
excel
and hit enter

Then file|open the second workbook.

Bruce wrote:

In Word, you can open 2 documents that act as completely separate programs,
being allowed to more one to a second display, etc. In Excel, how do you do
that? I don't want to have 2 files open inside of Excel, but I want to have
two totally separate instances of Excel open. Please help?!


--

Dave Peterson

  #4   Report Post  
Dave Peterson
 
Posts: n/a
Default Open Excel Files as Separate Windows

I think it's the easiest/safest...

This may help (or hurt).

If you open files by double clicking on them in windows explorer....

You could try:

Tools|options|General tab|Ignore other applications (check it)

Then double click on the workbook in windows explorer.

And be aware that turning this setting on sometimes gives errors with workbooks
that contain spaces in their path/name:

C:\my documents\excel\my book.xls

The error will look kind of like:
cannot find c:\my ..
then
cannot find documents\excel\my
then
cannot find book.xls

Or it may just open excel and not show you the file that you clicked on.

Bruce wrote:

Yes. That works. Is there a simplier way?
-----------------

"Dave Peterson" wrote:

Open the first workbook any way you want.

Start a second instance of excel.
either put a shortcut to excel.exe on your desktop and use that
or
windows start button|run
type:
excel
and hit enter

Then file|open the second workbook.

Bruce wrote:

In Word, you can open 2 documents that act as completely separate programs,
being allowed to more one to a second display, etc. In Excel, how do you do
that? I don't want to have 2 files open inside of Excel, but I want to have
two totally separate instances of Excel open. Please help?!


--

Dave Peterson


--

Dave Peterson
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Excel files in separate program windows Jason Dove Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 27 October 24th 08 07:58 PM
CSV formatted files open odly in Excel 2000 Janski Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 3 November 24th 05 07:58 PM
Excel shortcut/Multiple windows weirdness [email protected] Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 7 September 24th 05 07:08 PM
Replace Excel File Open with Windows Explorer KymY Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 2 May 2nd 05 01:05 PM
Excel runs, but files will not open [email protected] Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 1 January 11th 05 08:30 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:55 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 ExcelBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Microsoft Excel"