Fishbone†
<font color=blue>Does strange things while sleepin
- Joined
- May 31, 2001
- Messages
- 1,372
My IT guy accidentally trashed my computer yesterday by deleting a registry file that was necessary for.... . oh, say..... the computer to run at all.
Anyway, he had to reinstall Office 2000 and everything else that I use, and in the process I lost all my settings, etc. A nuisence for sure, but not the end of the world. *sigh*
What may be the end of the world though, is that I am missing one of my most dearly loved and used macros. One I would cry to have to recreate. I created it to be used in all files, and therefore it was in a hidden workbook that opened with Excel (I know there is a special name for this, but for some reason it escapes me right now). It's like the "normal" in Word. Anyway, it used to be that my Excel wouldn't open two sessions without warning me that this file was in use, but right now I could open multiple sessions without a problem.
Can someone tell me where Excel would have stored this macro, and how I might go about locating it?? And please don't tell me it's lost forever if at all possible.
THANK YOU!!!!
Anyway, he had to reinstall Office 2000 and everything else that I use, and in the process I lost all my settings, etc. A nuisence for sure, but not the end of the world. *sigh*
What may be the end of the world though, is that I am missing one of my most dearly loved and used macros. One I would cry to have to recreate. I created it to be used in all files, and therefore it was in a hidden workbook that opened with Excel (I know there is a special name for this, but for some reason it escapes me right now). It's like the "normal" in Word. Anyway, it used to be that my Excel wouldn't open two sessions without warning me that this file was in use, but right now I could open multiple sessions without a problem.
Can someone tell me where Excel would have stored this macro, and how I might go about locating it?? And please don't tell me it's lost forever if at all possible.
THANK YOU!!!!


