Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
I just installed Office 2003 and am trying to come to grips with some of
the small differences from the '97 version I was using. Everytime I open Word now, it gives me a "helpful" warning: "The macros in this project are disabled. Please refer to the online help to determine how to enable macros." Now the thing is that I don't want to enable macros. I don't use them in a word processor so I don't see any reason to open a security hole in Word that I don't need. So how do I get Word to stop nattering to me about enabling macros everytime I open a file that doesn't use them anyhow? Thanks. Bill |
#2
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
Bill,
The message is a result of the default security settings in Word2003. See ToolsMacroSecurity. The default setting is "high." To each his or her own, but I recommend you set Macro Security to Medium and then on the Trusted Publishers tab check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins." I think you will be free of the annoying message and still watertight. -- Greg Maxey/Word MVP See: http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/word_tips.htm For some helpful tips using Word. Bill Martin wrote: I just installed Office 2003 and am trying to come to grips with some of the small differences from the '97 version I was using. Everytime I open Word now, it gives me a "helpful" warning: "The macros in this project are disabled. Please refer to the online help to determine how to enable macros." Now the thing is that I don't want to enable macros. I don't use them in a word processor so I don't see any reason to open a security hole in Word that I don't need. So how do I get Word to stop nattering to me about enabling macros everytime I open a file that doesn't use them anyhow? Thanks. Bill |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
"Greg Maxey" wrote in
: Bill, The message is a result of the default security settings in Word2003. See ToolsMacroSecurity. The default setting is "high." To each his or her own, but I recommend you set Macro Security to Medium and then on the Trusted Publishers tab check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins." I think you will be free of the annoying message and still watertight. ---------------- That would probably work, but I don't see why I should enable macros just to get Word to stop nattering whenever I open or close the program. Most Microsoft warnings seem to have some way to tell the program to not warn you about whatever repeatedly. I haven't been able to find where that's buried in Word however. It would be one thing if I were trying to run some document with macros in it, but I'm not. Bill |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
Actually I told you wrong. The default setting is "very high."
-- Greg Maxey/Word MVP See: http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/word_tips.htm For some helpful tips using Word. Bill Martin wrote: "Greg Maxey" wrote in : Bill, The message is a result of the default security settings in Word2003. See ToolsMacroSecurity. The default setting is "high." To each his or her own, but I recommend you set Macro Security to Medium and then on the Trusted Publishers tab check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins." I think you will be free of the annoying message and still watertight. ---------------- That would probably work, but I don't see why I should enable macros just to get Word to stop nattering whenever I open or close the program. Most Microsoft warnings seem to have some way to tell the program to not warn you about whatever repeatedly. I haven't been able to find where that's buried in Word however. It would be one thing if I were trying to run some document with macros in it, but I'm not. Bill |
#5
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
Keep looking if you want. I can certainly be wroing, but I think that you
are going to find that your options are to set the security level to medium and be rid of the message or leave it as is and deal with the message. Setting it to meduim does not mean that you have to enable any macros. It just means that if you have Add-ins (e.g., Adobe, etc.) (have you checked?) that they will run. If you recieve a document with macros (the good kind or the bad) you will get the warning then with the option to let it run or not. -- Greg Maxey/Word MVP See: http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/word_tips.htm For some helpful tips using Word. Bill Martin wrote: "Greg Maxey" wrote in : Bill, The message is a result of the default security settings in Word2003. See ToolsMacroSecurity. The default setting is "high." To each his or her own, but I recommend you set Macro Security to Medium and then on the Trusted Publishers tab check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins." I think you will be free of the annoying message and still watertight. ---------------- That would probably work, but I don't see why I should enable macros just to get Word to stop nattering whenever I open or close the program. Most Microsoft warnings seem to have some way to tell the program to not warn you about whatever repeatedly. I haven't been able to find where that's buried in Word however. It would be one thing if I were trying to run some document with macros in it, but I'm not. Bill |
#6
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 00:31:00 -0500, Greg Maxey wrote:
Keep looking if you want. I can certainly be wroing, but I think that you are going to find that your options are to set the security level to medium and be rid of the message or leave it as is and deal with the message. Setting it to meduim does not mean that you have to enable any macros. It just means that if you have Add-ins (e.g., Adobe, etc.) (have you checked?) that they will run. If you recieve a document with macros (the good kind or the bad) you will get the warning then with the option to let it run or not. Thanks Greg. I guess I'm just crumudgeonly about security. I don't much like being forced to take it on faith that if I enable macros they really won't run anyhow. That there are no security bugs in this one product. It mystifies me why Microsoft would design in the high security levels, and then make it impossible to use them. What could they possibly have been thinking? Oops - maybe that's the problem. Thanks. Bill |
#7
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
Sun, 19 Feb 2006 02:31:50 -0500 from Bill Martin
: It mystifies me why Microsoft would design in the high security levels, and then make it impossible to use them. What could they possibly have been thinking? Oops - maybe that's the problem. I think you've put your finger on it. Microsoft products were designed without security. As reports of exploits began coming thick and fast in the late 90's and early 00's, Microsoft band-aided security measures so they could say "security? oh yah, you betcha." But the basic products had been written on the assumption of no security, so they don't run with security features enabled. Hence you have to disable security (in whole or in part) to do pretty much any real work. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ |
#8
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
I think you have misunderstood. Here's how it works:
1. You set the Security setting to Medium. This doesn't automatically enable macros; it gives you a choice. You'll still get a message box, but instead of saying that macros have been disabled, it will say that there are macros and give you the choice of enabling or disabling them. This will apply to documents that you open that may contain macros. 2. The message you're getting, however, is not from a document. Most likely it is from an add-in (the message probably tells you what it is). You can see some of the add-ins that are installed in Word by looking at the list in the Tools | Templates and Add-ins dialog. Some add-ins (COM add-ins) are not listed here; you can learn about those with another tool (see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customizat...sInstalled.htm). 3. Assuming that the add-ins are ones you want, and also to be able to use the Microsoft Wizards that ship with Word, you need to "trust" certain templates and add-ins. To do that, you check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins" on the Trusted Sources tab of Tools | Macro | Security. 4. Trusting installed add-ins will take care of templates in your user templates folder and the workgroup templates folder (if any), as well as add-ins in Word's Startup folder. Unfortunately, this trust does not extend to the Office Startup folder, so you may still get a message about add-ins that load from there, but the message will tell you what the add-in is and allow you to check a box to trust add-ins from that provider (Adobe, for example, if you have Adobe Acrobat). Then you won't get a message from that any more, either. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Bill Martin" wrote in message ... On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 00:31:00 -0500, Greg Maxey wrote: Keep looking if you want. I can certainly be wroing, but I think that you are going to find that your options are to set the security level to medium and be rid of the message or leave it as is and deal with the message. Setting it to meduim does not mean that you have to enable any macros. It just means that if you have Add-ins (e.g., Adobe, etc.) (have you checked?) that they will run. If you recieve a document with macros (the good kind or the bad) you will get the warning then with the option to let it run or not. Thanks Greg. I guess I'm just crumudgeonly about security. I don't much like being forced to take it on faith that if I enable macros they really won't run anyhow. That there are no security bugs in this one product. It mystifies me why Microsoft would design in the high security levels, and then make it impossible to use them. What could they possibly have been thinking? Oops - maybe that's the problem. Thanks. Bill |
#9
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
It would be one thing if I were trying to run some document with macros
in it, but I'm not. Well .. if you get this message you *are* (or Word is) trying to run some macros. If it happens at start up then you are using something which has been added to Word (not Word itself) - this may be either some code you have in your Normal template or it may be an AddIn which is designed to work with Word. It was presumably something you trusted in Word 97 which means it may well be safe to continue trusting it but it is not unreasonable to investigate what it might be. If you want it, you need to arrange to let it do its stuff - or, if not, you would be best to remove it. Firstly have a look under Tools templates and AddIns and see what you have - then you can decide what to do. -- Enjoy, Tony "Bill Martin" wrote in message 6... "Greg Maxey" wrote in : Bill, The message is a result of the default security settings in Word2003. See ToolsMacroSecurity. The default setting is "high." To each his or her own, but I recommend you set Macro Security to Medium and then on the Trusted Publishers tab check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins." I think you will be free of the annoying message and still watertight. ---------------- That would probably work, but I don't see why I should enable macros just to get Word to stop nattering whenever I open or close the program. Most Microsoft warnings seem to have some way to tell the program to not warn you about whatever repeatedly. I haven't been able to find where that's buried in Word however. It would be one thing if I were trying to run some document with macros in it, but I'm not. Bill |
#10
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
Actually, I think you may have misunderstood. I don't *want* any macros,
any add-ins, or anything else beyond a blank sheet I can type into. And thus I shouldn't need to enable things I don't want in the first place - I just simply want to use the highest security level that Microsoft designed into Word. I *do* use add-ins and VBA macros heavily in Excel, but I presume that does not mean that I have to enable them in Word? My first note provided the text of the message. Here it is again in its entirety: "The macros in this project are disabled. Please refer to the online help or documentation of the host application to determine how to enable macros." Following up on some of your other suggestions (and by clicking on Tools MacroMacros) I do find that there are 3 macros installed by Word initially out of the box. If this were Excel I could then delete the macros from that panel or edit them and delete their code. From Word however the "Delete" button is grayed out and it's impossible to kill the macros from within Word. (Adding insult to injury, the Description box at the bottom says that I created the macros when plainly I did not.) Trolling through my directory listings I finally found the file which was creating the add-in and deleted it. This is a new subdirectory, created by Office, which chose to set up Word so that I couldn't use the highest security level designed in. So 5 hours later, and with your assistance, I finally have Word working. Not a good out-of-the-box experience. Your note was quite helpful and I thank you for it. Please don't feel that my pique with Microsoft in any way reflects on your efforts here. I appreciate the help. Bill ------------------------------------------------------------ "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in : I think you have misunderstood. Here's how it works: 1. You set the Security setting to Medium. This doesn't automatically enable macros; it gives you a choice. You'll still get a message box, but instead of saying that macros have been disabled, it will say that there are macros and give you the choice of enabling or disabling them. This will apply to documents that you open that may contain macros. 2. The message you're getting, however, is not from a document. Most likely it is from an add-in (the message probably tells you what it is). You can see some of the add-ins that are installed in Word by looking at the list in the Tools | Templates and Add-ins dialog. Some add-ins (COM add-ins) are not listed here; you can learn about those with another tool (see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customizat...sInstalled.htm). 3. Assuming that the add-ins are ones you want, and also to be able to use the Microsoft Wizards that ship with Word, you need to "trust" certain templates and add-ins. To do that, you check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins" on the Trusted Sources tab of Tools | Macro | Security. 4. Trusting installed add-ins will take care of templates in your user templates folder and the workgroup templates folder (if any), as well as add-ins in Word's Startup folder. Unfortunately, this trust does not extend to the Office Startup folder, so you may still get a message about add-ins that load from there, but the message will tell you what the add-in is and allow you to check a box to trust add-ins from that provider (Adobe, for example, if you have Adobe Acrobat). Then you won't get a message from that any more, either. |
#11
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
Bill,
Would you be willing to share what sub-directory and what file you deleted so as to permit you to use Word on the highest security setting? -- Greg Maxey/Word MVP See: http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/word_tips.htm For some helpful tips using Word. Bill Martin wrote: Actually, I think you may have misunderstood. I don't *want* any macros, any add-ins, or anything else beyond a blank sheet I can type into. And thus I shouldn't need to enable things I don't want in the first place - I just simply want to use the highest security level that Microsoft designed into Word. I *do* use add-ins and VBA macros heavily in Excel, but I presume that does not mean that I have to enable them in Word? My first note provided the text of the message. Here it is again in its entirety: "The macros in this project are disabled. Please refer to the online help or documentation of the host application to determine how to enable macros." Following up on some of your other suggestions (and by clicking on Tools MacroMacros) I do find that there are 3 macros installed by Word initially out of the box. If this were Excel I could then delete the macros from that panel or edit them and delete their code. From Word however the "Delete" button is grayed out and it's impossible to kill the macros from within Word. (Adding insult to injury, the Description box at the bottom says that I created the macros when plainly I did not.) Trolling through my directory listings I finally found the file which was creating the add-in and deleted it. This is a new subdirectory, created by Office, which chose to set up Word so that I couldn't use the highest security level designed in. So 5 hours later, and with your assistance, I finally have Word working. Not a good out-of-the-box experience. Your note was quite helpful and I thank you for it. Please don't feel that my pique with Microsoft in any way reflects on your efforts here. I appreciate the help. Bill ------------------------------------------------------------ "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in : I think you have misunderstood. Here's how it works: 1. You set the Security setting to Medium. This doesn't automatically enable macros; it gives you a choice. You'll still get a message box, but instead of saying that macros have been disabled, it will say that there are macros and give you the choice of enabling or disabling them. This will apply to documents that you open that may contain macros. 2. The message you're getting, however, is not from a document. Most likely it is from an add-in (the message probably tells you what it is). You can see some of the add-ins that are installed in Word by looking at the list in the Tools | Templates and Add-ins dialog. Some add-ins (COM add-ins) are not listed here; you can learn about those with another tool (see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customizat...sInstalled.htm). 3. Assuming that the add-ins are ones you want, and also to be able to use the Microsoft Wizards that ship with Word, you need to "trust" certain templates and add-ins. To do that, you check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins" on the Trusted Sources tab of Tools | Macro Security. 4. Trusting installed add-ins will take care of templates in your user templates folder and the workgroup templates folder (if any), as well as add-ins in Word's Startup folder. Unfortunately, this trust does not extend to the Office Startup folder, so you may still get a message about add-ins that load from there, but the message will tell you what the add-in is and allow you to check a box to trust add-ins from that provider (Adobe, for example, if you have Adobe Acrobat). Then you won't get a message from that any more, either. |
#12
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
Hi Bill,
Word, out of the box, does not install any macros which try to run automatically. However Word does not uninstall macros which you may already have had on your machine. What I suspect you have stumbled over is Word's improved security now preventing something which always used to happen about which you were blissfully unaware. I would have to agre with you that the message would be a great deal more helpful if it told you which project the macros were disabled in. -- Enjoy, Tony "Bill Martin" wrote in message . 16... Actually, I think you may have misunderstood. I don't *want* any macros, any add-ins, or anything else beyond a blank sheet I can type into. And thus I shouldn't need to enable things I don't want in the first place - I just simply want to use the highest security level that Microsoft designed into Word. I *do* use add-ins and VBA macros heavily in Excel, but I presume that does not mean that I have to enable them in Word? My first note provided the text of the message. Here it is again in its entirety: "The macros in this project are disabled. Please refer to the online help or documentation of the host application to determine how to enable macros." Following up on some of your other suggestions (and by clicking on Tools MacroMacros) I do find that there are 3 macros installed by Word initially out of the box. If this were Excel I could then delete the macros from that panel or edit them and delete their code. From Word however the "Delete" button is grayed out and it's impossible to kill the macros from within Word. (Adding insult to injury, the Description box at the bottom says that I created the macros when plainly I did not.) Trolling through my directory listings I finally found the file which was creating the add-in and deleted it. This is a new subdirectory, created by Office, which chose to set up Word so that I couldn't use the highest security level designed in. So 5 hours later, and with your assistance, I finally have Word working. Not a good out-of-the-box experience. Your note was quite helpful and I thank you for it. Please don't feel that my pique with Microsoft in any way reflects on your efforts here. I appreciate the help. Bill ------------------------------------------------------------ "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in : I think you have misunderstood. Here's how it works: 1. You set the Security setting to Medium. This doesn't automatically enable macros; it gives you a choice. You'll still get a message box, but instead of saying that macros have been disabled, it will say that there are macros and give you the choice of enabling or disabling them. This will apply to documents that you open that may contain macros. 2. The message you're getting, however, is not from a document. Most likely it is from an add-in (the message probably tells you what it is). You can see some of the add-ins that are installed in Word by looking at the list in the Tools | Templates and Add-ins dialog. Some add-ins (COM add-ins) are not listed here; you can learn about those with another tool (see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customizat...sInstalled.htm). 3. Assuming that the add-ins are ones you want, and also to be able to use the Microsoft Wizards that ship with Word, you need to "trust" certain templates and add-ins. To do that, you check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins" on the Trusted Sources tab of Tools | Macro | Security. 4. Trusting installed add-ins will take care of templates in your user templates folder and the workgroup templates folder (if any), as well as add-ins in Word's Startup folder. Unfortunately, this trust does not extend to the Office Startup folder, so you may still get a message about add-ins that load from there, but the message will tell you what the add-in is and allow you to check a box to trust add-ins from that provider (Adobe, for example, if you have Adobe Acrobat). Then you won't get a message from that any more, either. |
#13
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
I think Tony's assessment is correct. Office/Word out of the box doesn't
install any add-ins, so these have to be ones left over from a previous installation. If you don't need the add-in that is using them, then you are quite correct to remove the add-in. If you later find you're missing functionality you need, presumably you can reinstall the add-in. I suspect that the title bar on the message window that says "The macros in this project are disabled" might have told you what project it was. I'm sorry that you had this experience (though five hours is a short time compared to how long some users are annoyed with Word), but I hope you will see that it is not (directly) Microsoft's fault. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Bill Martin" wrote in message . 16... Actually, I think you may have misunderstood. I don't *want* any macros, any add-ins, or anything else beyond a blank sheet I can type into. And thus I shouldn't need to enable things I don't want in the first place - I just simply want to use the highest security level that Microsoft designed into Word. I *do* use add-ins and VBA macros heavily in Excel, but I presume that does not mean that I have to enable them in Word? My first note provided the text of the message. Here it is again in its entirety: "The macros in this project are disabled. Please refer to the online help or documentation of the host application to determine how to enable macros." Following up on some of your other suggestions (and by clicking on Tools MacroMacros) I do find that there are 3 macros installed by Word initially out of the box. If this were Excel I could then delete the macros from that panel or edit them and delete their code. From Word however the "Delete" button is grayed out and it's impossible to kill the macros from within Word. (Adding insult to injury, the Description box at the bottom says that I created the macros when plainly I did not.) Trolling through my directory listings I finally found the file which was creating the add-in and deleted it. This is a new subdirectory, created by Office, which chose to set up Word so that I couldn't use the highest security level designed in. So 5 hours later, and with your assistance, I finally have Word working. Not a good out-of-the-box experience. Your note was quite helpful and I thank you for it. Please don't feel that my pique with Microsoft in any way reflects on your efforts here. I appreciate the help. Bill ------------------------------------------------------------ "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in : I think you have misunderstood. Here's how it works: 1. You set the Security setting to Medium. This doesn't automatically enable macros; it gives you a choice. You'll still get a message box, but instead of saying that macros have been disabled, it will say that there are macros and give you the choice of enabling or disabling them. This will apply to documents that you open that may contain macros. 2. The message you're getting, however, is not from a document. Most likely it is from an add-in (the message probably tells you what it is). You can see some of the add-ins that are installed in Word by looking at the list in the Tools | Templates and Add-ins dialog. Some add-ins (COM add-ins) are not listed here; you can learn about those with another tool (see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customizat...sInstalled.htm). 3. Assuming that the add-ins are ones you want, and also to be able to use the Microsoft Wizards that ship with Word, you need to "trust" certain templates and add-ins. To do that, you check the box for "Trust all installed templates and add-ins" on the Trusted Sources tab of Tools | Macro | Security. 4. Trusting installed add-ins will take care of templates in your user templates folder and the workgroup templates folder (if any), as well as add-ins in Word's Startup folder. Unfortunately, this trust does not extend to the Office Startup folder, so you may still get a message about add-ins that load from there, but the message will tell you what the add-in is and allow you to check a box to trust add-ins from that provider (Adobe, for example, if you have Adobe Acrobat). Then you won't get a message from that any more, either. |
#14
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
I certainly would be willing, but unfortunately unable. I deleted the
file, and later did some general housekeeping so it's not in still in the trash either. It was in the Microsoft\Office11\Startup subdirectory and was probably something not from Office itself, but rather something Office chose to pull from elsewhere on the disk automatically during install. Bill -------------------------- On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 12:08:56 -0500, Greg Maxey wrote: Bill, Would you be willing to share what sub-directory and what file you deleted so as to permit you to use Word on the highest security setting? |
#15
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
This indicates that you have an Add-In program installed. This is probably
installed to help other software work better with Word. If you follow Greg's instructions, it will run as intended. If you want to see what it is, you can look. http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customizat...sInstalled.htm -- Charles Kenyon Word New User FAQ & Web Directory: http://addbalance.com/word Intermediate User's Guide to Microsoft Word (supplemented version of Microsoft's Legal Users' Guide) http://addbalance.com/usersguide See also the MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/ which is awesome! --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- This message is posted to a newsgroup. Please post replies and questions to the newsgroup so that others can learn from my ignorance and your wisdom. "Bill Martin" wrote in message . 16... I just installed Office 2003 and am trying to come to grips with some of the small differences from the '97 version I was using. Everytime I open Word now, it gives me a "helpful" warning: "The macros in this project are disabled. Please refer to the online help to determine how to enable macros." Now the thing is that I don't want to enable macros. I don't use them in a word processor so I don't see any reason to open a security hole in Word that I don't need. So how do I get Word to stop nattering to me about enabling macros everytime I open a file that doesn't use them anyhow? Thanks. Bill |
#16
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
|
|||
|
|||
Macros Disabled
was probably something not from Office itself, but rather something Office
chose to pull from elsewhere on the disk automatically during install. If you install Office as an upgrade (over an older version), it does its best to retain all your personal settings, including any add-ins you have already installed. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Bill Martin" wrote in message .. . I certainly would be willing, but unfortunately unable. I deleted the file, and later did some general housekeeping so it's not in still in the trash either. It was in the Microsoft\Office11\Startup subdirectory and was probably something not from Office itself, but rather something Office chose to pull from elsewhere on the disk automatically during install. Bill -------------------------- On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 12:08:56 -0500, Greg Maxey wrote: Bill, Would you be willing to share what sub-directory and what file you deleted so as to permit you to use Word on the highest security setting? |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
word says macros are disabled everytime i open it | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Macros disabled | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Why do I receive error message that "Macros are disabled" | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Word Message - Macros in this project have been disabled | Microsoft Word Help | |||
In Office Word 2003 how eliminate message "macros are disabled"? | Microsoft Word Help |