Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have a user who has a Word document containing multiple links to multiple
Excel spreadsheets. There are roughly 6 different spreadsheets and as many as 6 links to each spreadsheet. When opening the document, Word tries to update the links and the following warning message is displayed "A document with the name name.xls is already open. You cannot open two documents with the same name, even if the documents are in different folders. To open the second document, either close the document that's currently open, or rename one of the documents. MS Word will then crash. I have verified that the spreadsheet is not open. The user updates these spreadsheets monthly, so the links do need to be updated on a regular basis. Does anyone have any insight with this one? Is there any additional information I can provide? Thanks... |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Brian -
I think the problem stems from having multiple links to the same file. Each link has to 'open' that same file in order to update & once 'opened' by the first link it doesn't get 'closed'. Hence the next link to the same file is trying to open a file that is already open. Based on your description of the file-linking complexity it's no surprise that Word crashes... It's surprising that *Windows* doesn't crash ![]() If the doc structure _must_ be this complex, you should be able to bypass updating of the links by holding Shift while opening the file. (Or if there is a prompt to update the links choose No rather than Yes.) Then try going into ToolsOptionsGeneral (I think General is correct - am at home on my Mac right now) & remove the check to Automatically Update Links at Open. That should allow opening the file without crashing Word. Secondly, don't attempt to update *all* links at once. Through the EditLinks dialog you can selectively update each link and you can Control+Click multiple non-consecutive links/Shift+Click consecutively listed links in order to update a few at a time - just don't select more than one link to the same file at once. There should also be an option in the same dialog to set the Links to Manual update rather than Automatic, which I would also choose. HTH |:) Bob Jones [MVP] Office:Mac On 7/14/06 2:14 PM, in article , "Brian" wrote: I have a user who has a Word document containing multiple links to multiple Excel spreadsheets. There are roughly 6 different spreadsheets and as many as 6 links to each spreadsheet. When opening the document, Word tries to update the links and the following warning message is displayed "A document with the name name.xls is already open. You cannot open two documents with the same name, even if the documents are in different folders. To open the second document, either close the document that's currently open, or rename one of the documents. MS Word will then crash. I have verified that the spreadsheet is not open. The user updates these spreadsheets monthly, so the links do need to be updated on a regular basis. Does anyone have any insight with this one? Is there any additional information I can provide? Thanks... |
#3
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks. These were my thoughts also. Unfortunetly, my user claims that she
has been updating all of these links for the past year and has never had an issue. I suggested setting them all to manual and updating them in that fashion, but she insists that it worked previously. "CyberTaz" wrote: Hi Brian - I think the problem stems from having multiple links to the same file. Each link has to 'open' that same file in order to update & once 'opened' by the first link it doesn't get 'closed'. Hence the next link to the same file is trying to open a file that is already open. Based on your description of the file-linking complexity it's no surprise that Word crashes... It's surprising that *Windows* doesn't crash ![]() If the doc structure _must_ be this complex, you should be able to bypass updating of the links by holding Shift while opening the file. (Or if there is a prompt to update the links choose No rather than Yes.) Then try going into ToolsOptionsGeneral (I think General is correct - am at home on my Mac right now) & remove the check to Automatically Update Links at Open. That should allow opening the file without crashing Word. Secondly, don't attempt to update *all* links at once. Through the EditLinks dialog you can selectively update each link and you can Control+Click multiple non-consecutive links/Shift+Click consecutively listed links in order to update a few at a time - just don't select more than one link to the same file at once. There should also be an option in the same dialog to set the Links to Manual update rather than Automatic, which I would also choose. HTH |:) Bob Jones [MVP] Office:Mac On 7/14/06 2:14 PM, in article , "Brian" wrote: I have a user who has a Word document containing multiple links to multiple Excel spreadsheets. There are roughly 6 different spreadsheets and as many as 6 links to each spreadsheet. When opening the document, Word tries to update the links and the following warning message is displayed "A document with the name name.xls is already open. You cannot open two documents with the same name, even if the documents are in different folders. To open the second document, either close the document that's currently open, or rename one of the documents. MS Word will then crash. I have verified that the spreadsheet is not open. The user updates these spreadsheets monthly, so the links do need to be updated on a regular basis. Does anyone have any insight with this one? Is there any additional information I can provide? Thanks... |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Why dont MS just f**king re-write Word from scratch? Its dogsh*t | Microsoft Word Help | |||
hard space between words. | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Word should allow to 'divide' page by 3 or 4, not just 2 | Page Layout | |||
Inserting Excel tables into Word | Microsoft Word Help | |||
In Word, how can I see all files (*.*) in "save as"? | New Users |