Thanks for the follow-up! The trick of changing the file to .xml or .xsl
didn't work for me (I have a MacBook running office 2008.) I am lucky
enough
to have Office for Windows too, and when I opened the file in Excel for
Windows the file corruption got fixed.
It would be nice to have that same functionality in Excel for Mac too.
Thanks again for the follow up!
Luis
"Pat McMillan" wrote:
> If you can send me a copy of the file I can investigate.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Pat McMillan
> patmcmil@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> On 10/11/08 3:32 PM, in article
> 9D33E336-421C-4F62-A4CE-6C425A20046B@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Luis"
> <Luis@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
> > I had the same issue described in this post, tried renaming the
extension of
> > my file to xml and xsl but Excel still had problems opening the file.
> >
> > I spent a long time putting the data together in that spreadsheet, and
now
> > it's lost. Can anyone help me recover the data in the file please?
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Luis
>
> --
> Pat McMillan
> Macintosh Business Unit
> Microsoft Corp.
> This posting is provided ³AS IS² with no warranties, and confers no
rights.
>
>
>


|