Can't Shut Down or Restart Computer After Creating Binder ObjectLast reviewed: July 29, 1997Article ID: Q130185 |
The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSWhen you create a Microsoft Office Binder OLE Automation object, using a Visual Basic, Applications Edition, procedure, you may receive the following error message when you restart or shut down your computer:
Please close Office Binder documents before shutting down Windows CAUSEWhen you create an Office Binder OLE Automation object, an invisible instance of Microsoft Office Binder is started. If you do not make the instance visible by using the Visible property, an invisible instance of Microsoft Binder is still running when you exit Windows, and you receive the error message described above.
RESOLUTIONTo work around this behavior, use any of the following methods.
Method 1Make the Binder object visible, by using the Visible property as in the following example. You can then close the application by clicking Close on the Office Binder File menu. Microsoft provides examples of Visual Basic procedures for illustration only, without warranty either expressed or implied, including but not limited to the implied warranties of merchantability and/or fitness for a particular purpose. This Visual Basic procedure is provided 'as is' and Microsoft does not guarantee that it can be used in all situations. Microsoft does not support modifications of this procedure to suit customer requirements for a particular purpose. Note that a line that is preceded by an apostrophe introduces a comment in the code-- comments are provided to explain what the code is doing at a particular point in the procedure. Note also that an underscore character (_) indicates that code continues from one line to the next. You can type lines that contain this character as one logical line or you can divide the lines of code and include the line continuation character. For more information about Visual Basic for Applications programming style, see the "Programming Style in This Manual" section in the "Document Conventions" section of the "Visual Basic User's Guide."
Sub BinderObject() ' Dimension variables Dim MyBinder As Object, SectionCount As Integer ' Set value of MyBinder variable equal to ' binder OLE Automation object Set MyBinder = CreateObject("Office.Binder") ' Add new Microsoft Excel worksheet object to binder MyBinder.Sections.Add Type:="Excel.Sheet.5" ' Add worksheet to workbook MyBinder.Sections(1).Object.Parent.Worksheets.Add ' Enter value "Test" in cell A1 on new worksheet MyBinder.Sections(1).Object.Parent.Worksheets(1) _ .Range("A1").Value = "Test" ' Set value of variable SectionCount equal to ' number of sections in binder SectionCount = MyBinder.Sections.Count ' Save binder as MINE.OBD MyBinder.SaveAs "c:\Mine.obd" ' Display dialog box with binder name and number of ' sections MsgBox "A new binder named " & MyBinder.Name & _ " has been created and contains " & SectionCount _ & " sections." ' Make Office Binder visible MyBinder.Visible = True ' Prompt user to close Office Binder MsgBox "To close Office Binder, click Close on the _ File menu." ' Clear Binder object from memory Set MyBinder = Nothing End Sub Method 2Close the invisible instance(s) of Office Binder using the Close Program dialog box by doing the following:
MORE INFORMATIONNote that after creating an Office Binder OLE Automation object, when you press ALT+TAB to switch to another application, a Binder icon may appear on the task-switching window, although when you select the object, the Binder application does not appear. Version : 1.00 Platform : WINDOWS |
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