The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSIn Microsoft Excel, when you make a change to a worksheet in a shared workbook that conflicts with the change that another person made to the same worksheet, formatting may be applied to the conflicting cell or cells on the worksheet when you accept the changes to the worksheet. CAUSE
This behavior occurs when you accept a change in the Conflict Resolution
dialog box that results in a new row being inserted on the shared
worksheet. For example, if one person changes a value in cell A2 on a
shared worksheet, and another person deletes row 2 on the shared worksheet,
the Conflict Resolution dialog box appears when the second person saves the
file. If this person chooses to accept the Cell Change rather than the Row
Delete, a new row is inserted on the worksheet in the instance where the
row had been deleted. The cells in this new row contain the formatting of
the cells from the previous row, although technically the row was not
inserted, but restored, instead of being deleted from the worksheet.
RESOLUTIONTo avoid the behavior described above, do not delete rows in a shared workbook while another person has the file open. STATUSMicrosoft has confirmed this to be a problem in the Microsoft products listed at the beginning of this article. We are researching this problem and will post new information here in the Microsoft Knowledge Base as it becomes available. REFERENCESFor more information about creating a shared list in Microsoft Excel, click the Index tab in Microsoft Excel Help, type the following text shared listsdouble-click the selected text and then double-click "Create a shared list" to go to the "Create A Shared List" topic. Additional query words:
Keywords : xlwin |
Last Reviewed: October 6, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |