
The odd thing is if I create a new button it works fine until I save and close the file. I still see the button name "cmdButtonGetInfo" and "=EMBED("Forms.CommandButton.1","") in the name box and formula bar. I can't seem to locate the command button properties any longer.

If I right-click the button in Design Mode and select Properties, I get sheet properties not the button properties. Now when I open the workbook, the buttons don't work! When I click them nothing happens. Then I saved and closed the workbook and went to lunch.
#Hyperlink not working in excel offer up code#
I added the _Click code to run the macros when the user clicked the buttons.Īll of the buttons were working fine. I got into the button properties and set the background colors. So I removed the form control buttons and created new ActiveX command buttons. I had been using the form control buttons to run macros, but the boss wanted each button to have it's own, different color. I'm having a problem in a workbook with several ActiveX command buttons.
#Hyperlink not working in excel offer up how to#
csv, close the window and then open that file up again, that dang scientific format is back.ĭoes anyone have any idea of how to work around this? Once I have successfully gotten the numbers to display as the long-chain number, how can I get them to "stick" so that they don't revert back to scientific format when I reopen the file? I have tried creating an Excel doc from scratch and entering text in Text format, to see if this created a cleaner file. csv file), the numbers are back to being displayed in scientific format. So if I do that, close the Excel window, and then open again (as the. I have saved as a TXT file, pasted the longer number and it displays correctly. I have been successful at preventing Excel from coverting that long number into scientific format. csv files, so this is how I need to save my doc (with this extension). csv file in order to upload to an application that parses out the. I am working with an Excel spreadsheet and saving it as a. I know this question has been asked a bajillion times, so I apologize for the redundancy.
