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Working with Imperial Linear Distances
Incomplete and Corrupt Sorting
Quickly Removing a Toolbar Button
Deriving High and Low Non-Zero Values
Counting Cells with Specific Characters
Are you up for an experiment? Try the following: open a brand new workbook in Excel; one that has no macros in it. Record a quick macro, and then delete it. Save the workbook, close it, and reopen it. If all went as expected, Excel should have warned you about the workbook when you reopened it, and asked you if you wanted to disable the macros.
This sounds odd--after all, you know there are no macros in the workbook. Are there phantom macros at work here? No, not really. The reason Excel behaves this way is that when you create your first macro in a workbook, Excel creates a new module in which to retain the macro. When you later delete the macro, the module remains behind, ready to hold any other macros you may create. It is modules that Excel checks for when you open a workbook, not individual macros. If there is a module, you get the warning.
To fix this situation, you must follow these steps:
At this point your workbook contains no modules, and you will not get any notification when you subsequently open it.
ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training. This tip (2011) applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 2000 2002 2003
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