'The solutions and answers provided on Experts Exchange have been extremely helpful to me over the last few years. I wear a lot of hats - Developer, Database Administrator, Help Desk, etc., so I know a lot of things but not a lot about one thing. Hi I am an experienced, mac user, and programmer, but Icant figure out what happen with my mac mini intel. Many applications crah randomly (iPhoto, Safari, Skype, Googleearth. My MS office crashed and now I can't open any of it, have tried uninstalling and reinstalling. Am on OS Sierra. Any ideas as I really need to access an auto save version of one of my files in Excel? Hi kmgsg, Your install of Excel is right up to date. Since you're the kind of person who keeps their software updated (a very good thing IMHO), I'll assume you also keep Mac OS up to date. ![]() You also mentioned that you have a workbook that crashed and you're trying to get it back using AutoRecover. Here's what I think is happening. When Excel crashed, it saved a copy of your workbook in the AutoRecovery location. The trouble is, that copy is bad. When you open Excel, it tries to recover the bad file and crashes all over again. You're caught in an endless loop. Antivirus software for mac reviews 2018 cnet. To break the loop, hold the Shift key down and then click on the Excel icon in your dock. This starts Excel in 'Safe Mode,' which skips the step to check for AutoRecovery files. This should allow Excel to run. Now we have to deal with the bad file. Apple thinks it is very important to keep certain of your files hidden in secret places so you can't find or use them. Microsoft is stuck with this bad idea. Your next move is to unhide super secret Library folder, where many of your important files reside. Here's one of hundreds of internet articles explaining how to show the hidden Library folder: Now you can navigate to the clumsily named location where your AutoSave workbook copy was saved. You should be able to find the bad workbook here: ~/Library/Containers/com.microsoft.Excel/Data/Library/Preferences/AutoRecovery/ Drag the bad workbook to the desktop. Then open Excel and use File > Open and try to open the file. I suspect all you'll get is a crash. You can try using Excel On Line to open the file. Perhaps that version will be able to recover your work. I think the best solution would be to use Time Machine and restore the latest version of the file that doesn't cause the crash and go forward with that version. I am an unpaid volunteer and do not work for Microsoft. 'Independent Advisors' work for contractors hired by Microsoft. 'Microsoft Agents' work for Microsoft Support.
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АвторНапишите что-нибудь о себе. Не надо ничего особенного, просто общие данные. Архивы
Март 2019
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