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This page presents how to work with Microsoft Excel 2007 features and its redesigned interface. You may also visit our Excel Question page.
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Excel > Getting help
Reference: Locations of Excel 2003 commands in Excel 2007
This article introduces the basic elements of the new Microsoft Office Fluent user interface in Microsoft Office Excel 2007. It also provides lists of commands that you may already be familiar with in Microsoft Office Excel 2003, showing you how to accomplish the same results in Office Excel 2007.
Important This article is designed as a quick reference tool only, and is not intended for training or learning purposes.
In this article

Introducing the new interface
Adding commands to the Quick Access Toolbar
New locations of familiar commands

Introducing the new interface
In Office Excel 2007, the new Office Fluent user interface replaces menus, toolbars, and most of the task panes from earlier versions of Excel with a single mechanism that is simple and discoverable. The Office Fluent user interface is designed to help you be more productive in Excel, more easily find the right features for various tasks, discover new functionality, and be more efficient.
This article is designed for experienced Excel 2003 users — Help desk personnel, IT professionals, and others who are already familiar with the Excel 2003 interface — who want to find familiar commands quickly in Office Excel 2007.
Office Fluent user interface
The primary replacement for menus and toolbars in Office Excel 2007 is the Ribbon, a component of the Office Fluent user interface. Designed for easy browsing, the Ribbon consists of tabs that are organized around specific scenarios or objects. The controls on each tab are further organized into several groups. The Ribbon can host richer content than menus and toolbars can, including buttons, galleries, and dialog box content.


Tabs are designed to be task-oriented.
Groups within each tab break a task into subtasks.
Command buttons in each group carry out a command or display a menu of commands.

Tabs that appear only when you need them
In addition to the standard set of tabs that you see on the Office Fluent Ribbon whenever you start Office Excel 2007, there are two other kinds of tabs, which appear in the interface only when they are useful for the type of task you are currently performing.
Contextual tools Contextual tools enable you to work with an object that you select on the page, such as a table, picture, or drawing. When you click the object, the pertinent set of contextual tabs appear in an accent color next to the standard tabs.


Select an item in your document.
The name of the applicable contextual tools appears in an accent color, and the contextual tabs appear next to the standard set of tabs.
The contextual tabs provide controls for working with the selected item.

Program tabs Program tabs replace the standard set of tabs when you switch to certain authoring modes or views, including Print Preview.

Menus, toolbars and other familiar elements
In addition to tabs, groups, and commands, Office Excel 2007 uses other elements that also provide paths for accomplishing your tasks. The following elements are more like the menus and toolbars that you are already familiar with from earlier versions of Excel. The Excel Ribbon mapping workbook directs you to a workbook that contains all of the mapped elements.
Microsoft Office Button
This button is located in the upper-left corner of the Excel window and opens the menu shown here.

Quick Access Toolbar The Quick Access Toolbar is located by default at the top of the Excel window and provides quick access to tools that you use frequently. You can customize the Quick Access Toolbar by adding commands to it.

Dialog Box Launchers Dialog Box Launchers are small icons that appear in some groups. Clicking a Dialog Box Launcher opens a related dialog box or task pane, providing more options related to that group.

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Adding commands to the Quick Access Toolbar
As indicated in the tables at the end of this article, some Excel 2003 commands are available in Office Excel 2007 only from the list of all commands in the Excel Options dialog box. To use these commands in Office Excel 2007, you first add them to the Quick Access Toolbar as follows:
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- In the list at the left, click Customization.
- In the Choose commands from drop-down list box, click All commands.

- In the Customize Quick Access Toolbar box, select either For all documents (default) or a specific document.
- Click the command that you want to add, and then click Add.
Repeat for each command that you want to add.
- Click the Move Up and Move Down arrow buttons to arrange the commands in the order in which you want them to appear on the Quick Access Toolbar.
- Click OK.
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New locations of familiar commands
To find the location of menu and toolbar commands in Excel 2007, open the Excel Ribbon mapping workbook. Instructions on the first tab of the workbook provide tips for customizing, finding, and printing data.
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Excel > Getting help
Where can I find the Readme or Known issues list?
We author readme topics that define the known issues that exist in the various Microsoft Office products. These topics are available on the Microsoft Office Online Web site.
During the product setup process, a file called Readme is stored at C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\Office12\<####> directory (using default location during Setup). This file contains a link to the specific online topic for you product.
Note <####> references the Locale Identification ID or LCID of the language that you have loaded on your machine.
If you want to see all of the available readme or known issue topics on the Microsoft Online Web site, do the following:
- Make sure that your computer is connected to the Internet.
- In the main window of your Microsoft Office program, open Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- To find the various Known Issues or ReadMe topics that are available, search for readme or known issues.
See Also
Excel > Getting help
Find the content you need in the Help window
The way that you navigate the Help window is much the same way that you navigate the Web in a Web browser, such as Windows Internet Explorer. However, the Help window has additional features that a Web browser lacks. This topic describes how you can use some of these features to get the Help you need to accomplish your tasks.
You can find Help for Microsoft Office programs in more than one place. Help is installed on your computer when you install an Office program, and you can get additional Help content from Microsoft Office Online. You can specify where you want to search for Help, and you can restrict the scope of your search to online or offline or to a specific category within a program.
If Connected to Office Online appears in the lower-right corner of the Help window, you are searching and getting Help from Office Online. If Offline appears in the lower-right corner, you are searching and getting Help from the files stored on your computer.
What do you want to do?

Search Microsoft Office Online
Restrict a search to a specific feature area
Search the Help content on your computer
Switch between online and offline Help
Search for updates, templates, or training

Search Microsoft Office Online
If you are connected to the Internet, you can search for up-to-date Help, templates, training, or additional online content on Microsoft Office Online.
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Access Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Excel Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office OneNote Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Outlook Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office PowerPoint Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Project Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Publisher Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Visio Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Word Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from Office Online.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Restrict a search to a specific feature area
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click a feature area to which you want to restrict the search.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
When you view the results of this search, you see that all of the results are Office Online topics that relate to the feature area you selected.
Tip If you want to search by using the same keyword or keywords that you already recently used, you can click the arrow next to the Type words to search for list, and then click the search term that you want in the list.
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Search the Help content on your computer
Office Online is a great resource, but sometimes you are not connected to the Internet and need offline Help. When you are offline, you can search your local files and see the search results that Help finds there. When you search offline Help, additional online content is not available.
- In the Help window, in the Search list
, click an option under Content from this computer.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Switch between online and offline Help
The Connection Status menu in the lower-right corner of the Help window indicates whether you are looking at Help online or offline.

- Do one of the following, depending on whether you are currently connected to the Internet or offline:
- To see Help on Office Online, on the Connection Status menu in the lower-right corner of the Help window, click Show content from Office Online.
- To see Help on your computer, on the Connection Status menu in the lower-right corner, click Show content only from this computer.
This setting is retained after you close the Help window. The next time you open Help, the offline or connected status is the same as you left it.
- Type keywords in the search criteria list, and then click Search
.
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Search for updates, templates, or training
To locate updates, templates, or training, you must be connected to the Internet.
- In the Help window, under More on Office Online, click the option you want.
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Tips
- A specific search with only 2 to 7 words returns the most accurate results. For example, instead of typing templates, type resume for a pilot.
- To narrow your search results in Search Results, select a scope in the Search list
. For example, to search for templates only, click Templates in the Search scope list.
- If you see a topic in the search results that is close to what you are looking for, you can click a category link for that result to get a list of related information. For example, in the the category link PowerPoint Home > Saving and printing, click Saving and printing to see a list of articles with information about saving or printing your Microsoft Office PowerPoint presentation.
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Excel > Getting help
Work with the Help window
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The first time you use the Help feature in Microsoft Office programs, the online Help window appears in a default location and size on your screen. You can change the way the Help window is displayed. After that, when you open the Help window, the settings that you made are maintained.
Each program in Microsoft Office has a separate Help window. This means that when you open the Help window from one program, such as Microsoft Office Word, and then go to another program, such as Microsoft Office Outlook, and open Help, you see two separate Help windows. Microsoft Office maintains unique settings for each of these Help windows. For example, the Help window for Word maintains a different position, size, and Keep On Top state than the Help window for Outlook.
Note Only one setting, the Connection Status button state, is global. This means that no matter which Help window you are working in, changes to this setting affect that Help window and all the other Help windows.
What do you want to do?

Resize or reposition the Help window
Keep the Help window on top

Resize or reposition the Help window
- In the main window of your Microsoft Office program, open Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Open Help (using the mouse)
- Click the Microsoft Office Access Help button, Microsoft Office Excel Help button, Microsoft Office PowerPoint Help button, or Microsoft Office Word Help button
.
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help, Microsoft Office OneNote Help, Microsoft Office Outlook Help, Microsoft Office Project Help, Microsoft Office Publisher Help, Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help, Microsoft Office Visio Help, or Microsoft Office Clip Organizer Help.
- To resize the Help window, move the pointer over a corner of the Help window until you see the double-headed arrow, and then drag the corner until the window is the size that you want it to be.
- To move the Help window, move the pointer to the title bar, and drag the window where you want it.
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Keep the Help window on top
The default setting for the Help window is to stay on top of other Microsoft Office program windows. If the setting has been changed so that the window is not on top, or if you don't want it on top, you can adjust the setting to what you want. The Keep on top button on the Help window toolbar is a toggle key that you click to keep Help on top and click again to move a program window on top of the Help window. If the window is currently set to stay on top of other windows in your Microsoft Office program, the Keep On Top button looks like a push pin viewed from the top:
. If the window is set to say on top of other windows, the ScreenTip (ScreenTip: A short description that appears when the user holds the mouse pointer over an object, such as a button or hyperlink.) text changes to Not on Top, and the button looks like a push pin viewed from the side:
.
- In the main window of your Microsoft Office program, open Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Open Help (using the mouse)
- Click the Microsoft Office Access Help button, Microsoft Office Excel Help button, Microsoft Office PowerPoint Help button, or Microsoft Office Word Help button
.
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help, Microsoft Office OneNote Help, Microsoft Office Outlook Help, Microsoft Office Project Help, Microsoft Office Publisher Help, Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help, or Microsoft Office Visio Help.
- On the Help window toolbar, click the Keep On Top button.
Note The Keep On Top setting keeps the Help window on top of only Microsoft Office programs. It has no effect on other applications that are not part of Microsoft Office. For example, if you open Microsoft Notepad and move the window over the Help window, the Help window does not stay on top.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help
Get targeted help on a program or feature
What do you want to do?

View the Help home page for an Office program or tool
Get help on a command in Access, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, or Word
Get help on a dialog box
Get developer help

View the Help home page for an Office program or tool
Each program in Microsoft Office has its own Help home page. This page can be a good place to get an overview of a program. On the Help home page, you can browse to other topics or search for topics by typing your question in the Type words to search for box.
To open the Help home page, do one of the following in the main window of one of these 2007 Microsoft Office system programs:
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Clip Organizer
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Access Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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Clip Organizer
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Clip Organizer Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Excel Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office OneNote Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Outlook Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office PowerPoint Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Project Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Publisher Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Visio Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Word Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Note The home page that is displayed depends on the setting in the Search list
. For more information, see Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content.
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Get help on a command in Access, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, or Word
All commands that are available in these programs are available on the Ribbon, which is part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface. When you rest the pointer on a command on the Ribbon, a ScreenTip is displayed to give you information about what that command does. If you see the message Press F1 for more help, continue to rest the pointer on the command and press F1 to get more information about using that command.
Note In Microsoft Office Outlook, the Office Fluent Ribbon is displayed only in the window of an open item, such as an e-mail message or appointment.
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Get help on a dialog box
When a Microsoft Office program displays a dialog box, sometimes it is not clear how to use the options to accomplish a task. To get help while you work in a dialog box, do the following:
- Click Help
, which is located in the title bar of the dialog box that you are using.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- If there is a Help topic available for the dialog box, the topic is displayed. Otherwise, the Help home page is displayed.
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Get developer help
In some Microsoft Office programs, you can use Help to get conceptual and reference information about how to develop Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) procedures that extend the capabilities of Microsoft Office to meet business needs. To get developer help, do the following:
- In the Microsoft Office program that contains the object model that you want to use, press F1.
- In the Search list
, do one of the following:
- To get the most up-to-date content, under Content from Office Online, click Developer Reference.
- To get content from your computer, under Content from this computer, click Developer Reference.
Excel > Getting help
Change the appearance of a Help topic
Show All
Note If you change the font, background color, or text size of the Help topics in the Help window, the change also affects the font and background color when you view a Web page in Windows Internet Explorer.
What do you want to do?

Change the size of text in the Help window
Change the color, background color, or font of text in the Help window

Change the size of text in the Help window
- In the main window of your Microsoft Office program, open Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Open Help (using the mouse)
- Click the Microsoft Office Access Help button, Microsoft Office Excel Help button, Microsoft Office PowerPoint Help button, or Microsoft Office Word Help button
.
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help, Microsoft Office OneNote Help, Microsoft Office Outlook Help, Microsoft Office Project Help, Microsoft Office Publisher Help, Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help, or Microsoft Office Visio Help.
- Click Font size
, and then click a text size.
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Change the color, background color, or font of text in the Help window
- In Control Panel in Microsoft Windows XP, in Category view, click Network and Internet Connections, and then click Internet Options.
- On the General tab, click Accessibility, and then under Formatting, select the Ignore colors specified on Web pages check box.
- Click OK.
- In the Internet Properties dialog box, do one or both of the following:
Change the color of the background or text in the Help window
- On the General tab, click Colors, and then select the options you want.
Change the font in the Help window
- On the General tab, click Fonts, and then select the options you want.
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Excel > Getting help
Print a Help topic
Show All
To print a topic in the Help window:
- In the main window of your Microsoft Office program, open Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Open Help (using the mouse)
- Click the Microsoft Office Access Help button, Microsoft Office Excel Help button, Microsoft Office PowerPoint Help button, or Microsoft Office Word Help button
.
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help, Microsoft Office OneNote Help, Microsoft Office Outlook Help, Microsoft Office Project Help, Microsoft Office Publisher Help, Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help, or Microsoft Office Visio Help.
- Find and display the Help topic that you want.
- In the Help window, click Print
.
Keyboard shortcut To open the Print dialog box, press CTRL+P.
- Select the printing options that you want, and then click Print.
Excel > Getting help
Get help from Microsoft Support Services
Get personalized answers from Microsoft support professionals. Support options include phone, chat, or e-mail assistance. You can go directly to the Microsoft Office Help and Support Web page or do the following in these Microsoft Office programs.
When connected to the Internet (online)
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Resources, and then click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Resources, and then click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Resources, and then click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Resources, and then click Contact Us.
- Under Professional Support, click Support for Microsoft Office products.
When not connected to the Internet (offline)
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

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Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Resources, and then under About Microsoft Office Access 2007, click About.
- Click Tech Support.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Resources, and then under About Microsoft Office Excel 2007, click About.
- Click Tech Support.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office InfoPath.
- Click Tech Support.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office OneNote.
- Click Tech Support.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Outlook.
- Click Tech Support.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Resources, and then under About Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, click About.
- Click Tech Support.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Project.
- Click Tech Support.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Publisher.
- Click Tech Support.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer.
- Click Tech Support.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Visio.
- Click Tech Support.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Resources, and then under About Microsoft Office Word 2007, click About.
- Click Tech Support.
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Excel > Automation and programmability
Find Help on using the Visual Basic Editor
Show All
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
Outlook
PowerPoint
Visio
Word

Access
- On the Database Tools tab, in the Macro group, click Visual Basic.
- In the Visual Basic Editor, on the Help menu, click Microsoft Visual Basic Help.
- In the Help window, click Access VBA Reference.
- In the Type words to search for box, type the method, property, function, statement, or object for which you want help, or type a query.
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Excel
- On the Developer tab, click Visual Basic.
I don't see the Developer tab
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Popular, and then select the Show Developer tab in the Ribbon check box.
Note The Ribbon is part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Visual Basic Help.
- In the Type words to search for box, type the method, property, function, statement, or object for which you want help, or type a query.
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Outlook
- On the Developer tab, click Visual Basic.
I don't see the Developer tab
- On the Tools menu, click Options.
- On the Other tab, click Advanced Options, and then select the Show Developer tab in the Ribbon check box.
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Visual Basic Help.
- In the Type words to search for box, type the method, property, function, statement, or object for which you want help, or type a query.
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PowerPoint
- On the Developer tab, click Visual Basic.
I don't see the Developer tab
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Popular, and then select the Show Developer tab in the Ribbon check box.
Note The Ribbon is part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Visual Basic Help.
- In the Type words to search for box, type the method, property, function, statement, or object for which you want help, or type a query.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Developer Reference.
How do I run in developer mode?
- On the Tools menu, click Options.
- On the Advanced tab, under Advanced Options, select the Run in developer mode check box.
- In the Help window, click Visual Basic for Applications Language Reference.
- In the Type words to search for box, type the method, property, function, statement, or object for which you want help, or type a query.
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Word
- On the Developer tab, click Visual Basic.
I don't see the Developer tab
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Popular, and then select the Show Developer tab in the Ribbon check box.
Note The Ribbon is part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Visual Basic Help.
- In the Type words to search for box, type the method, property, function, statement, or object for which you want help, or type a query.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help
Why am I getting a message that says to troubleshoot my Internet connection?
Show All
Symptoms
When you click a category under Microsoft Office Online, you might see a message with two hyperlinks: one to try again and the other to troubleshoot your Internet connection.
Cause
If you click the try again link and still can't connect to the Internet, it might be because of one of the following reasons:
- Your network connection is down.
- Your Internet connection is down.
- The Microsoft Office Online Web site is unreachable.
Resolution
For the first two possible causes, you can check your cable connections, fix any connection problems, or contact your system administrator.
For the third possible cause, if you click the try again link and it still does not work, you should search the offline Help until the Microsoft Office Online Web site is available again.
Search offline Help
- In the main window of your Microsoft Office program, open Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Open Help (using the mouse)
- Click the Microsoft Office Access Help button, Microsoft Office Excel Help button, Microsoft Office PowerPoint Help button, or Microsoft Office Word Help button
.
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help, Microsoft Office OneNote Help, Microsoft Office Outlook Help, Microsoft Office Project Help, Microsoft Office Publisher Help, Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help, Microsoft Office Visio Help or, Microsoft Office Clip Organizer Help.
- On the Connection Status menu, which is located at the bottom-right corner of the Help window, click either Show content from Office Online or Show content only from this computer.
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What and where is the Microsoft Office Button?
The user interface has been significantly redesigned in the following 2007 Microsoft Office system programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, and Outlook (in the composing and reading windows). The Microsoft Office Button
replaces the File menu and is located in the upper-left corner of these Microsoft Office programs.
When you click the Microsoft Office Button
, you see the same basic commands available in earlier releases of Microsoft Office to open, save, and print your file.
However, in the 2007 Office release, more commands are now available, such as Finish and Publish. For example, in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint by pointing to Finish, and then clicking Inspect Document, you can check a file for hidden metadata or personal information.
In Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 when you read or create a message, task, contact, or calendar item, you see the new Microsoft Office Button
.
See Also
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the File menu?
The user interface has been significantly redesigned in the following 2007 Microsoft Office system programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, and Outlook (in the composing and reading windows). The File menu has been replaced with the Microsoft Office Button
.
Important No option is currently available to switch the user interface back to the File menu, toolbars, and commands as they appeared in earlier versions of these Microsoft Office programs.
When you click the Microsoft Office Button
, you see the same basic commands available in earlier releases of Microsoft Office to open, save, and print your file. Some commands, such as Import, have been moved to the Ribbon, part of the Microsoft Office Fluent interface.
However, in the 2007 Office release, more commands are now available, such as Prepare and Publish. For example, in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint by pointing to Prepare, and then clicking Inspect Document, you can check a file for hidden metadata or personal information.
You can also click the Options button for the Office program you are working in to find the program settings that control things such as your preferences to correct spelling or save a file.
For example, in Word, you would click the the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click the Word Options button.
In Excel, you would click the the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click the Excel Options button, and so forth.
In Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 when you read or create a message, task, contact, or calendar item, you see the new Microsoft Office Button
.
See Also
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the From Scanner or Camera option for adding pictures to a presentation?
The From Scanner or Camera option for adding pictures to a presentation, photo album, or workbook is not available in Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007 or Microsoft Office Excel 2007. Instead, you can add pictures from your camera or scanner by downloading the pictures to your computer first, and then copying them from your computer into PowerPoint or Excel.
Note For more information about how to copy a picture file from your camera or scanner to your computer, see the documentation included with the camera or scanner.
After you download a picture to your computer, do the following:
- On the Insert tab, in the Illustrations group, click Picture, locate the picture that you want to add to your presentation, photo album, or workbook, and then click Insert.
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the Options command on the Tools menu?

Tags button; edit; menu; options; paste options; print options; save as; table tools

What are tags?
In earlier versions of Microsoft Office, you could set your preferences for specific view, display, and editing settings in the Options dialog box (Tools menu, Options command). As part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface in the following 2007 Microsoft Office system programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Access, the Options command on the Tools menu has been moved so that it is under Word Options, Excel Options, PowerPoint Options, or Access Options after you click the Microsoft Office Button
.
To find the program settings that control things such as your preferences to correct spelling or save a file, click Word Options, Excel Options, PowerPoint Options, or Access Options after you click the Microsoft Office Button
.
See Also
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the Web toolbar?
Show All
The Web toolbar is not available in Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Word 2007, or Microsoft Office Excel 2007. However, in these 2007 Microsoft Office system products, you can still access and use a few of the commands that existed on the Web toolbar.
The Address box is now called the Location box, and it displays Uniform Resource Locators (URL) (Uniform Resource Locator (URL): An address that specifies a protocol (such as HTTP or FTP) and a location of an object, document, World Wide Web page, or other destination on the Internet or an intranet. For example: http://www.example.com/.) or other paths, allowing you to copy links and share them with others. Although the Location box is available on the Document Properties panel on the Ribbon, which is a part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface, if you use it often enough, you might want to add it to the Quick Access Toolbar.
Other commands that were on the Web toolbar that you can still use in the 2007 Office release are the Back and Forward buttons, which you can add to the Quick Access Toolbar as well.
Access and use the Location box in the Document Properties panel on the Ribbon
To access the Location box in the Document Properties panel on the Ribbon, do the following:
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, click Prepare, and then click Properties.

You can find the Location box in the Document Properties panel
Note If you have not saved your file, the Location box shows Not saved. You must save your file before you will see a path in the Location box.
Add the Location box and the Back and Forward buttons to the Quick Access Toolbar
If you use the Location box often enough, you might want to add it to the Quick Access Toolbar.
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, click Program Name Options, and then click Customize.
- In the Choose commands from list, select All Commands, and then do one or more of the following:
- To add the Back button to the Quick Access Toolbar, click Back, and then click Add.
- To add the Forward button to the Quick Access Toolbar, click Forward, and then click Add.
- To add the Location box to the Quick Access Toolbar, click Document Location, and then click Add.
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to Detect and Repair?
The Detect and Repair feature that was included with Microsoft Office 2003 has been replaced in the 2007 Microsoft Office system with Microsoft Office Diagnostics. This new tool provides more comprehensive testing and repair capabilities.
Run Microsoft Office Diagnostics
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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How do I run Office Diagnostics if I can't run an Office program?
If necessary, you can run Office Diagnostics from the Start menu.
- In Microsoft Windows, click Start, point to All Programs, point to Microsoft Office, point to Microsoft Office Tools, and then click Microsoft Office Diagnostics.
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See Also
Excel > Worksheet and Excel table basics > Using Excel tables
What happened to Excel lists?
Symptoms
You cannot find the Excel List feature on the Ribbon, which is a component of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface.
Cause
The Excel List feature still exists, but it has been renamed. Excel lists are now called Excel tables.
Resolution
To create an Excel table (previously known as an Excel list), select the range that you want to turn into a table, and then do one of the following:
- On the Insert tab, in the Tables group, click Table.

Keyboard shortcut In addition to CTRL+L, you can now press CTRL+T to create a table.
- On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click Format as Table, and then select the format that you want to use.

Tip This displays the Table Tools, adding a Design tab that provides access to additional table features, such as table options and styles.
For more information on how to create a table, see Create or delete an Excel table.
See Also
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the Office Assistant?
The online Help feature in the 2007 Microsoft Office system has been completely redesigned, and the new design does not include the Microsoft Office Assistant. Find links to more information about how to quickly get the help you need in the See Also section.
See Also
Excel > PivotTable reports and PivotChart reports > Basics
What happened to the PivotTable and PivotChart Report command?
In earlier versions of Microsoft Office Excel, the PivotTable and PivotChart Report command was located on the Data menu and it started the PivotTable and PivotChart Wizard. In Microsoft Office Excel 2007, the PivotTable and PivotChart Report command has been separated into the following two commands:
- The PivotTable command, which displays the Create PivotTable dialog box.
- The PivotChart command, which displays the Create PivotTable with PivotChart dialog box.
Both commands are available from the PivotTable in-group command in the Tables group on the Insert tab. Both dialog boxes have similar user interfaces, and are much simpler to use than the wizard in the earlier version. The difference is that the Create PivotTable dialog box only creates a PivotTable report, and the Create PivotTable with PivotChart dialog box creates a PivotChart report with an associated PivotTable report.
See Also
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the Type a question for help box?
As part of the user interface redesign in the 2007 Microsoft Office system programs, the Type a question for help box was moved to the Help window for each Office program and renamed Type words to search for. You can get to Help by clicking the Help
button.
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the Drawing toolbar?
Show All
The Drawing toolbar is not available in most 2007 Microsoft Office system programs. 
The Ribbon, which is a part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface, replaces the Drawing toolbar and other toolbars and menus in some 2007 Office release programs.
The Ribbon is designed to help you quickly find the commands that you need to complete a task. Commands are organized in logical groups under tabs, such as the Clipboard group on the Home tab. Each tab relates to a type of activity, such as writing or designing a page. To reduce clutter, some tabs appear only when needed. For example, the Drawing Tools tab appears only when you select a shape, line, or other drawing object (drawing object: Any graphic you draw or insert, which can be changed and enhanced. Drawing objects include Shapes, curves, lines, and WordArt.). To learn more about the Ribbon, see Use the Ribbon.
Note If you do not see the Drawing Tools tab, make sure that you selected a shape, line, or drawing object.

In 2007 Office release programs, to perform tasks that you used to perform from the Drawing toolbar (such as inserting a shape, drawing a line, and adding a picture, clip art (clip art: A single piece of ready-made art, often appearing as a bitmap or a combination of drawn shapes.), SmartArt graphic, or WordArt (WordArt: Text objects you create with ready-made effects to which you can apply additional formatting options.)), you click an option in the Illustrations group, or Text group, on the Insert tab.

The Illustrations group as it appears in Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007 and Microsoft Office Word 2007

The Text group as it appears in Office PowerPoint 2007
After you insert a shape, line, picture, clip art, SmartArt graphic, or WordArt, additional tabs appear that contain formatting and effects previously found on the Drawing toolbar, and additional new features like Quick Styles (Quick Styles: Collections of formatting options that make formatting your documents and objects easier.).

Note If you do not see these tabs, make sure that you selected a shape, line, picture, clip art, SmartArt graphic, or WordArt.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the Insert Diagram or Organization Chart button on the Drawing toolbar?
Show All
The Insert Diagram or Organization Chart button on the Drawing toolbar is not available in most 2007 Microsoft Office system programs. 
In some 2007 Office release programs, the Ribbon, which is a part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface replaces the Drawing toolbar and other toolbars and menus.
The Ribbon is designed to help you quickly find the commands that you need to complete a task. Commands are organized in logical groups under tabs, such as the Clipboard group on the Home tab. Each tab relates to a type of activity, such as writing or designing a page. To reduce clutter, some tabs appear only when needed. For example, the Drawing Tools tab appears only when you add or select a shape, line, or other drawing object. To learn more about the Ribbon, see Use the Ribbon.

To create a diagram or organization chart by using 2007 Office release programs, insert a SmartArt graphic. A SmartArt graphic is a visual representation of your information that you can quickly and easily create by choosing from many different layouts, to effectively communicate your message. To add a SmartArt graphic, on the Insert tab, in the Illustrations group, click SmartArt.

The Illustrations group as it appears in Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007 and Microsoft Office Word 2007
After you insert a SmartArt graphic, additional tabs appear under SmartArt Tools that contain formatting and effects previously found on the Drawing toolbar, and additional new features like Quick Styles (Quick Styles: Collections of formatting options that make formatting your documents and objects easier.).

For more information about creating an organization chart, see Create an organization chart.
Tip Because presentations often contain slides with bulleted lists, you can quickly convert slide text to a SmartArt graphic in Office PowerPoint 2007. To convert slide text to a SmartArt graphic, on the Home tab, in the Paragraph group, click Convert to SmartArt graphic
. This button is available only when you have text selected.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Automatically save and recover Office files
Sometimes a Microsoft Office program closes before you can save changes to a file you are working on. Some possible causes include:
- A power outage occurs.
- Your system is made unstable by another program.
- Something goes wrong with the Microsoft Office program itself.
Although you can't always prevent problems such as these from happening, you can take steps to protect your work when an Office program closes abnormally.
What do you want to do?

Learn how AutoRecover and AutoSave work
Enable and adjust AutoRecover and AutoSave
Save early and save often

Learn how AutoRecover and AutoSave work
The AutoRecover option (in these Microsoft Office programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher, and Visio) and AutoSave option (in Microsoft Office Outlook) can help you avoid losing work in two ways:
- Your data is automatically saved If you enable AutoRecover or AutoSave, your file (such as a Microsoft Office Word document) or item (such as an Outlook e-mail message) is automatically saved as often as you want. Therefore, if you have been working for a long time but forget to save a file or if your power goes out, the file you have been working on contains all or at least some of the work you have done since you last saved it.
- Your program state is automatically saved In Microsoft Office Excel, Microsoft Office Outlook, Microsoft Office PowerPoint, and Microsoft Office Word, there is an additional benefit to enabling AutoRecover or AutoSave. In these programs, if you enable this option, some aspects of the state of the program are recovered when the program is restarted after it closed abnormally.
For example, you are working on several Excel workbooks at the same time. Each file is open in a different window, with specific data visible in each window. In one of the workbooks, a cell is selected to help you keep track of which rows you already reviewed, and then Excel crashes. When you restart Excel, it opens the workbooks again and restores the windows to the way they were before Excel crashed.
Although not every aspect of your program's state can be recovered, in many cases, the Recovery feature can help you recover more quickly.
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Enable and adjust AutoRecover and AutoSave
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Excel
Outlook
PowerPoint
Publisher
Visio
Word

Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Save.
- Select the Save AutoRecover information every x minutes check box.
- In the minutes list, specify how often you want the program to save your data and the program state.
Tip The amount of new information that the recovered file contains depends on how frequently a Microsoft Office program saves the recovery file. For example, if the recovery file is saved only every 15 minutes, your recovered file won't contain your last 14 minutes of work before the power failure or other problem occurred.
- Optionally, you can change the location (specified in the AutoRecover file location box) where the program automatically saves a version of files you work on.
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Outlook
- On the Tools menu, click Options.
- On the Preferences tab, click E-mail Options, and then click Advanced E-mail Options.
- Select the AutoSave items every: x minutes check box.
- In the minutes list, specify how often you want the program to save your data and the program state.
Tip The amount of new information that the recovered item contains depends on how frequently a Microsoft Office program saves the recovery item. For example, if the recovery item is saved only every 15 minutes, your recovered item won't contain your last 14 minutes of work before the power failure or other problem occurred.
- Optionally, on the AutoSave items in menu, select the folder where you want Outlook to automatically save items.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Save.
- Select the Save AutoRecover information every x minutes check box.
- In the minutes list, specify how often you want the program to save your data and the program state.
Tip The amount of new information that the recovered file contains depends on how frequently a Microsoft Office program saves the recovery file. For example, if the recovery file is saved only every 15 minutes, your recovered file won't contain your last 14 minutes of work before the power failure or other problem occurred.
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Publisher
- On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the Save tab.
- Select the Save AutoRecover information every x minutes check box.
- In the minutes list, specify how often you want the program to save your data.
Tip The amount of new information that the recovered file contains depends on how frequently a Microsoft Office program saves the recovery file. For example, if the recovery file is saved only every 15 minutes, your recovered file won't contain your last 14 minutes of work before the power failure or other problem occurred.
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Visio
- On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the Save/Open tab.
- Select the Save AutoRecover information every x minutes check box.
- In the minutes list, specify how often you want the program to save your data.
Tip The amount of new information that the recovered file contains depends on how frequently a Microsoft Office program saves the recovery file. For example, if the recovery file is saved only every 15 minutes, your recovered file won't contain your last 14 minutes of work before the power failure or other problem occurred.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Save.
- Select the Save AutoRecover information every x minutes check box.
- In the minutes list, specify how often you want the program to save your data and the program state.
Tip The amount of new information that the recovered file contains depends on how frequently a Microsoft Office program saves the recovery file. For example, if the recovery file is saved only every 15 minutes, your recovered file won't contain your last 14 minutes of work before the power failure or other problem occurred.
- Optionally, you can change the location (specified in the AutoRecover file location box) where the program automatically saves a version of files you work on.
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Save early and save often
The AutoRecover and AutoSave features are not a substitute for regularly saving your work by clicking Save
. Manually saving your file is the surest way to preserve the work you have done.
Keyboard shortcut To save a file, press CTRL+S.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Participate in the Customer Experience Improvement Program
By participating in the Customer Experience Improvement Program, you can help to improve the quality, reliability, and performance of Microsoft Office.
In this article

Key points about the Customer Experience Improvement Program
If you want to participate in the Customer Experience Improvement Program
If I choose to participate now, can I stop participating later?

Key points about the Customer Experience Improvement Program
- If you are willing to participate, you don't have to do any additional work. You never have to complete a form, fill out a survey, or answer a telephone call.
- Microsoft automatically collects information from your computer, including the error messages that are generated by the software and when they are generated, the kind of computer equipment that you are using, whether your computer is having any difficulty running Microsoft software, and whether your hardware and software respond well and perform rapidly. In general, this information is collected once each day.
- Any information that you share with Microsoft is completely anonymous, and absolutely no information is personally identifiable as being yours. This information is not used in advertising or sales in any way. Microsoft does not share this information with any other company. When you join the program, an identification number is generated randomly. That number is the only identification that is used when you share information with Microsoft. Because the number is completely random, Microsoft cannot trace your information back to you — and neither can anyone else.
- For full details about this program and to learn more about information privacy, visit the Customer Experience Improvement Program Web site.
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If you want to participate in the Customer Experience Improvement Program
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Trust Center.
- Click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Trust Center.
- Click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Trust Center.
- Click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Customer Feedback Options.
- Click Yes, I am willing to participate anonymously in the Customer Experience Improvement Program, and then click OK.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Trust Center.
- Click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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If I choose to participate now, can I stop participating later?
Yes, you can stop participating in the Customer Experience Improvement Program at any time.
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Trust Center.
- Click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Trust Center.
- Click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Trust Center.
- Click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Customer Feedback Options.
- Click No, I don't wish to participate, and then click OK.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Trust Center.
- Click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Clear the Sign up for the Customer Experience Improvement Program check box, and then click OK.
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Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
My recovered file or item does not contain my changes
Symptoms
You turned on the AutoSave or AutoRecover feature before your Microsoft Office program closed abnormally. However, when you start the program again, you don't see your changes in the recovered file or item.
Cause
The amount of new information that the recovered file contains depends on how frequently a Microsoft Office program saves the recovery file. For example, if the recovery file is saved only every 15 minutes, your recovered file won't contain your last 14 minutes of work before the power failure or other problem occurred.
Resolution
For information about how to change the AutoSave or AutoRecover save interval, see Avoid losing work when an Office program closes abnormally.
Find links to more information about file recovery in the See Also section.
See Also
Excel > What's new
Use the Ribbon
Show All

Tags commands; customize toolbar; interactive; menu; Quick Access Toolbar; Ribbon; tab; toolbars; view

What are tags?
When you first start some of the programs in 2007 Microsoft Office system, you may be surprised by what you see. The menus and toolbars in some programs have been replaced with the Ribbon, which is part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface.

The Ribbon as it appears in Microsoft Office Word 2007
The Ribbon is designed to help you quickly find the commands that you need to complete a task. Commands are organized in logical groups, which are collected together under tabs. Each tab relates to a type of activity, such as writing or laying out a page. To reduce clutter, some tabs are shown only when needed. For example, the Picture Tools tab is shown only when a picture is selected.
Don't have the 2007 Office release yet? You can download a free trial or buy it now.
In this article

Programs that use the Ribbon
Learn more about using the Ribbon
Minimize the Ribbon

Programs that use the Ribbon
The Ribbon is featured in the following 2007 Microsoft Office system programs:
- Office Access 2007
- Office Excel 2007
- Office PowerPoint 2007
- Office Word 2007
- Office Outlook 2007 (in open items such as Mail, Contacts, and Appointments)
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Learn more about using the Ribbon
Click any of the following items for links to topics, training, and demos that can help you get up to speed with the Ribbon.
2007 Office release
Microsoft Office Access 2007
Microsoft Office Excel 2007
Microsoft Office Outlook 2007
Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007
Microsoft Office Word 2007
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Minimize the Ribbon
The Ribbon is designed to help you quickly find the commands that you need to complete a task. Commands are organized in logical groups that are collected together under tabs. Each tab relates to a type of activity, such as writing or laying out a page. To reduce screen clutter, some tabs are shown only when they are needed.
There is no way to delete or replace the Ribbon with the toolbars and menus from the earlier versions of Microsoft Office. However, you can minimize the Ribbon to make more space available on your screen.
Always keep the Ribbon minimized
- Click Customize Quick Access Toolbar
.
- In the list, click Minimize the Ribbon.
- To use the Ribbon while it is minimized, click the tab you want to use, and then click the option or command you want to use.
For example, with the Ribbon minimized, you can select text in your Microsoft Office Word document, click the Home tab, and then in the Font group, click the size of the text you want. After you click the text size you want, the Ribbon goes back to being minimized.
Keep the Ribbon minimized for a short time
- To quickly minimize the Ribbon, double-click the name of the active tab. Double-click a tab again to restore the Ribbon.
Keyboard shortcut To minimize or restore the Ribbon, press CTRL+F1.
Restore the Ribbon
- Click Customize Quick Access Toolbar
.
- In the list, click Minimize the Ribbon.
Keyboard shortcut To minimize or restore the Ribbon, press CTRL+F1.
Tip You can still use the keyboard shortcuts while the Ribbon is minimized. For more information about keyboard shortcuts, see Use the keyboard to work with Ribbon programs.
Don't have the 2007 Office release yet? You can try it or buy it now.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Locate the Product ID for your Office program

Tags activate; get help; Microsoft Office Button

What are tags?
The Product ID is specific to your 2007 Microsoft Office system license and is verified during product activation. After it has been activated, the Product ID for your Office program is located on a window that looks similar to the following:

Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Clip Organizer
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Resources, and then click About.
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Clip Organizer
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Clip Organizer.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Resources, and then click About.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office InfoPath.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office OneNote.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Outlook.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Resources, and then click About.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Project.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Publisher.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office Visio.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Resources, and then click About.
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Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
My Office program did not open a recovered file
Symptoms
You turned on the AutoRecover feature before your Microsoft Office program closed abnormally. However, when you start the program again, it doesn't open the recovered file.
Resolution
When you restart a Microsoft Office program after a power failure or other problem, the program automatically opens any recovered files. If for some reason the recovery file doesn't open, you can try to open it yourself.
Notes
- The information in this topic can help you if you turned on the AutoRecover or AutoSave feature. Also, you should make sure that the save interval is short enough to ensure that your work is saved frequently enough. For more information, see Avoid losing work when an Office program closes abnormally.
- In general, when you restart the program, the program automatically opens the files that were automatically saved. This is the preferred way to open an automatically saved file. You should use the following information only if the program fails to open a file that you think was automatically saved.
Manually open an automatically saved file
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Excel
PowerPoint
Publisher
Visio
Word

Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Open.
- In the Open dialog box, type the path and file mask to display a list of the automatically saved files. The path and file mask for Excel depend on the version of Microsoft Windows you are running:
%userprofile%\AppData\Microsoft\Excel\*.xlsb
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003 or Microsoft Windows XP
%userprofile%\Application Data\Microsoft\Excel\*.xlsb
- Click the name of the file that you want to recover, and then click Open. If you are not sure which file you need to open, do the following:
- The automatically saved files are named by using the following convention: Original file name (version Version number). For example, if your original file is named Trucks, the automatically saved file name should be Trucks (version 1).
- Optionally, you can modify the file list in the Open dialog box to make it easier to browse through the files to find the right one:
- Click the arrow next to the Views
button, and then click Details.
- Click the column header to sort the list by Name, Size, Type, or Date Modified. Click the column header again to sort the list in the opposite order. For example, click Date Modified once or twice so that the list of files is sorted with the most recently modified files at the top of the list.
- Continue to open files until you find the one you are looking for. After you find the file, click Save
.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Open.
- In the Open dialog box, type the path and file mask to display a list of the automatically saved files. The path and file mask depend on the program that you are using:
%temp%\ppt*.tmp
- Click the name of the file that you want to recover, and then click Open. If you are not sure which file you need to open, do the following:
- The automatically saved files are not named in a descriptive way. See the next step for information about how to use the Open dialog box to help you find the right file.
- Optionally, you can modify the file list in the Open dialog box to make it easier to browse through the files to find the right one:
- Click the arrow next to the Views
button, and then click Details.
- Click the column header to sort the list by Name, Size, Type, or Date Modified. Click the column header again to sort the list in the opposite order. For example, click Date Modified once or twice so that the list of files is sorted with the most recently modified files at the top of the list.
- Continue to open files until you find the one you are looking for. After you find the file, click Save
.
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Publisher
- On the Standard toolbar, click Open
.
- In the Open dialog box, type the path and file mask to display a list of the automatically saved files. The path and file mask depend on the program that you are using:
%temp%\pub*.tmp
- Click the name of the file that you want to recover, and then click Open. If you are not sure which file you need to open, do the following:
- The automatically saved files are not named in a descriptive way. See the next step for information about how to use the Open dialog box to help you find the right file.
- Optionally, you can modify the file list in the Open dialog box to make it easier to browse through the files to find the right one:
- Click the arrow next to the Views
button, and then click Details.
- Click the column header to sort the list by Name, Size, Type, or Date Modified. Click the column header again to sort the list in the opposite order. For example, click Date Modified once or twice so that the list of files is sorted with the most recently modified files at the top of the list.
- Continue to open files until you find the one you are looking for. After you find the file, click Save
.
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Visio
- On the Standard toolbar, click Open
.
- In the Open dialog box, type the path and file mask to display a list of the automatically saved files. The path and file mask depend on the program that you are using:
%temp%\*.vsd
- Click the name of the file that you want to recover, and then click Open. If you are not sure which file you need to open, do the following:
- The automatically saved files are not named in a descriptive way. See the next step for information about how to use the Open dialog box to help you find the right file.
- Optionally, you can modify the file list in the Open dialog box to make it easier to browse through the files to find the right one:
- Click the arrow next to the Views
button, and then click Details.
- Click the column header to sort the list by Name, Size, Type, or Date Modified. Click the column header again to sort the list in the opposite order. For example, click Date Modified once or twice so that the list of files is sorted with the most recently modified files at the top of the list.
- Continue to open files until you find the one you are looking for. After you find the file, click Save
.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Open.
- In the Open dialog box, type the path and file mask to display a list of the automatically saved files. The path and file mask for Word depend on the version of Windows you are running:
%userprofile%\AppData\Microsoft\Word\*.asd
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003 or Microsoft Windows XP
%userprofile%\Application Data\Microsoft\Word\*.asd
- Click the name of the file that you want to recover, and then click Open. If you are not sure which file you need to open, do the following:
- The automatically saved files are named by using the following convention: Auto Recovery save of Original file name. For example, if your original file is named Trucks, the automatically saved file name should be Auto Recovery save of Trucks.
- Optionally, you can modify the file list in the Open dialog box to make it easier to browse through the files to find the right one:
- Click the arrow next to the Views
button, and then click Details.
- Click the column header to sort the list by Name, Size, Type, or Date Modified. Click the column header again to sort the list in the opposite order. For example, click Date Modified once or twice so that the list of files is sorted with the most recently modified files at the top of the list.
- Continue to open files until you find the one you are looking for. After you find the file, click Save
.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Minimize the Ribbon
The Ribbon, which is part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface, is designed to help you quickly find the commands that you need to complete a task. Commands are organized in logical groups that are collected together under tabs. Each tab relates to a type of activity, such as writing or laying out a page. To reduce screen clutter, some tabs are shown only when they are needed. When the Ribbon is minimized, you see only the tabs.
There is no way to delete or replace the Ribbon with the toolbars and menus from the earlier versions of Microsoft Office. However, you can minimize the Ribbon to make more space available on your screen.
Full Ribbon

Minimized Ribbon

Always keep the Ribbon minimized
- Click Customize Quick Access Toolbar
.
- In the list, click Minimize the Ribbon.
- To use the Office Fluent Ribbon while it is minimized, click the tab you want to use, and then click the option or command you want to use.
For example, with the Ribbon minimized, you can select text in your Microsoft Office Word document, click the Home tab, and then in the Font group, click the size of the text you want. After you click the text size you want, the Ribbon goes back to being minimized.
Keep the Ribbon minimized for a short time
- To quickly minimize the Ribbon, double-click the name of the active tab. Double-click a tab again to restore the Ribbon.
Keyboard shortcut To minimize or restore the Ribbon, press CTRL+F1.
Restore the Ribbon
- Click Customize Quick Access Toolbar
.
- In the list, click Minimize the Ribbon.
Keyboard shortcut To minimize or restore the Ribbon, press CTRL+F1.
Tip You can still use the keyboard shortcuts while the Ribbon is minimized. For more information about keyboard shortcuts, see Use the keyboard to work with Ribbon programs.
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the File menu?
The user interface has been significantly redesigned in the following 2007 Microsoft Office system programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, and Outlook (in the composing and reading windows). The File menu has been replaced with the Microsoft Office Button
.
Important No option is currently available to switch the user interface back to the File menu, toolbars, and commands as they appeared in earlier versions of these Microsoft Office programs.
When you click the Microsoft Office Button
, you see the same basic commands available in earlier releases of Microsoft Office to open, save, and print your file. Some commands, such as Import, have been moved to the Ribbon, part of the Microsoft Office Fluent interface.
However, in the 2007 Office release, more commands are now available, such as Prepare and Publish. For example, in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint by pointing to Prepare, and then clicking Inspect Document, you can check a file for hidden metadata or personal information.
You can also click the Options button for the Office program you are working in to find the program settings that control things such as your preferences to correct spelling or save a file.
For example, in Word, you would click the the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click the Word Options button.
In Excel, you would click the the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click the Excel Options button, and so forth.
In Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 when you read or create a message, task, contact, or calendar item, you see the new Microsoft Office Button
.
See Also
Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to the Options command on the Tools menu?

Tags button; edit; menu; options; paste options; print options; save as; table tools

What are tags?
In earlier versions of Microsoft Office, you could set your preferences for specific view, display, and editing settings in the Options dialog box (Tools menu, Options command). As part of the Microsoft Office Fluent user interface in the following 2007 Microsoft Office system programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Access, the Options command on the Tools menu has been moved so that it is under Word Options, Excel Options, PowerPoint Options, or Access Options after you click the Microsoft Office Button
.
To find the program settings that control things such as your preferences to correct spelling or save a file, click Word Options, Excel Options, PowerPoint Options, or Access Options after you click the Microsoft Office Button
.
See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
I can't find the advanced settings I used in earlier versions of Office
To make the user interface of many 2007 Microsoft Office system programs easy to use, many of the less commonly used settings for features such as compatibility, editing, printing, and saving have been placed in the Advanced category in the Program Name Options dialog box. If there is a setting that you usually changed in earlier versions of Microsoft Office programs but that you cannot find where you think it should be in the new Program Name Options dialog box, you might find it among the advanced settings.
Note If you upgrade from an earlier version of Microsoft Office to the 2007 Microsoft Office system, the settings from the earlier version are kept.
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options, Excel Options, PowerPoint Options, or Word Options.
- Click Advanced.
- Look for the setting on the Advanced category. The settings are organized by feature category.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Diagnose and repair crashing Office programs by using Office Diagnostics
Show All

Tags crash; detect and repair; Microsoft Office Button; open and repair; troubleshoot; update

What are tags?
Microsoft Office Diagnostics in the 2007 Microsoft Office system is a series of diagnostic tests that can help you discover why your computer is crashing (closing abnormally). The diagnostic tests can solve some problems directly and might identify ways that you can solve other problems.
Important Diagnostic information that is gathered from your computer is compiled and kept on your computer. When Office Diagnostics determines that the data might be useful to help diagnose and fix a problem, the system asks whether you want to send the information to Microsoft. Also, after the tests are completed, you are prompted to visit a Web page to get advice based the results of the tests. Any information that you share with Microsoft is completely anonymous, and absolutely no information is personally identifiable as being yours. To learn more about information confidentiality, see the Privacy Statement.
In this article

What do the individual diagnostic tests do?
How do I run Office Diagnostics?

What do the individual diagnostic tests do?
When you run Office Diagnostics, you generally are running all of the tests. However, in some cases, some tests are not run — for example, if you are running a server version of Microsoft Windows or if an administrator has disabled some of the tests.
The Office Diagnostics are:
- Setup Diagnostic This test checks for corruption in the files and registry settings in your 2007 Microsoft Office system installation. Files and settings can be corrupted by malicious viruses or by hardware that is faulty or incorrectly configured.
The following are some important facts about this test:
- This test might take 15 minutes or longer to run.
- This test might not run effectively if you are logged onto the system using Terminal Services or Remote Desktop.
- While running the test, in some uncommon situations, you might be prompted to insert the Microsoft Office installation disc. Make sure you have access to the disc or network share from which you installed Office.
Note In earlier versions of Office, this feature was called Detect and Repair.
- Disk Diagnostic This test looks for evidence of problems with your hard disk. Specifically this test checks for errors logged by the following:
- The Windows system event log.
- The Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology (SMART) feature of your hard disk. SMART is a feature that some disk drive manufacturers provide to give users advance notice of potential hard disk failure.
- Memory Diagnostic This test verifies the integrity of your computer's random access memory (RAM).
Note This test is disabled by default on server versions of Windows.
- Update Diagnostic This test checks whether your computer is up to date with installed free service packs from Microsoft. Service packs are designed to make Office more stable. If your installation of Office is missing one or more service packs, it is important to install them as soon as possible. (Updates are available at Downloads on Microsoft Office Online. Under Office Update, click Check for Updates.) This test is run only if you enable it.
How do I enable the Update Diagnostic test?









- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Trust Center, click Advanced Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems check box.
- Wait about a week to allow the file to be downloaded, and then run Microsoft Office Diagnostics again.

- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Trust Center, click Advanced Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems check box.
- Wait about a week to allow the file to be downloaded, and then run Microsoft Office Diagnostics again.

- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems check box.
- Wait about a week to allow the file to be downloaded, and then run Microsoft Office Diagnostics again.

- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems check box.
- Wait about a week to allow the file to be downloaded, and then run Microsoft Office Diagnostics again.

- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Trust Center, click Advanced Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems check box.
- Wait about a week to allow the file to be downloaded, and then run Microsoft Office Diagnostics again.

- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems check box.
- Wait about a week to allow the file to be downloaded, and then run Microsoft Office Diagnostics again.

- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems check box.
- Wait about a week to allow the file to be downloaded, and then run Microsoft Office Diagnostics again.

- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Trust Center, click Advanced Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select the Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems check box.
- Wait about a week to allow the file to be downloaded, and then run Microsoft Office Diagnostics again.

- Compatibility Diagnostic This test identifies conflicting versions of Microsoft Office Outlook that might be installed on your computer. Two different versions of Outlook cannot be installed on the same computer without causing instability.
- Check for known solutions This test reviews the data on crashes of the 2007 Office release that have recently occurred on your system. The test then connects to a server to look for any solutions that might be available for the problems that caused these crashes.
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How do I run Office Diagnostics?
Before running Office Diagnostics, and to ensure all the tests can run successfully, we recommend that you do the following:
- Plan to run the tests during a time when you can stop using your system. In particular, you should avoid using the system while the Memory Diagnostic is running.
- Close as many running programs as you can.
Do the following in one of these 2007 Microsoft Office system programs:
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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How do I run Office Diagnostics if I can't run an Office program?
If necessary, you can run Office Diagnostics from the Start menu.
- In Microsoft Windows, click Start, point to All Programs, point to Microsoft Office, point to Microsoft Office Tools, and then click Microsoft Office Diagnostics.
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Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Work with Office safe modes
Show All
Microsoft Office safe modes can allow you to safely use a Microsoft Office program that has encountered certain problems. There are two types of safe modes:
- Automated Safe mode When you start a program and a problem is detected, the program goes into this mode and either fixes the problem or isolates it, allowing the program to start successfully.
- User-Initiated Safe mode You can start a program in this mode to try to resolve certain issues.
Important If you are having problems with a Microsoft Office program, we strongly recommend that you use Microsoft Office Diagnostics to diagnose and potentially solve the problem. For more information, see Diagnose and repair crashing Office programs by using Office Diagnostics.
What do you want to do?

Understand and work with Automated Safe mode
Use a Microsoft Office program in User-Initiated Safe mode
Understand the difference between Office safe mode and Windows safe mode

Understand and work with Automated Safe mode
When you start a program:
- Office checks for problems such as an add-in or extension that won't start or a corrupted resource, file, registry, or template. If a problem is found, the program may not be able to start.
- If the program is not able to start, the next time you try to start the program, Automated Safe mode is triggered. A message is displayed to identify the problem and ask whether you want to disable the part of the program that has a problem.
- If the program is still not able to start, you may be prompted to disable more functionality that may be preventing the program from starting normally.
To view the list of disabled items, display the Disabled Items dialog box by doing the following in the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Access, Excel, PowerPoint, or Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options, Excel Options, PowerPoint Options, or Word Options.
- Click Add-Ins.
- On the Manage menu, click Disabled Items, and then click Go.
Visio, Outlook, Publisher, or InfoPath
- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Add-ins.
- On the Manage menu, click Disabled Items, and then click Go.
OneNote, Project, or SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click About Microsoft Office OneNote, About Microsoft Office Project, or About Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer.
- Click Disabled Items.
After you view the items listed in the Disabled Items dialog box, you can select an item and then click Enable to turn it on again. Enabling some items may require you to reload or reinstall an add-in program or reopen a file. After you enable an item, the program may run into a problem the next time it starts. In this case, you are prompted to disable the item again.
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Use a Microsoft Office program in User-Initiated Safe mode
If you are having problems with a Microsoft Office program, you may be able to use User-Initiated Safe mode to make it possible to run the program. Some situations in which this can be helpful include:
- You need to view a file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using is crashing before you can do so.
- You are trying to resolve a problem with your Microsoft Office program. You may need help from a technical support representative to do this.
Use User-Initiated Safe mode
To start a Microsoft Office program in User-Initiated Safe mode:
On the Microsoft Windows Start menu
- Click Start, point to All Programs, and then point to Microsoft Office.
- Press and hold the CTRL key, and then click the name of the Microsoft Office program that you want to run.
In the Command Prompt window
To stop User-Initiated Safe mode, exit the program, and then start it again normally.
What User-Initiated Safe mode does
The following restrictions apply when you start a program in User-Initiated Safe mode. (Some items listed below do not apply to all Microsoft Office programs.)
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Understand the difference between Office safe modes and Windows safe mode
The Office safe modes are not the same as Windows safe mode. For more information about Windows safe mode, do the following:
- Click Start and then click Help and Support.
- Type safe mode in the Search list, and then press ENTER.
- Open a topic on the Search Results list.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Disclaimer: Use of Fictitious Names
The example companies, organizations, products, domain names, e-mail addresses, logos, people, places, and events depicted herein are fictitious. No association with any real company, organization, product, domain name, e-mail address, logo, person, places, or events is intended or should be inferred.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Get the version number for your Office program and information about your computer
You can check which version of the Microsoft Office program is installed on your computer, and you can determine the product ID number of your copy of the program. You can also get information about your computer.
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Resources, and then click About.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Resources, and then click About.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office OneNote Help.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Outlook Help.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Resources, and then click About.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Project Help.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Publisher Help.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Visio Help.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Resources, and then click About.
- To see information about your computer, click System Info.
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Excel > Getting help > What happened to?
What happened to Detect and Repair?
The Detect and Repair feature that was included with Microsoft Office 2003 has been replaced in the 2007 Microsoft Office system with Microsoft Office Diagnostics. This new tool provides more comprehensive testing and repair capabilities.
Run Microsoft Office Diagnostics
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Project
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Visio
- On the Help menu, click Office Diagnostics.
- Click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Resources.
- Click Diagnose, click Continue, and then click Start Diagnostics.
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How do I run Office Diagnostics if I can't run an Office program?
If necessary, you can run Office Diagnostics from the Start menu.
- In Microsoft Windows, click Start, point to All Programs, point to Microsoft Office, point to Microsoft Office Tools, and then click Microsoft Office Diagnostics.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office
Terms of use
Information in this document, including URL and other Internet Web site references, is subject to change without notice. Unless otherwise noted, the companies, organizations, products, domain names, e-mail addresses, logos, people, places, and events depicted in examples herein are fictitious. No association with any real company, organization, product, domain name, e-mail address, logo, person, place, or event is intended or should be inferred. Complying with all applicable copyright laws is the responsibility of the user. Without limiting the rights under copyright, no part of this document may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), or for any purpose, without the express written permission of Microsoft Corporation.
Microsoft may have patents, patent applications, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property rights covering subject matter in this document. Except as expressly provided in any written license agreement from Microsoft, the furnishing of this document does not give you any license to these patents, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property.
© 2006 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office Online
Register for online services on Office Online
Microsoft Office Online is the Web site where you can get free online services for Microsoft Office. To make sure that these services are available to you, connect to the Internet and complete a brief registration and sign-in process.
What online services do I have to register for?
Registration grants you authorization to use the free services hosted on Office Online that require authentication.
You can use the product updates, templates, clip art, and Help on Office Online without registering. However, for example, if you want to publish your Microsoft Office Outlook calendar using the Microsoft Office Outlook calendar publishing service, you must register. For more information, see Publish a calendar on Office Online.
Notes
- Registration is not the same process as activation. While you must activate your software for it to work correctly, registration is entirely optional.
- When you register for Microsoft Online Services, you are asked to sign in by using your Windows Live ID credentials (an e-mail address and a password). You can register for those credentials at the Windows Live ID Web site. You are also asked to enter additional information, such as a display name and a country/region. Your display name is shown when you use personalization features on Office Online.
- For more information about your privacy rights, see the Microsoft Office Online Privacy Statement.
How do I register for Office Online updates and services?
Do any of the following:
- Go directly to the registration sign-in page, and then follow the directions provided.
- On the final page in the Office Setup Wizard, click Go to Office Online.
- From the Activation Wizard, click Go to Office Online.
- In the individual program do the following:
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options
- Click Resources, and then click Go Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options
- Click Resources, and then click Go Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options
- Click Resources, and then click Go Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
Project
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
Visio
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Resources, and then click Go Online.
- Follow the directions provided.
Top of Page
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office Online
Get online Help, templates, training, and additional content
Show All

Tags get help; offline; template; training

What are tags?
If you are connected to the Internet, you can go online to browse or search for the most up-to-date Help, templates, training, and other online content.
What do you want to do?

Choose between offline and online content in the Help window
Temporarily browse or search offline or online content in the Help window
Get online content from Office Online

Choose between offline and online content in the Help window
You can choose which version of the Microsoft Office Help topics you want to see — those installed on your computer as part of Microsoft Office (offline) or the topics available on Microsoft Office Online. To choose between offline and online topics:
- In the main window of your Microsoft Office program, open Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
Open Help (using the mouse)
- Click the Microsoft Office Access Help button, Microsoft Office Excel Help button, Microsoft Office PowerPoint Help button, or Microsoft Office Word Help button
.
- On the Help menu, click Microsoft Office InfoPath Help, Microsoft Office OneNote Help, Microsoft Office Outlook Help, Microsoft Office Project Help, Microsoft Office Publisher Help, Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer Help, Microsoft Office Visio Help, or Microsoft Office Clip Organizer Help.
- On the Connection Status menu, which is located at the bottom right corner of the Help window, click either Show content from Office Online or Show content only from this computer.
Now whenever you open a Help window from any Microsoft Office program, the Help window displays content from the source you chose.
How do I decide which option to choose?
- You are in a location where you cannot connect to the Internet, for example, on an airplane.
- You are in a location where you do not want to connect to the Internet. For example, you might be using a computer where you have to pay to access the Internet.
- You are concerned about the privacy of your connection to the Internet.
Why is the Help window offline even though I chose to be online?
- You are disconnected from the Internet.
- The Microsoft Office Online server is unavailable.
Why don't I see the Show content from Office Online option?
Top of Page
Temporarily browse or search offline or online content in the Help window
You use the Connection Status menu at the bottom right corner of the Help window to choose the source of content for the Help window. For example, if you usually want your computer to get content only from your hard disk, you choose Show content only from this computer. There may be some situations where you want to temporarily search or browse for content online. To do this, you change the option in the Search list
to specify the content you want to search and browse.
For example, in the following scenario you are looking for some Help topics about Microsoft Office PowerPoint:
- In the main PowerPoint window, you press F1 so you can search for a Help topic. The Connection Status menu is set to Show content only from this computer (Offline) because you want to use the Help topics installed on your hard disk instead of connecting to the Internet.
- You don't find the topic you are looking for, so you change the Search list
from PowerPoint Help under Content from this computer to All PowerPoint under Content from Office Online. The Connection Status menu now displays the Connected to Office Online option.
- After browsing and and searching the online Help, you find the topic you are looking for. When you are finished reading the topic, you close the Help window.
- Later, when you need to find another Help topic, you press F1. The Connection Status menu displays Offline.
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Get online content from Office Online
While the Help window has several advantages, content is also available from the Microsoft Office Online Web site. Find links to more information about Office Online in the See Also section.
Some of these topics are the same topics you can view in the Help window. Some advantages of using Office Online include:
- On the Web site, you can choose to search across content for all Microsoft Office programs, not just the content for a single program. For example, if you are looking for information about creating an organization chart, you can search Office Online to learn which programs have this feature and how to use it.
- You can bookmark a link for your own reference or to share with someone else. For example, if you find a Help topic that is useful, you can copy the address of the topic and paste it into an e-mail message, and then send the message to a colleague.
For more information about finding and using online content, visit Office Online.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office Online
Get the latest online content while working in the 2007 release
Did you know that you can search Office Online right from within the 2007 Microsoft Office system? When you're connected to Office Online from your 2007 Microsoft Office programs, you can find all the latest online content either on the program Spotlight or the Help Viewer.
Automatically update content on the Spotlight
The Spotlight feature is a section in the File New dialog box of Microsoft Office Word 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, and in the Getting Started dialog box for Microsoft Office Visio 2007 and Microsoft Office Access 2007. This section contains featured articles, tips, and links to Office Online templates, trainings, downloads, and more.

You can turn on the automatic content updates from Office Online by clicking the link on the orange bar at the bottom of the Spotlight. Once you're connected, an Updates: On link at the bottom right of the Spotlight will appear indicating that you're connected to Office Online.
Connect to Office Online from the Help Viewer
The Help Viewer is the new version of the Microsoft Office Help Window. To optimize your experience, we've combined all the functionality of the old versions of Microsoft Office task panes including the Help Pane, Search Pane, Table of Contents Pane, and Getting Started Pane into a single Help viewer that is directly connected to Office Online.
By connecting from the Help Viewer, you can access articles, tips, clip art, templates, online training, downloads, and services on Office Online to enhance how you work with different versions of the Microsoft Office programs. You can also find information to help you understand the new features and components of the 2007 Microsoft Office suites without leaving the Help Viewer.

To connect to Office Online, click Connection Status at the bottom of the Help Viewer, and then choose Show content from the Internet.

You talk: We listen and respond
One of the biggest innovations that began with version 2003 was the opportunity to get feedback on our Help. Customers who are connected to the Web can send comments and feedback on the content they see in Help. We use this feedback to drive the development of new content and to update current help topics as needed. Connected customers have access to updated help topics.
The power of the feedback loop is that we can get better, more actionable feedback. It’s one thing to say that customers need more assistance; it’s quite another to have the richness of feedback from the customer that tells us what they were looking for, what they couldn’t find, or what they found but couldn’t use. We also use the feedback to identify trends that assist us in creating better Help for new features. The 2007 Office system Help was developed with the benefit from having feedback from thousands of Office customers.
We make continual improvements to Office Online based on feedback we get from customers like you. Tell us what you think and let us know what we can do to make Office Online better for you. We're listening.
See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office Online
You talk, we listen and respond
We have been requesting your feedback; maybe you even clicked a button at the bottom of a Help or how-to article to let us know whether the information was helpful. In fact, your comments encouraged us to change how you submit feedback to us.
We use a yes or no rating system, and you have the option to make comments. With a Microsoft Office program installed and an Internet connection, you can tell us whether the articles that you use are helpful, and you can send us comments about why you rated the content the way you did. The question is: Do we listen?

Providing feedback we can act on
Yes, we do listen to your feedback. Low ratings and your comments are the primary criteria that we use to determine whether and how to improve an article to increase customer satisfaction. Comments are the information that we use to focus on where we need to make changes in an article.

Your specific comments — including, for example, where a procedure or task failed you — might uncover trends that other customers are experiencing related to the same article or feature.
General comments such as "Nothing was right about this topic" or "This article stinks" are not specific enough for us to take action on; whereas a comment such as "The [feature] is grayed out and the procedure doesn't tell me how to make it available" gives us enough information to figure out whether other customers are having the same problem. The more details you provide, the more likely it is we can interpret and address a problem correctly.
How we are responding
Thousands of customers like you take time to rate our Help and how-to content and make comments every day, and we have an entire team devoted to improving content based on your feedback. We analyze the feedback data that we capture to determine which articles we will revise. When an article gets low ratings, and if your comments identify a particular trend, we make the necessary changes to improve our Help and how-to content. Trends are trends only over time, so we continue to examine the data on an ongoing basis to ensure that we make the right changes for the greatest number of customers.
In some cases, your comments tell us that a particular feature, rather than the information in a topic, needs improvement. Those comments are forwarded to product managers and developers, who use your feedback to decide how to improve the next version of the product.
Getting help from a human being
Sometimes you need help with a product feature, and you need it now. The feedback buttons at the end of an article aren't designed to give you the immediate assistance that you can get from technical support staff. If you have paid for technical support and you need to speak to someone, you can call Microsoft Product Support Services (PSS). For more information about PSS and the fees required to use the services, see Microsoft Product Support Services.
Give us your feedback right now
If you haven't tried our customer feedback ratings and comments, why don't you start with this article? How does our content stack up? Did you get the information you wanted? Did you expect to find information that wasn't there? If other customers agree, your comments might result in content changes that will increase satisfaction for customers like you. Your feedback is essential to making everything about our products better.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office Online
Get featured links from Office Online
Microsoft Office Online featured links are your source of up-to-date information from Microsoft Office Online. The information in featured links answers questions frequently asked about Microsoft Office and can help you increase your productivity with Microsoft Office programs. Microsoft is constantly responding to customer feedback, and these featured links are the best way to get new and updated information about Microsoft Office from within your Microsoft Office program.
What do you want to do?

See featured links
Turn on or off featured links

See featured links
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
PowerPoint
Visio
Word

Top of Page
Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click New.
- If necessary, scroll to the bottom of the window.
Top of Page
Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click New.
- Under Microsoft Office Online, click Featured.
Top of Page
PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click New.
- Under Microsoft Office Online, click Featured.
Top of Page
Visio
- On the File menu, point to New, and then click Getting Started.
- If necessary, scroll to the bottom of the window.
Top of Page
Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click New.
- Under Microsoft Office Online, click Featured.
Top of Page
Turn on or off featured links
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
Outlook
PowerPoint
Publisher
Visio
Word

Access
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Access Options.
- Click Trust Center, click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select or clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box.
Notes
- To see the featured links after you turn on the feature, you must exit and restart any Microsoft Office program that is open.
- When you turn on or off featured links, the setting affects all the programs in which this feature appears (Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, Microsoft Office Visio 2007, and Microsoft Office Word 2007).
- After you clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box, the information is no longer updated. However, the existing information still appears.
Top of Page
Excel
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Excel Options.
- Click Trust Center, click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select or clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box.
Notes
- To see the featured links after you turn on the feature, you must exit and restart any Microsoft Office program that is open.
- When you turn on or off featured links, the setting affects all the programs in which this feature appears (Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, Microsoft Office Visio 2007, and Microsoft Office Word 2007).
- After you clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box, the information is no longer updated. However, the existing information still appears.
Top of Page
InfoPath
- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select or clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box.
Notes
- To see the featured links after you turn on the feature, you must exit and restart any Microsoft Office program that is open.
- When you turn on or off featured links, the setting affects all the programs in which this feature appears (Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, Microsoft Office Visio 2007, and Microsoft Office Word 2007).
- Although you can turn on or off featured links in Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, the feature itself is not available in this program.
- After you clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box, the information is no longer updated. However, the existing information still appears.
Top of Page
Outlook
- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select or clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box.
Notes
- To see the featured links after you turn on the feature, you must exit and restart any Microsoft Office program that is open.
- When you turn on or off featured links, the setting affects all the programs in which this feature appears (Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, Microsoft Office Visio 2007, and Microsoft Office Word 2007).
- Although you can turn on or off featured links in Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, the feature itself is not available in this program.
- After you clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box, the information is no longer updated. However, the existing information still appears.
Top of Page
PowerPoint
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click PowerPoint Options.
- Click Trust Center, click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select or clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box.
Notes
- To see the featured links after you turn on the feature, you must exit and restart any Microsoft Office program that is open.
- When you turn on or off featured links, the setting affects all the programs in which this feature appears (Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, Microsoft Office Visio 2007, and Microsoft Office Word 2007).
- After you clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box, the information is no longer updated. However, the existing information still appears.
Top of Page
Publisher
- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select or clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box.
Notes
- To see the featured links after you turn on the feature, you must exit and restart any Microsoft Office program that is open.
- When you turn on or off featured links, the setting affects all the programs in which this feature appears (Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, Microsoft Office Visio 2007, and Microsoft Office Word 2007).
- Although you can turn on or off featured links in Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, the feature itself is not available in this program.
- After you clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box, the information is no longer updated. However, the existing information still appears.
Top of Page
Visio
- On the Tools menu, click Trust Center, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select or clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box.
Notes
- To see the featured links after you turn on the feature, you must exit and restart any Microsoft Office program that is open.
- When you turn on or off featured links, the setting affects all the programs in which this feature appears (Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, Microsoft Office Visio 2007, and Microsoft Office Word 2007).
- After you clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box, the information is no longer updated. However, the existing information still appears.
Top of Page
Word
- Click the Microsoft Office Button
, and then click Word Options.
- Click Trust Center, click Trust Center Settings, and then click Privacy Options.
- Select or clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box.
Notes
- To see the featured links after you turn on the feature, you must exit and restart any Microsoft Office program that is open.
- When you turn on or off featured links, the setting affects all the programs in which this feature appears (Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Excel 2007, Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007, Microsoft Office Publisher 2007, Microsoft Office Visio 2007, and Microsoft Office Word 2007).
- After you clear the Update featured links from Microsoft Office Online check box, the information is no longer updated. However, the existing information still appears.
Top of Page
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office Online
Find online training courses
To search for online training courses available for you to take, you must be connected to the Internet.
Tip To go to the Training home page on Microsoft Office Online, at the bottom of the Help window, click Training under More on Office Online.
Which 2007 Microsoft Office system program are you using?

Access
Excel
InfoPath
OneNote
Outlook
PowerPoint
Project
Publisher
SharePoint Designer
Visio
Word

Top of Page
Access
- Click the Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click Access Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
Excel
- Click the Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click Excel Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
InfoPath
- On the Help menu, click Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click InfoPath Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
OneNote
- On the Help menu, click Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click OneNote Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
Outlook
- On the Help menu, click Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click Outlook Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
PowerPoint
- Click the Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click PowerPoint Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
Project
- On the Help menu, click Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click Project Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
Publisher
- On the Help menu, click Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click Publisher Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
SharePoint Designer
- On the Help menu, click Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click SharePoint Designer Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
Visio
- On the Help menu, click Help.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click Visio Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
Word
- Click the Help button
.
Keyboard shortcut To open Help, press F1.
- In the Type words to search for box, type what you are looking for, for example, what's new.
- In the Search list
, under Content from Office Online, click Word Training.
- Click Search.
Top of Page
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Office Online
Where do I find templates?
Need to find and download a template?
Do you want to create a resume, budget, fax cover sheet, presentation, or invitation? To get free templates for these and other areas, go to the Templates home page on Microsoft Office Online. You can use these free templates as is or modify them to match what you need to create.
For more information about templates from Office Online, see Templates Help.
Note Some templates come with your Microsoft Office programs. Therefore, if you don't have access to the Internet, you might still be able to create what you need from a template stored on your computer. To see the templates on your computer, create a new file and select your template.
Have a template you want to share?
Do you have a template that you created and are proud of? If you want to share your template with other people, you can submit your template at Office Online Community Templates.
For more information about submitting your template to Office Online, see Community-submitted template Help.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Change the screen resolution
In Windows Vista
- Click the Start button
, and then click Control Panel.
- Under Appearance and Personalization, click Adjust screen resolution.
- Under Resolution, drag the slider to change the screen resolution.
In Microsoft Windows XP
- In Control Panel, click Appearance and Themes, and then click Change the screen resolution.
- Under Screen resolution, drag the slider to change the screen resolution.
Note Your monitor and video adapter determine your screen resolution options.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Change the size of the mouse pointer
Increase the size of your mouse pointer
- In Control Panel, open Mouse.
- On the Pointers tab, do one or both of the following:
- To change all of your pointers at one time, under Scheme, select a new scheme with (large) or (extra large) in its name.
- To change one pointer, select it in the Customize list. Click Browse, and then double-click the name of the new pointer that you want to use for that task.
Decrease the size of your mouse pointer
- In Control Panel, open Mouse.
- On the Pointers tab, do one or both of the following:
- To change all of your pointers at one time, under Scheme, select a new scheme without (large) or (extra large) in its name.
- To change one pointer, select it in the Customize list. Click Browse, and then double-click the name of the new pointer that you want to use for that task.
Note A pointer scheme is any combination of pointers that are used on your desktop. You can change any number of pointers and then save them as a new scheme by clicking Save As under Scheme. The new scheme appears in the list under Scheme.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Format a disk
Warning Formatting a disk erases all information on that disk.
Do one of the following:
Microsoft Windows Vista
- If the disk that you want to format is a floppy disk, insert it into its drive. Otherwise, skip to step 2.
- Click the Start button
, and then click Computer.
- Right-click the disk that you want to format, and then click Format.
- Select the options that you want.
- Click Start.
Microsoft Windows XP
- If the disk that you want to format is a floppy disk, insert it into its drive. Otherwise, skip to step 2.
- In Windows XP, click Start, and then click My Computer.
- Click the disk that you want to format.
- On the File menu, click Format.
- Select the options that you want.
- Click Start.
Notes
The Quick Format option (Format dialog box) removes files from the disk without scanning the disk for bad sectors. Select this check box only if the disk has been previously formatted and you are sure that the disk is not damaged.
For information about any of the options in the Format dialog box, click the question mark in the upper-right corner of the dialog box, and then click the option.
You cannot format a disk if files are open on the disk, if the contents of the disk are displayed, or if the disk contains the system or boot partition.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Minimize a window or document
Click Minimize
on the title bar, a horizontal bar at the top of a window, dialog box, or toolbar that shows the name of the document, program, or toolbar, of the active window. The program window minimizes to a button on the Microsoft Windows taskbar.
Note The following are keyboard shortcuts that you can use to work with a window or Microsoft Office document.
|
To do this
|
Press
|
|
Minimize a window
|
ALT+SPACEBAR+N
|
|
Minimize all windows
|
Windows logo key+M
|
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Minimize all program windows on the Windows desktop
Show All
Do one of the following:
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Copy an image of a window or screen
Show All

Tags button; html; insert word document; paste; paste options; print screen; printing; print setup; screen shot; window

What are tags?
In the past, the PRINT SCREEN key did what it says — it sent the current screen of text to your printer. Now, pressing PRINT SCREEN captures an image of your entire screen, also known as a "screen shot" or "screen capture", and copies it to the Clipboard in your computer's memory. You can then paste (CTRL+V) the image into a document, e-mail message, or other file. If you want, you can print the image from the application that you pasted it into.

When you press PRINT SCREEN, you copy the parts of the Desktop that you can see, the parts of the inactive window that you can see, and the entire active window.
To copy the image of what is in the inactive window, you need to make it an active window by clicking some part of the window.
When you press ALT+PRINT SCREEN, you only copy the active window.
What do you want to do?

Copy only the image of the active window
Copy the entire image on the screen
Modify the image

Copy only the image of the active window
The active window is the window that you are currently working in. Only one window can be active at a time.
- Click the window that you want to copy.
- Press ALT+PRINT SCREEN.
Important The text you see on your keyboard might be PrtSc, PrtScn, or PrntScrn. The other text on the Print Screen key is usually SysRq.
Where is the PRINT SCREEN button?
- Paste (CTRL+V) the image into a Microsoft Office program or other application.
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Copy the entire image on the screen
- Open everything you want copy and position it the way you want.
- Press PRINT SCREEN.
Important The text you see on your keyboard might be PrtSc, PrtScn, or PrntScrn. The other text on the Print Screen key is usually SysRq.
Where is the PRINT SCREEN button?
- Paste (CTRL+V) the image into a Microsoft Office program or other application.
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Modify the image
- Paste (CTRL+V) the image into a drawing application, such as Microsoft Paint, and by using the tools available in your drawing application, you can add circles around text or images you want to highlight or crop anything that you don't want to appear in the image.
For more information about how to use your drawing application, see the Help in that application.
How do I open Microsoft Paint?
- Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, and then click Paint.
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See Also
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Restore a minimized window
Do one of the following:
- On the Microsoft Windows taskbar, the bar that contains the Start button and appears by default at the bottom of the desktop, click the name of the window that you want to restore.
- From within a program, click Maximize
on the title bar, a horizontal bar at the top of a window, dialog box, or toolbar that shows the name of the document, program, or toolbar, of the window you want to restore.
Tip To quickly restore a minimized window that is visible, double-click the minimized window's title bar.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Show all windows on the Windows desktop
Do one of the following:
- In Windows Vista, right-click the taskbar, and then click Cascade Windows, Show Windows Stacked, or Show Windows Side by Side on the shortcut menu.
- In Microsoft Windows XP and Microsoft Windows 2000, right-click the background of the taskbar, and then click Tile Windows Horizontally or Tile Windows Vertically on the shortcut menu.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
Show or hide multiple program buttons on the Windows taskbar
Show All
Show or hide program buttons on the Microsoft Windows XP or Windows Vista taskbar, the bar that contains the Start button and appears by default at the bottom of the desktop. You can click the taskbar buttons to switch between programs.
Show a single program button
- Right-click the background of the taskbar, and then click Properties.
- Click the Taskbar tab.
- Select the Group similar taskbar buttons check box.
Each open window in your Office program is now grouped together in one single button. Click this button, and then click one of the windows to view it.
Show multiple program buttons
- Right-click the background of the taskbar, and then click Properties.
- Click the Taskbar tab.
- Clear the Group similar taskbar buttons check box.
Note In some cases, your program windows may not display grouped in one single button even after following the steps above. For example, if the Windows taskbar is displayed vertically, the windows may continue to display as separate icons.
Excel > Getting help > Using Microsoft Windows
View all hidden file types and file name extensions
In Microsoft Windows Vista
- Click the Start button
.
- In Computer, open the folder containing files that you want to view.
- On the Organize menu, click Folder and Search Options, and then click the View tab.
- To view all hidden file types, click the Show hidden files and folders option.
- To see all file name extensions, clear the Hide file extensions for known file types check box.
- Click Apply.
In Microsoft Windows XP
- In My Computer or Windows Explorer, open the folder containing files you want to view.
- On the Tools menu, click Folder Options, and then click the View tab.
- To view all hidden file types, click the Show hidden files and folders option.
- To see all file name extensions, clear the Hide file extensions for known file types check box.
- Click Apply.