Dean wrote:
Indeed some good advice is not profound. I should have said it was not that
helpful. Behind door #1, I have a repaired file that EXCEL says may not have
been fully repaired, and it has lost all cell formatting. Behind door #2 is a
file that was last saved 7 minutes before the 'file crash' - I also have daily
backups as the file evolved. Numerically, they both seem to be identical in
every way, something that is next to impossible a cell was compromised, so I
feel reasonably comfortable that the only remaining corruption may be in the
formatting. Still, if I am wrong, the results would be disastrous.
I do backup very often but, when a file becomes corrupted, rather than EXCEL
crashing, how can you ascertain what the real source of the corruption is,
especially when the repaired file says it may not have been able to fix all
the corruption. How do you then know whether a prior file version was (and
is) already close to corruption. It is not enough to know that a revised file
is not crashing. I need to feel comfortable that it is producing the intended
results, as programmed.
If I conclude that the corruption is in the formatting only, I guess door #2
is the best choice as I only need to redo 7 minutes of formatting, as opposed
to door #1, which might involve days of formatting.
The questions I am left with are:
Are both files likely corrupted, in which case I may need to rebuild from
scratch, but then is there something I must avoid to guard against the same
eventual outcome? I fear that, although the event happened at a specific
point in time, it may have been merely a straw that broke the camel's back
and, hence, is likely to return, if I just pick up with a 7- minute old
version. I was looking for guidance on all this. I have had this happen in
the past, albeit in much earlier versions of EXCEL that did not purport to
self-repair. Though one can never be sure, it is my strong belief that, after
days of re-doing formats, those files never seemed to fail again. This almost
suggests that corruption in EXCEL has a certain random component and is often
limited to cosmetics.
Basically, I was looking for insight from anyone who has some expertise in
EXCEL file corruption.
I would appreciate any advice.
Thanks for your help, Dave. I didn't mean to offend you. I did not
communicate my needs well enough.
Dean