V
Varne
Hello
Good Morning.
I am able to overwrite passwords written to protect workbook windows and
structure in Excel 2003.
Mine may be an older version of Excel 2003. Has it been rectified by
Microsoft within Excel 2003?
Is there no solid defence against it? Or is there any way to defend against
it using some procedures that run when the unprotect workbook event happens?
I am trying to find a somewhat indirect solution by not allowing the cracker
to save his changes. One Dave Peterson helped. However I will appreciate if
someone can give me a robust solution.
Thank You
M Varnendra
Good Morning.
I am able to overwrite passwords written to protect workbook windows and
structure in Excel 2003.
Mine may be an older version of Excel 2003. Has it been rectified by
Microsoft within Excel 2003?
Is there no solid defence against it? Or is there any way to defend against
it using some procedures that run when the unprotect workbook event happens?
I am trying to find a somewhat indirect solution by not allowing the cracker
to save his changes. One Dave Peterson helped. However I will appreciate if
someone can give me a robust solution.
Thank You
M Varnendra