I’ve switched my major four times. I came in as dietetics, then switched to psychology, then business economics. And then the new sport management program was created. So I changed to that, and I’ve really enjoyed it. I grew up in a sports family. Sports has been everything to me, and when I realized this new major had come along, I was like, “Wow, I really want to try that!” And I really like it a lot.
If you are using Mac Excel 2011 then it supports VBA/macros just the same as Windows. An Excel spreadsheet on Mac and PC is the case of getting a file name. That were such a time suck--even with the best anti-virus software installed).
A lot of student athletes have switched into this major, actually, and we all really enjoy it because it’s more of what we specifically want to do.
Open Disk Utility (in your Utilities folder). Select (click) the volume to check on the left panel.
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Make sure the First Aid tab is selected in the right panel. Click Repair Disk button. If it's the boot drive you can only click the verify button. You would need to boot from some other drive to repair the boot drive (e.g., your installer dvd). Verify is good enough to see if there are any problems with a disk. Repair does that first itself to decide whether it has to do a repair.
![Excel 2011 for mac download Excel 2011 for mac download](http://www.pinoytechblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/officeformac.jpg?x60048)
After the button is clicked DU does its thing and displays its progress in the right panel and at the end tells you whether it's 'happy' with what it found or did. Thanks for that!
So I did what you said and I got a message saying that there is something wrong with my disk and that I should start up my computer with a new disk (e.g., my Mac OSX installation disk) and then run the disk utility or something like that. I recently upgraded my OS from Tiger to Snow Leopard, so do I just pop in my Snow Leopard installation disk and then restart my computer? Then do I run the Disk Utility to fix it? Will I lose anything? (i.e., my files, music etc) Thanks so much! Yes, use the SL retail disc; hold down the C key on start up (wait for the chime if it's a bluetooth keyboard) until the Apple logo appears. OK the language page, then ignore the installer and go to the menu bar, Utilities menu Disk Utility.
Booted from the DVD you will now be able to use the 'Repair Disk' button to repair the HD. Run 'Repair Disk' again after repairs have been reported, until the green message 'The Volume Macintosh HD appears to be OK' appears. Then Quit DU, quit the installer and restart from Macintosh HD. There should be no loss of data, but you should always have a backup of that anyway. If a message appears saying DU can't repair the drive, repost here for further instructions. I had a similar problem.
Turned out Microsoft Excel didn't like the volume name where the document was stored. I had /Volumes/aux/. I noticed that when I renamed the volume to /Volumes/faux/ that everything worked again and changing it back to /Volumes/aux/ would consistently result in the following errors: When opening an existing document in /Volumes/aux/ Microsoft Office Excel cannot access the file.
There are several possible reasons: - The file name or path does not exist. The file is being used by another program. The workbook you are trying to save has the same name as a currently open workbook. When saving a new document to /Volumes/aux/ Alert Document not saved Hope this helps someone.
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