Manosa

Manosa

Joined Member # 6854103
1 Posts 2 Replies 89 Reputation

It works just like you described: I start Excel and it is not skinned. I change skin and then change it again back to the skin I want to use. Excel is skinned and as long as it is running, new spreadsheets I open are skinned. Word is skinned as soon as I start it as long as I do not specify a document. If I specify a document, it works like Excel. There is a difference in the way Excel and Word work. I think Word loads a new instance with every document. With Excel, if

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And I thought I was the only one who still uses Office 2003! I just tried running Excel and it was not skinned. I will leave it running and see what happens, like you suggested. However, I noticed a difference between Excel and Word. If I run Word, it gets skinned as long as I do not specify a document when I run it. That does not happen with Excel. Excel does not get skinned no matter how I run it. I only use one spreadsheet and I always run it from a shortcut so, until today

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New WB user here...I got the software because WIN 10 does not allow more detailed customization of colors. For the most part, I really like the way WB works but I have encountered the following problem and I'm not sure if it's a limitation or if there is a setting or workaround that I'm not aware of: I'm using an old version of MS Office (2003). When I run e.g. Word, the skin is applied the way it should. However, if I run it by clicking on an associated document, the skin is not appl

5 Replies 7,211 Views