If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
If you do a Paste Link, then there will be a connection maintained between the Word document and the Excel Workbook.
yes
The benefit of linking a chart from an Excel worksheet to a Word document is that the chart data will always be current. Excel is spreadsheet software from Microsoft.
Current data is more important than past data.
To quickly determine if spreadsheet data in a Word document is linked to a source file, right-click on the data and choose "Linked Worksheet Object" or "Linked Excel Chart" if available. If the option to "Edit Links" appears, it indicates that the data is linked to an external file. Additionally, you may see the "Update Link" prompt when opening the document, which further confirms the data’s linked status.
True
Because a linked object is created and stored in a separate source file and then it is linked to the destination file, while an embedded object is created in a separate source file but then it is inserted into the destination file , becoming the part of that file.
Is an external excel spreadsheet linked into a word document considered a compoound document in the microsoft enviroment?
The data will be in its original form, but any changes in the data will be reflected in the Excel document, as will changing the Excel document affect the Access table. It is the same data when it is linked, not copied.
A Word doc with a linked spreadsheet is usually called a 'Compound Document'.
It is still an Excel spreadsheet. The workbook does not change, just because it is linked to another document to form a compound document.
Sure. Why not?
yes