You don't. "Auto" means automatic - Excel does it for you.
You can open a 2007 Excel spreadsheet with Excel 2003 if you save the file in Excel 2007 using "Save As" and select the 2003 compatibility mode.
In XLS 2003 you can simply turn the "Save AutoRecovery info" in EXCEL (Tools/Options/Save)
The differences between them are not extensive so you can work in Excel 2010 easily if you are familiar with Excel 2007. You can save your files so that Excel 2007 will recognise them.
open file in excel 2007 then press ribbon and go to Save as, you will see Excel 1997-2003 Workbook option, click on it and save file.
auto save
..xlsx is a Excel 2007 format, whereas .xls is Excel 2003 or earlier. Excel 2007 allows you to save in multiple 2007 formats: ..xlsx - Normal Excel 2007 format ..xlsm - Macro-Enabled format ..xlsb - Binary format Save your files as 2003 under Save as Type and you should be fine.
Save the workbook as an Excel 2007 file instead of 97-2003 file.
i m also search the auto correct option in Microsoft Excel 2007 Pleas help
Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.Up to version 2003, Excel uses xls as its extension and file type. From versions 2007 onwards you can do a Save As to save to the 2003 version, which will mean it is in xls version.
xls comes from an Excel Spreadsheet. It is from versions of Excel up to Excel 2003. From version 2007, xlsx has been used.
It will save it with the name you specify and as the default type of workbook for the version of Excel you have. You should give the file a name, but if you don't it will call it Book1 and then add the appropriate extension. For the more modern versions, which is Excel 2007 onwards, that would be .xlsx, but if you are using an older version than Excel 2007, then it would be .xls instead.
I don't know about Excel 2007 but in 2003 you cannot do it with a macro. An inherent feature constratint of Excel 2003.