If you have saved it over the previous document, using the same name and location, then the previous version is gone and cannot be restored. So you can either find a completely separate copy of the original or open the document and try to make the changes to restore it to the way it was. If you are doing that, maybe first save the newest version with a different name, in case you want to have that one too.
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.
You can copy a table in Excel and paste it into Word. You will lose any formulas, but the resulting values will be retained. You can also link a Word document to a table in Excel, which will allow changes in the Excel table to be maintained in the Word document.
It can be called embedding. Depending on how it is done, it can also be called linking if it is done in such a way that if the chart in the Excel document changes, so will the one in the Word document.
You can use a hyperlink to link from a Word document to an Excel document. Select the text you want to act as the link and press Ctrl-K. You can then find the excel workbook you want to link to. You can also copy from an Excel document and paste as a hyperlink, using Paste As Hyperlink in the Word document. This can link to a specific point in the Excel Workbook. You can also do a Paste Link to maintain a connection between the two files, so that when there are changes in the Excel workbook, they will be seen in the Word document.
If the document is linked then any changes in the original spreadsheet will change in the Word Document. It is also actually possible to create spreadsheet documents with calculations exclusively in Word. There are special functions to do this with tables. Figures won't automatically change like they do in Excel, so after changing figures, you use the F9 key to get the formulas in the Word document to re-calculate. As it is limited in its capabilities and because many people don't even know you can do it, spreadsheets are rarely done exclusively in Word. It is much better to do them in Excel and copy them to a Word document if they are needed in one.
Excel tables can be copied-and-pasted into Word files in their original formats or converted to match the Word format. Excel files also can be exported to Word in the rich text file format (.rtf), while still maintaining the column and row spacing. Values will come, but not the underlying formulas. However, Word does have a limited capability of doing some formulas in tables, so some can be re-created in Word. Links can be created between Excel tables imported into Word and the original document in which the table was created. In that way, any changes to the original Excel document will autmatically update the Word document. That can be done using a copy in Excel and doing Paste Link in Word. It also is possible to save an Excel table as an image file, which can then be imported into a Word document. If it is an image, then nothing can be edited, so that may not be of any use. Also, putting an image into a Word document considerably increases the size of the file on your disk, which is another problem.
You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.
If you changed the file, saved the file, and exited, you will not be able to recover your previous changes. However, if the file is still open, you may be able to use the undo option to reverse your changes.
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.
Linking
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
You do a Paste Link.