Re: Macros Disabled



If you have an add-in in your Startup folder whose functionality you don't
want (since you're consistently disabling it), then why don't you just move
it out of the Startup folder?

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.

"Bill Martin" <Wylie@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uJmQwkkWGHA.1564@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Once again, I agree with you 100%. In point of fact that's exactly what I
did and Word natters constantly. Go back to read the posts and you'll see
the problem is that Word puts a file in a startup folder looking to "help"
me. And then when Word starts up it recognizes a conflict between those
settings you've described and the fact that there's a file in it's startup
folder. So it asks what to do? Which is fine, but it asks repeatedly.
Endlessly. Ad nauseam. It never remembers that it's already asked about
this. And it never tells a poor dumb user to go sort through its internal
files to resolve the problem.

I agree absolutely that Word should work like you and Suzanne have
described. I'm only suggesting Microsoft should in fact make it work that
way.

Bill
-------------------------------------------------------

"Tony Jollans" <My Forename at My Surname dot com> wrote in message
news:%23af3HSaWGHA.2080@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I rather think you're making a mountain out of a molehill here.

If you don't want any macros to run, ever, and you don't want to be
nagged
then set security to Very High and uncheck both boxes on the Trusted
Publishers tab.

I do agree that, for an average user, the wording on the dialog (and in
the
help) isn't particularly clear and doesn't really explain what or where
a
trusted location is.

--
Enjoy,
Tony

"Bill Martin" <Wylie@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:OQw#u2LWGHA.3376@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
You've put your finger precisely my complaint. I agree Word should
work
the
way you say. However, if I simply set security "High" then Word
badgers
me
10 times a day to turn on macros.

Word will not quietly accept my telling it to run "High", and it won't
quietly accept me overriding the macros the first time. It continues
to
natter about macros every single time Word is opened or closed. And
when
I
follow the help prompts, Word tells me to set security "Low" - unless I
think there might be viruses somewhere in the world.

Does this seem like a good user interface to you? Or more like
something
that Microsoft could fix trivially if it chose to - simply by
suppressing
the prompt after the first warning?

Bill
--------------------------
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" <sbarnhill@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:OuKabhGWGHA.3448@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
If you set Macro Security to High, macros will be disabled
automatically.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
newsgroup
so
all may benefit.

"Bill Martin" <Wylie@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23A8vQxFWGHA.1192@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
You're missing the point that I didn't install it either. Somehow
when
Word
installed its updates, it looked around on the disk and thought that
would
be a good file to move there with no guidance from me, and no other
program
active. When I killed that file before, it stayed killed until Word
installed its updates.

And that as a poor, dumb, ignorant user I have no way of knowing
it's
there
or how it got there. As a systems programmer I have some
appreciation
of
what's going on, but should one have to be a systems programmer to
use
a
simple word processor?

I'm simply maintaining that if I tell Word to run no macros, it
should
be
smart enough to do what it's told. Do you disagree?

Bill
------------------
"Charles Kenyon" <wordfaq@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23C8lTbCWGHA.840@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Then don't try to load files that have macros.

Word did _not_ put a FineMacro6.dot in a Startup folder. You did,
or
some
other program you installed did. The people who wrote that program
think
you need their macros. If you disagree, fine. Then don't use it.
--
Charles Kenyon

Word New User FAQ & Web Directory: http://addbalance.com/word

Intermediate User's Guide to Microsoft Word (supplemented version
of
Microsoft's Legal Users' Guide) http://addbalance.com/usersguide

See also the MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/ which is awesome!
--------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
This message is posted to a newsgroup. Please post replies
and questions to the newsgroup so that others can learn
from my ignorance and your wisdom.


"Bill Martin" <Wylie@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uUHEJ0BWGHA.3492@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I don't know anything about this and you may well be right.
HOWEVER....
Do I really need to know this much about Office internals, and
where
what
files are stored by whom to be allowed to set security "High" and
write
a
simple grocery list?

For that matter, I don't want to "trust all installed templates
and
add-ins" anyhow. I just want no macros, no add ins, nothing but
a
dead
dumb word processor that doesn't natter about macros 10 times a
day
when
I already told it I don't want to execute any.

Bill
--------------------------------
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" <sbarnhill@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:enCJFd4VGHA.5460@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Word will not question anything in its own Startup folder
provided
you
have
"Trust all installed templates and add-ins" checked on the
Trusted
Sources
tab of Tools | Macro | Security. Unfortunately, this trust does
not
extend
to the Office Startup folder.










.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Macros Disabled
    ... "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... the problem is that Word puts a file in a startup folder looking to "help" ... >> 10 times a day to turn on macros. ... >>> Microsoft MVP (Word) ...
    (microsoft.public.word.newusers)
  • Re: Macros Disabled
    ... startup folder rather than in the Word ... >I can confirm that the security level is medium and the trusted sources tab ... I however do not get the chance/ability to trust all macros. ... >> Did you "refer to the online help or documentation of the host ...
    (microsoft.public.word.docmanagement)
  • Re: How do I enable macros?
    ... I have an add-in in my startup folder which puts some buttons on Word that ... like dealing with the window to enable macros every time I start Word, ... > templates in your User Templates and Workgroup Templates folders (that is, ... > ones that you have created), as well as all templates and add-ins in Word's ...
    (microsoft.public.word.docmanagement)
  • Re: I want to get rid of the macro warnings in Word from Office 03
    ... out of the Office startup folder. ... (The Word startup folder can be a trusted ... > pdfwriter97.dot contains macros. ...
    (microsoft.public.word.docmanagement)
  • Re: Annoying Macro Warnings After Upgrading to Office 2003
    ... These are almost certainly Add-Ins installed in the Office Startup folder ... > HCDLookup.dot contains macros; ... > popup boxes appearing and without setting my macro security to low? ...
    (microsoft.public.word.application.errors)

Loading