That is not a glitch/flaw. Hiding workbooks in Excel has been around for
years. It is not new to Excel 2007. If you have a workbook open and go the
View tab on the ribbon and in the Window group select Hide or press Alt then
W then H, Excel hides the workbook. When you exit Excel, it will ask you if
you want to save the changes to the workbook. If you say "Yes", Excel will
save the workbook marked as hidden. When you next start Excel and open the
hidden workbook, it remains hidden. You can unhide the workbook by selecting
the View tab on the ribbon and then in the Window group select unhide or
press Alt, then W then U and Excel will show you a list of hidden workbooks.
Select your workbook. People who use the Personal.xlsx(m) workbook often
hide it in this manner. Don't blame Excel. You hid your own workbook. Excel
didn't. Blame yourself
Tyro
"Mark Olbert" <ChairmanMAO...newsgroups.nospam> wrote in message
news:43qfq35edav1gkjme9dg4i9vovnd078f60...4ax.com...
>I really, really like it when a company takes a stable, useful product and
>rewrites it so as to turn it into a flaky -- and
> therefore less useful -- product. It gives meaning to my existence as a
> customer.
> So here's the latest glitch/flaw in Excel 2007:
> I have an xlsx spreadsheet. I don't recall doing anything special to it.
> Yet when I try to open it by double-clicking the file (this
> is under Vista), Excel launches and displays... a blank screen. No
> spreadsheet.
> Yet when I try to close Excel it comes back and asks me if I want to save
> the changes made to the file.
> And I can't create another file of the same name as the "invisible" file.
> So in some metaphyiscal sense the file is there. Only I can't see it, edit
> it, print it, or do anything with it.
> This makes trying to update it kinda hard.
> I would dearly love to get my file back. Anyone have any suggestions?
> - Mark
> p.s. One other odd behavior that I noticed before the file "disappeared":
> I'd close Excel, it would ask me if I wanted to save the
> changes, the spreadsheet would disappear, but Excel would stay open. Since
> the "disappearing" file was the only one open at the
> time, Excel should have shut down.