In addition to this, another trick is to create a HTML document out of
the data, but to give the file an XLS extension. Excel will open the
document, identify it as HTML and not the native XLS format, and will
then convert it. You can get colors, some formatting, and even some
calculations built in this way.
Kevin Cully
CULLY Technologies, LLC
Sponsor of Fox Forward 2006!
http://foxforward.net
Charlie Coleman wrote:
At 12:42 PM 10/24/2006 -0400, David Crooks wrote:
Has anyone any experience with tool that will export DBF tables to Excel
spreadsheets? I do have a couple requirements: 1) Not very expensive
(Stonefield and others similar) 2) Has to work with older DBFs (FoxPro
2.0). Any ideas? TIA!
David L. Crooks
Huh?
USE <table>
COPY TO <filename desired> TYPE XL5
I'm sure works back to VFP 6.
-Charlie
[excessive quoting removed by server]
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