M
misooo misooo
Guest
i have the same micros problem but when i changed the office setup and enabled the visual basic app as said the problem solved thank you
Cherry V wrote:
A workaround
25-Feb-09
After reading some more websites I have now discovered how to disable all add-ins, which has fixed the problem. As soon as I add back ANY add-in, including Microsoft ones, the error comes straight back.
Is this going to affect my usage of Word? Any further ideas on what's going on here?
Previous Posts In This Thread:
On Monday, February 18, 2008 12:32 AM
Techgurl wrote:
Word 2007 Issue
Every time I open Word 2007 I get this error message
I tried going into the security setting and disabling macro security and all
that but I can't get rid of this annoying messages. Its not even opening a
document so how can it be containing macros.
Does anyone have a clue to how to fix this? I already installed SP 1 for
Office
Thanks
Jeanette
This error usually occurs because of macro security settings. If you know
that the macro comes from a source that you trust, you can change your macro
security settings to allow you to enable the macro. The way that you change
your macro security settings depends on the Microsoft Office System program
that you are using.
Microsoft Office Access, Microsoft Office Excel, Microsoft Office
PowerPoint, or Microsoft Office Word --
To check your macro security settings, click the Microsoft Office Button,
click Options, click Trust Center, and then click Trust
Center Settings.
If macro security is set to Disable all macros without notification, all
macros are automatically disabled. Use the following procedure to enable the
macro.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Macro Settings, and then click Disable
all macros with notification.
Click OK in the Trust Center dialog box to apply the new setting. Click OK
to close the program options dialog box.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. A Security Alert appears in the Document Information
Bar just below the ribbon. Click Enable Content to allow the macro to run.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to Disable all macros without notification.
If macro security is set to Disable all macros with notification, but you
selected Disable when prompted by the macro warning dialog when you opened
the file, use the following procedure to enable the macro.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Cancel. Click Cancel to close the
program options dialog box.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. A Security Alert appears in the Document Information
Bar just below the ribbon. Click Enable Content to allow the macro to run.
If macro security is set to Disable all macros except digitally signed
macros, the macro may not have been digitally signed. Verify that you can
trust the macro before using the following procedure to allow it to run.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Cancel. Click Cancel to close the
program options dialog box.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. A Security Alert appears in the Document Information
Bar just below the ribbon. Click Enable Content to allow the macro to run.
Microsoft Office Outlook, Microsoft Office Visio, or Microsoft Office
Publisher --
To check your macro security settings, on the Tools menu, click Trust
Center, and then click Macro Security.
If macro security is set to No warnings and disable all macros, all macros
are automatically disabled. Use the following procedure to enable the macro.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Warnings for signed macros; all
unsigned macros are disabled, and then click OK.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. When prompted, click Enable Content to allow the macro
to run. If you are using Visio, the Enable Content button appears as part of
a Security Alert in the Document Information Bar. If you are not prompted to
enable the macro, or if you receive this error again, the macro may not be
digitally signed. Verify that you can trust the macro. If you are certain
that you can trust the macro, use the next procedure below to enable the
macro.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to No warnings and disable all macros.
If macro security is set to Warnings for signed macros; all unsigned macros
are disabled, the macro may not be digitally signed. If you are certain that
you can trust the macro, use the following procedure to enable the macro.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Warnings for all macros, and then
click OK.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. When prompted, click Enable Content to allow the macro
to run. If you are using Visio, the Enable Content button appears as part of
a Security Alert in the Document Information Bar.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to Warnings for signed macros; all unsigned macros are
disabled.
Microsoft Office Project --
To check your macro security settings, on the Tools menu, click Macro, and
then click Security.
If macro security is set to Very High, use the following procedure to enable
the macro.
In the Security dialog box, click High, and then click OK.
Close the file and Microsoft Office Project.
Open the file again. When prompted, click Enable Content to allow the macro
to run. If you are not prompted to enable the macro, or if you receive this
error message again, the macro may not be digitally signed. Verify that you
can trust the macro. If you are certain that you can trust the macro, use
the next procedure below to enable the macro.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to Very High.
If the macro security setting is set to High, the macro may not be digitally
signed. If you are certain that you can trust the macro, use the following
procedure to enable the macro.
In the Security dialog box, click Medium, and then click OK.
Close the file and Microsoft Office Project.
Open the file again. When prompted, click Enable Content to allow the macro
to run.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to High.
This error may also occur for the following reasons:
The certificate of trust that is attached to the macro is invalid. Unless
you are certain that the macro is safe, it is recommended that you not trust
or run the macro.
The certificate is no longer trusted, was revoked by the issuing authority,
or is damaged. Unless you are certain that the macro is safe, it is
recommended that you not trust or run the macro.
Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) is not installed on your computer. In
this case, no VBA macro can be run, regardless of whether the macro has a
valid certificate of trust. You or your administrator may have chosen not to
install VBA, or the version of Microsoft Office that you are using may not
install VBA by default. If your version of Microsoft Office does not provide
VBA as an installable feature, you can upgrade to a version that provides
VBA support.
If you are unable to change the security settings, it is possible that
another program has locked the security settings. Close all Microsoft Office
System programs, then restart your program and change the security settings.
More information about this error message online.
On Monday, February 18, 2008 8:37 AM
Beth Melton wrote:
Can you provide us with the text of the messages you are encountering?
Can you provide us with the text of the messages you are encountering?
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email cannot be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP
Coauthor of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/books/9801.aspx#AboutTheBook
Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/
"Techgurl" wrote in message
news:B00FCF16-CAD3-4430-B9C7-7A76747B97B5@microsoft.com...
On Monday, February 18, 2008 1:04 PM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Beth Melton wrote:
I posted the text right under my signature.
Thanks
Jeanette
On Monday, February 18, 2008 1:31 PM
Gordon wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
No you did not - that was the HELP text you posted - a lot of totally
irrelevant words.
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 1:19 AM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Gordon wrote:
NO this was the error that came up. I copied and pasted it
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 1:26 AM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Gordon wrote:
Let me explain better. When I first installed Office 2007 it worked
fine. After one of the updates it started opening a box with scroll bars.
Its starts as this
This error usually occurs because of macro security settings. If you
know that the macro comes from a source that you trust, you can change
your macro security settings to allow you to enable the macro. The way
that you change your macro security settings depends on the Microsoft
Office System program that you are using.
Microsoft Office Access, Microsoft Office Excel, Microsoft Office
PowerPoint, or Microsoft Office Word --
The help comes up with the error which I also posted. What I tried was
the setting they recommended and then I tried every setting in the macro
settings to eliminate this. The thing is it pops up every time even if
there is no document loaded so there is no macros.
I also tried reinstalling. I googled and tried to find a solution but
there was several people with the same problem but no one had a solution.
So I am asking here if anyone knows what to do. Or if it was a security
update which one was it so I can try to uninstall that update.
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 11:48 AM
Beth Melton wrote:
Sorry, I missed that part.
Sorry, I missed that part. I've grown accustomed to reading up to a
signature and not after.
It sounds like you have an add-in that is causing the issue. Click the
Office Button, click Word Options, and in the Add-ins section what add-ins
do you have listed? You can try disabling them to see if that resolves the
issue using the Manage options at the bottom.
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email cannot be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP
Coauthor of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/books/9801.aspx#AboutTheBook
Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/
"Jeanette" wrote in message
news:e9dh1ilcIHA.1188@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 5:22 PM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Beth Melton wrote:
Looks like the add ons I have is google desktop office add in
and ODF word add in.
But I do not see a button to disable them.
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 5:26 PM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Beth Melton wrote:
I found the add ins and disabled it. You were right its one of the add ins.
Thanks your so smart
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 8:22 PM
Beth Melton wrote:
Glad to hear you have the issue resolved.
Glad to hear you have the issue resolved.
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email cannot be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP
Coauthor of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/books/9801.aspx#AboutTheBook
Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/
"Jeanette" wrote in message
news:uD0MHa0cIHA.2688@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
On Wednesday, February 18, 2009 1:09 PM
- - wrote:
may help
Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) is not installed on your computer. In
this case, no VBA macro can be run, regardless of whether the macro has a
valid certificate of trust.
so you have to :
1) go back to Control Panel\Programs and Features
2) click (office 2007) and (change) button
3) >add and remove features >continue
4) >office Share feature > turn on Visual Basic for APP
5) >continue
On Wednesday, February 25, 2009 6:52 PM
Cherry Vanderbeke wrote:
Mystery
Hi, I have the same problem. I have checked the add-ins and the only external one I had was for salesforce, which I have now removed as I wasn't using the software anymore. As a result the problem got even WORSE ... instead of having to click OK 6-8 times to respond to the error every time I open Word or open a new document, I now have to click OK up to *18* times! This is SO frustrating and very confusing to my clients when they see it. I saw the other suggestion about enabling VB, but I can't see how to do that. I have Office 2007 and I don't have an add/remove features option in my control panel. Please help, this is driving me mad!
On Wednesday, February 25, 2009 11:39 PM
Cherry V wrote:
A workaround
After reading some more websites I have now discovered how to disable all add-ins, which has fixed the problem. As soon as I add back ANY add-in, including Microsoft ones, the error comes straight back.
Is this going to affect my usage of Word? Any further ideas on what's going on here?
Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
How to display a Gravatar Image with 100 Percent Client Script Code
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorial...c-b0877c10ecb4/how-to-display-a-gravatar.aspx
Cherry V wrote:
A workaround
25-Feb-09
After reading some more websites I have now discovered how to disable all add-ins, which has fixed the problem. As soon as I add back ANY add-in, including Microsoft ones, the error comes straight back.
Is this going to affect my usage of Word? Any further ideas on what's going on here?
Previous Posts In This Thread:
On Monday, February 18, 2008 12:32 AM
Techgurl wrote:
Word 2007 Issue
Every time I open Word 2007 I get this error message
I tried going into the security setting and disabling macro security and all
that but I can't get rid of this annoying messages. Its not even opening a
document so how can it be containing macros.
Does anyone have a clue to how to fix this? I already installed SP 1 for
Office
Thanks
Jeanette
This error usually occurs because of macro security settings. If you know
that the macro comes from a source that you trust, you can change your macro
security settings to allow you to enable the macro. The way that you change
your macro security settings depends on the Microsoft Office System program
that you are using.
Microsoft Office Access, Microsoft Office Excel, Microsoft Office
PowerPoint, or Microsoft Office Word --
To check your macro security settings, click the Microsoft Office Button,
click Options, click Trust Center, and then click Trust
Center Settings.
If macro security is set to Disable all macros without notification, all
macros are automatically disabled. Use the following procedure to enable the
macro.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Macro Settings, and then click Disable
all macros with notification.
Click OK in the Trust Center dialog box to apply the new setting. Click OK
to close the program options dialog box.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. A Security Alert appears in the Document Information
Bar just below the ribbon. Click Enable Content to allow the macro to run.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to Disable all macros without notification.
If macro security is set to Disable all macros with notification, but you
selected Disable when prompted by the macro warning dialog when you opened
the file, use the following procedure to enable the macro.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Cancel. Click Cancel to close the
program options dialog box.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. A Security Alert appears in the Document Information
Bar just below the ribbon. Click Enable Content to allow the macro to run.
If macro security is set to Disable all macros except digitally signed
macros, the macro may not have been digitally signed. Verify that you can
trust the macro before using the following procedure to allow it to run.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Cancel. Click Cancel to close the
program options dialog box.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. A Security Alert appears in the Document Information
Bar just below the ribbon. Click Enable Content to allow the macro to run.
Microsoft Office Outlook, Microsoft Office Visio, or Microsoft Office
Publisher --
To check your macro security settings, on the Tools menu, click Trust
Center, and then click Macro Security.
If macro security is set to No warnings and disable all macros, all macros
are automatically disabled. Use the following procedure to enable the macro.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Warnings for signed macros; all
unsigned macros are disabled, and then click OK.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. When prompted, click Enable Content to allow the macro
to run. If you are using Visio, the Enable Content button appears as part of
a Security Alert in the Document Information Bar. If you are not prompted to
enable the macro, or if you receive this error again, the macro may not be
digitally signed. Verify that you can trust the macro. If you are certain
that you can trust the macro, use the next procedure below to enable the
macro.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to No warnings and disable all macros.
If macro security is set to Warnings for signed macros; all unsigned macros
are disabled, the macro may not be digitally signed. If you are certain that
you can trust the macro, use the following procedure to enable the macro.
In the Trust Center dialog box, click Warnings for all macros, and then
click OK.
Close the file and the Microsoft Office program that you are using.
Open the file again. When prompted, click Enable Content to allow the macro
to run. If you are using Visio, the Enable Content button appears as part of
a Security Alert in the Document Information Bar.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to Warnings for signed macros; all unsigned macros are
disabled.
Microsoft Office Project --
To check your macro security settings, on the Tools menu, click Macro, and
then click Security.
If macro security is set to Very High, use the following procedure to enable
the macro.
In the Security dialog box, click High, and then click OK.
Close the file and Microsoft Office Project.
Open the file again. When prompted, click Enable Content to allow the macro
to run. If you are not prompted to enable the macro, or if you receive this
error message again, the macro may not be digitally signed. Verify that you
can trust the macro. If you are certain that you can trust the macro, use
the next procedure below to enable the macro.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to Very High.
If the macro security setting is set to High, the macro may not be digitally
signed. If you are certain that you can trust the macro, use the following
procedure to enable the macro.
In the Security dialog box, click Medium, and then click OK.
Close the file and Microsoft Office Project.
Open the file again. When prompted, click Enable Content to allow the macro
to run.
When you have enabled the macro, it is recommended that you return the macro
security setting to High.
This error may also occur for the following reasons:
The certificate of trust that is attached to the macro is invalid. Unless
you are certain that the macro is safe, it is recommended that you not trust
or run the macro.
The certificate is no longer trusted, was revoked by the issuing authority,
or is damaged. Unless you are certain that the macro is safe, it is
recommended that you not trust or run the macro.
Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) is not installed on your computer. In
this case, no VBA macro can be run, regardless of whether the macro has a
valid certificate of trust. You or your administrator may have chosen not to
install VBA, or the version of Microsoft Office that you are using may not
install VBA by default. If your version of Microsoft Office does not provide
VBA as an installable feature, you can upgrade to a version that provides
VBA support.
If you are unable to change the security settings, it is possible that
another program has locked the security settings. Close all Microsoft Office
System programs, then restart your program and change the security settings.
More information about this error message online.
On Monday, February 18, 2008 8:37 AM
Beth Melton wrote:
Can you provide us with the text of the messages you are encountering?
Can you provide us with the text of the messages you are encountering?
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email cannot be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP
Coauthor of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/books/9801.aspx#AboutTheBook
Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/
"Techgurl" wrote in message
news:B00FCF16-CAD3-4430-B9C7-7A76747B97B5@microsoft.com...
On Monday, February 18, 2008 1:04 PM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Beth Melton wrote:
I posted the text right under my signature.
Thanks
Jeanette
On Monday, February 18, 2008 1:31 PM
Gordon wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
No you did not - that was the HELP text you posted - a lot of totally
irrelevant words.
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 1:19 AM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Gordon wrote:
NO this was the error that came up. I copied and pasted it
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 1:26 AM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Gordon wrote:
Let me explain better. When I first installed Office 2007 it worked
fine. After one of the updates it started opening a box with scroll bars.
Its starts as this
This error usually occurs because of macro security settings. If you
know that the macro comes from a source that you trust, you can change
your macro security settings to allow you to enable the macro. The way
that you change your macro security settings depends on the Microsoft
Office System program that you are using.
Microsoft Office Access, Microsoft Office Excel, Microsoft Office
PowerPoint, or Microsoft Office Word --
The help comes up with the error which I also posted. What I tried was
the setting they recommended and then I tried every setting in the macro
settings to eliminate this. The thing is it pops up every time even if
there is no document loaded so there is no macros.
I also tried reinstalling. I googled and tried to find a solution but
there was several people with the same problem but no one had a solution.
So I am asking here if anyone knows what to do. Or if it was a security
update which one was it so I can try to uninstall that update.
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 11:48 AM
Beth Melton wrote:
Sorry, I missed that part.
Sorry, I missed that part. I've grown accustomed to reading up to a
signature and not after.
It sounds like you have an add-in that is causing the issue. Click the
Office Button, click Word Options, and in the Add-ins section what add-ins
do you have listed? You can try disabling them to see if that resolves the
issue using the Manage options at the bottom.
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email cannot be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP
Coauthor of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/books/9801.aspx#AboutTheBook
Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/
"Jeanette" wrote in message
news:e9dh1ilcIHA.1188@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 5:22 PM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Beth Melton wrote:
Looks like the add ons I have is google desktop office add in
and ODF word add in.
But I do not see a button to disable them.
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 5:26 PM
Jeanette wrote:
Re: Word 2007 Issue
Beth Melton wrote:
I found the add ins and disabled it. You were right its one of the add ins.
Thanks your so smart
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 8:22 PM
Beth Melton wrote:
Glad to hear you have the issue resolved.
Glad to hear you have the issue resolved.
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email cannot be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP
Coauthor of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/books/9801.aspx#AboutTheBook
Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/
"Jeanette" wrote in message
news:uD0MHa0cIHA.2688@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
On Wednesday, February 18, 2009 1:09 PM
- - wrote:
may help
Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) is not installed on your computer. In
this case, no VBA macro can be run, regardless of whether the macro has a
valid certificate of trust.
so you have to :
1) go back to Control Panel\Programs and Features
2) click (office 2007) and (change) button
3) >add and remove features >continue
4) >office Share feature > turn on Visual Basic for APP
5) >continue
On Wednesday, February 25, 2009 6:52 PM
Cherry Vanderbeke wrote:
Mystery
Hi, I have the same problem. I have checked the add-ins and the only external one I had was for salesforce, which I have now removed as I wasn't using the software anymore. As a result the problem got even WORSE ... instead of having to click OK 6-8 times to respond to the error every time I open Word or open a new document, I now have to click OK up to *18* times! This is SO frustrating and very confusing to my clients when they see it. I saw the other suggestion about enabling VB, but I can't see how to do that. I have Office 2007 and I don't have an add/remove features option in my control panel. Please help, this is driving me mad!
On Wednesday, February 25, 2009 11:39 PM
Cherry V wrote:
A workaround
After reading some more websites I have now discovered how to disable all add-ins, which has fixed the problem. As soon as I add back ANY add-in, including Microsoft ones, the error comes straight back.
Is this going to affect my usage of Word? Any further ideas on what's going on here?
Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
How to display a Gravatar Image with 100 Percent Client Script Code
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorial...c-b0877c10ecb4/how-to-display-a-gravatar.aspx