Within our company we use a number of Excel workbooks that link to other Excel workbooks with VLOOKUP.
We use Dropbox and have run into issues when opening the same file on different computers - the files being linked to the file return with "#VALUE!" in each cell. With all of the services we have tested the file path for files is different for every machine. For example the same folder on two different machines would have file locations as below:
Machine 1 Dropbox = C:[machine 1]\Dropbox\Excel Folder\Excel File
Machine 2 Dropbox = C:[machine 2]\Dropbox\Excel Folder\Excel File
When this happens you have to choose the source for the links every single time you open the file from a different machine. If you create a file with links to other files on machine 1 and then move to machine 2, machine 2 no knows where the files with 'machine 1' in the path as stored. This is a huge barrier for us using this kind of storage as every user would have to change each file each time they open it.
I understand why this happens, but is there a way to get around this and have files link together in such a way that the links are relative rather than absolute.
We are using Office 2016.
We use Dropbox and have run into issues when opening the same file on different computers - the files being linked to the file return with "#VALUE!" in each cell. With all of the services we have tested the file path for files is different for every machine. For example the same folder on two different machines would have file locations as below:
Machine 1 Dropbox = C:[machine 1]\Dropbox\Excel Folder\Excel File
Machine 2 Dropbox = C:[machine 2]\Dropbox\Excel Folder\Excel File
When this happens you have to choose the source for the links every single time you open the file from a different machine. If you create a file with links to other files on machine 1 and then move to machine 2, machine 2 no knows where the files with 'machine 1' in the path as stored. This is a huge barrier for us using this kind of storage as every user would have to change each file each time they open it.
I understand why this happens, but is there a way to get around this and have files link together in such a way that the links are relative rather than absolute.
We are using Office 2016.