I have been getting this message occasionally lately. There doesn't seem to
be any one action that causes it. When I get this message, the page breaks
get all messed up, causing each cell to print on it's own page. I can't
figure out what is causing this, or how to correct it. Others in my office
have the same problem. Any help would be greatly appreciated
Forget it, I figured it out...
> I have been getting this message occasionally lately. There doesn't seem to
> be any one action that causes it. When I get this message, the page breaks
> get all messed up, causing each cell to print on it's own page. I can't
> figure out what is causing this, or how to correct it. Others in my office
> have the same problem. Any help would be greatly appreciated
beckye - 30 Jun 2006 19:23 GMT
OK I am having the same problem. But I haven't figured it out. Can you
help me?
> Forget it, I figured it out...
>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> > figure out what is causing this, or how to correct it. Others in my office
> > have the same problem. Any help would be greatly appreciated
MarkFeinberg - 30 Jun 2006 20:03 GMT
Try changing your printer in the print dialog box. Once you select the new
printer, the weird page breaks will go away. You can even click 'cancel' if
you don't want to print to that printer. It seems that Excel is having some
connection problems with your printer, and you need to 'reset' that
connection.
> OK I am having the same problem. But I haven't figured it out. Can you
> help me?
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> > > figure out what is causing this, or how to correct it. Others in my office
> > > have the same problem. Any help would be greatly appreciated