XL97: Excel Objects Appear Truncated
ID: Q189279
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The information in this article applies to:
-
Microsoft Excel 97 for Windows
-
Microsoft Office 97 for Windows
SYMPTOMS
When you insert a Microsoft Excel object into any program, such as Microsoft PowerPoint or Wordpad, portions of the object may be cut off. Specifically, the right-most and bottom portions may be missing.
In addition, when you edit an embedded Excel object on Microsoft Windows
NT, the embedded object may become larger, and the right-most and bottom
portions may be missing.
CAUSE
This behavior is caused by a design limitation in the size of a Windows
metafile. This design is to prevent overflow in the metafile size. The size
of this metafile is more accurately defined in Windows NT than in Windows
95 or Windows 98; therefore, objects embedded in Windows 95 and Windows 98
may exhibit this behavior when edited in a Windows NT environment.
WORKAROUND
To work around this limitation, use one of the following methods.
NOTE: While these examples are written specifically for Excel and
PowerPoint, the general principals apply to Excel and Microsoft Word or
Excel and any other program that exhibits this behavior.
Workaround 1: Reduce Font and Cell Sizes
Reduce the font sizes and cell sizes proportionately in Microsoft Excel so
that the object will fit within the boundaries of the metafile. Use this
method only if the Excel object is only slightly truncated. To use this
method, follow these steps:
- Right-click the truncated object and click Open Worksheet Object.
- Select the entire range of the spreadsheet that you would like to
alter. If the object is a chart, please see the following article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q166862
PPT97: Microsoft Excel Chart Cropped When Pasted in
PowerPoint
- On the Format menu, point to Column, and click Width. Reduce the listed
width by 75%. Click OK.
- On the Format menu, point to Row, and click Height. Reduce the listed
height by 75%, and click OK.
- On the Format menu, click Cells, and click the Font tab. Under the font
size, reduce the listed size by 75%, rounding down. (Although the
listed font size will only be reduced to 8 points, you can manually type
any number as small as 1. You may see formatting errors if you
make the font size smaller than 8 points.)
- Select the newly formatted section. On the Edit menu, click Copy.
- Press ALT+TAB to switch back to PowerPoint. On the Edit menu, click
Paste.
You can now safely delete your original spreadsheet.
Workaround 2: Paste the Spreadsheet in Sections
Paste the Excel spreadsheet in sections, and then group the sections. To do
this, follow these steps:
- Right-click the truncated Excel object and click Open Worksheet
Object.
- Select the portion of the Excel spreadsheet that was originally
visible. On the Edit menu, click Copy. If it is a chart, please see the
following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q166862
PPT97: Microsoft Excel Chart Cropped When Pasted in
PowerPoint
- Press ALT+TAB to switch back into PowerPoint.
- On the Edit menu, click
Paste.
- Press ALT+TAB to switch back into Excel. Highlight a section of the
Excel spreadsheet that was not displayed in the originally inserted
object.
Make sure that the size of your selection does not exceed the first
section that you have already copied. On the Edit menu, click Copy.
- Press ALT+TAB to switch back to PowerPoint. On the Edit menu, click
Paste.
- Using the guides, align the two pasted Excel sections so that they
appear to be one seamless spreadsheet. (If the guides are not visible,
click Guides on the View menu.)
- Select both objects by clicking one, and then click the other guide
while holding down the SHIFT key.
- On the Draw menu, click Group.
- Repeat steps 4 through 8 until the entire spreadsheet is copied.
Additional query words:
OFF97 ppt97 ppt 8.0 ppt8 cut cutoff cut-off cropped missing gone covered hidden dropped drawn incorrectly incorrect wrong data chart overlapping under behind editing inplace in-place in place ole activex active-x objects XL97
Keywords : kbinterop kbole kbdta
Version : WINDOWS:97
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbbug
Last Reviewed: July 13, 1999