From the Not Just Numbers blog:
This week I have a simple tip to solve a very specific problem, but one that many users will encounter regularly.
Many times when building spreadsheets, I have a set of formulae that do what I want in one workbook that I want to copy to a similar workbook with the same worksheet names.
If you’ve tried to do this, you will know it is not as straightforward as it sounds.
For example, if I have 5 sales reporting spreadsheets in the same format for 5 group companies, I might have an invoice layout in one worksheet (let’s call this sheet Invoice) that pulls information from a list of sales invoices on another worksheet (called Data).
If I decide to redesign the layout of all invoices to follow a new format across the group, it would make sense to do this once and copy it to the other 4 when I am happy.
When I copy the new layout and paste it into the Invoice sheet of one of the other companies, all of the formulae automatically link to the Data sheet in the first spreadsheet by adding the file path to the cell references (not what I want).
Where I could approach this with some careful use of Find and Replace, there is a quicker, simpler way that will address the problem for the whole workbook.
Excel stores the names and locations of any spreadsheets that it links to in a table that you can access by clicking “Edit Links” on the Data ribbon (in Excel 2003 or earlier, choose “Links…” from the Edit menu).
Click on the name of the external worksheet in the list of sources (unless you have other links to external spreadsheets in this workbook, it will be the only one there).
Click the “Change Source” button on the right and browse to the location of the new workbook (the one that you are in) and click OK.
The link will disappear from the list as it is no longer an external link – all formulae are now referring to the corresponding location in the new workbook, rather than to an external workbook.
You can check your formulae now and the file paths will have disappeared.
This becomes even more useful when you are copying many formulae in multiple sheets across from one workbook to another – as this process redirects every reference to the original sheet to the new one.
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