Hi,
I have a situation here that is a bit confusing. I have an application, which exports data into an excel instance.
I've killed every instance using "SET X = NOTHING" for my instances of "EXCEL.APPLICATION", "EXCEL.WORKBOOK", and "EXCEL.WORKSHEET"
When I close my instance of Excel, and then my application, everything is fine. The same for when I close my application, then my instance of Excel.
Strange thing is, if I close the workbook, and not excel itself, the instance dissapears and remains in the TASK MANAGER, even after I've closed my application.
How do I remove the instance from the task manager, if the user quits the workbook and not excel? Is this normal?
Users of my application have requested that the instances of Excel remain open, even after closing the application that created them. This is easily done by not systematically quitting the excel application. Except, I'm worried that after my application is closed, I have no way of "cleaning" the remaining instances. Is this true?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Yazster
I have a situation here that is a bit confusing. I have an application, which exports data into an excel instance.
I've killed every instance using "SET X = NOTHING" for my instances of "EXCEL.APPLICATION", "EXCEL.WORKBOOK", and "EXCEL.WORKSHEET"
When I close my instance of Excel, and then my application, everything is fine. The same for when I close my application, then my instance of Excel.
Strange thing is, if I close the workbook, and not excel itself, the instance dissapears and remains in the TASK MANAGER, even after I've closed my application.
How do I remove the instance from the task manager, if the user quits the workbook and not excel? Is this normal?
Users of my application have requested that the instances of Excel remain open, even after closing the application that created them. This is easily done by not systematically quitting the excel application. Except, I'm worried that after my application is closed, I have no way of "cleaning" the remaining instances. Is this true?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Yazster