Thanks for your feedback. I work in the Macintosh Business Unit at
Microsoft, and I'm sorry for the pain you and your company are feeling with
Excel 2008. We do have a number of issues that we're working through and
hope that you will hang in there as we push to get an update out with fixes
for those issues. I hope you will find evidence in our next update that we
do care about our customers and are able to solve any problems that we've
let slip into our products.
With respect to the specific problem you're reporting here: I have seen
something similar to what you're reporting in both Excel 2004 and Excel
2008, but I have been unable to reproduce the problem from scratch (by
creating a new file, that is). If there's any chance you could send a
workbook with this problem to me it would help us investigate a possible
fix.
Thanks,
Pat McMillan
patmcmil@microsoft.com
On 4/21/08 1:41 AM, in article ee99114.-1@webcrossing.caR9absDaxw,

Signature
Pat McMillan
Macintosh Business Unit
Microsoft Corp.
This posting is provided ³AS IS² with no warranties, and confers no rights.
I've lately begun experiencing this issue as well. I have a spreadsheet that I've been using for a couple years, essentially a template that gets reworked and reused.
When I double click in a cell, with the formula bar closed, instead of letting me enter the cell and showing the formula, with precedents, it jumps to another cell, and changes the position of the file within the window. Makes no difference whether the window is maximized or not - it still jumps.
This is irritating as hell, since the precendents often are not visible from the dependent cell. I've been using Excel on Mac since the early days, and never saw this bug since the inline editing feature became available.
Mac PowerBook G4 running Leopard 10.5.2
Excel/Office 2008
I agree with the other poster -- this version is full of bugs, and very disappointing.
> I have been using excel for over 10 years in both Windows and on the Mac. Never had any problems. But the new 2008 is very unstable and incomprehensible.
>
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>
> Thank you for listening.
dakotakid@officeformac.com - 01 May 2008 00:20 GMT
Addendum: In the spreadsheet that I've been experiencing this in, it exhibits the behavior in "Normal" view, but seems to work in "Page Layout" mode. Will let you know if there is other symptoms that are reproducible.
> I've lately begun experiencing this issue as well. I have a spreadsheet that I've been using for a couple years, essentially a template that gets reworked and reused.
>
[quoted text clipped - 24 lines]
> >
> > Thank you for listening.
dakotakid@officeformac.com - 01 May 2008 00:22 GMT
Switching back to Normal view now works properly. Doubleclickin in the buggy cell shows precedents, even with formula bar showing. Now I can't make it jump, clicking in the cell that was buggy before. Very odd behavior.
> Addendum: In the spreadsheet that I've been experiencing this in, it exhibits the behavior in "Normal" view, but seems to work in "Page Layout" mode. Will let you know if there is other symptoms that are reproducible.
>
[quoted text clipped - 26 lines]
> > >
> > > Thank you for listening.
Bob Greenblatt - 01 May 2008 12:58 GMT
On 4/30/08 7:13 PM, in article ee99114.1@webcrossing.caR9absDaxw,
> I've lately begun experiencing this issue as well. I have a spreadsheet that
> I've been using for a couple years, essentially a template that gets reworked
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
> Mac PowerBook G4 running Leopard 10.5.2
> Excel/Office 2008
This is by design. Double clicking a cell either 1) selects the cell's
precedents if Edit directly in cell is turned off, or 2) allows the cell to
be edited if Edit directly in cell is checked. Look in Excel's EDIT
preferences to make sure it is set the way you want. (I personally NEVER
have edit directly in cell turned on because I find the selection of
precedents to be extremely helpful.)

Signature
Bob Greenblatt [MVP], Macintosh
bobgreenblattATmsnDOTcom
mollywj@gmail.com - 13 May 2008 21:24 GMT
I am having the same problem. "Edit directly in cell" is turned ON.
Switching between normal and page layout views did not help. The
problem only occurs some of the time, and it seems to matter where I
click. If the cursor is dead on in the middle of the cell, then I can
edit the cell. If the cursor is offset even slightly up or down, I
get jumped all the way to the top or bottom of the datablock. Even
with great care it is impossible to get the cursor in exactly the
right place every time.
Any suggestions?
> On 4/30/08 7:13 PM, in article ee9911...@webcrossing.caR9absDaxw,
>
[quoted text clipped - 25 lines]
> Bob Greenblatt [MVP], Macintosh
> bobgreenblattATmsnDOTcom