O
OutsideObserver
Hey, I found a stupidity bug (yes it was stupid to have missed it).
When you detail a hyperlink, all is fine. When you format the
hyperlink, all is fine.
IF you subsequently edit the hyperlink in any way, the formatting gets
reset to the STUPID MS default, which should ALSO be something that we
can set down as OUR standard defaults.
Another one is the validation comments. They too should be something
the workbook author can set, and the default setting should also be able
to be modified.
The bug alone wastes hours when one has a sheet that was copied as a
template to other sheets, and then each hyperlink has to be edited for
the pointer, and THEN one has to re-edit the damned thing to put the
formatting back in place!
Fix it, you overpaid, undereducated (not talking about your degree, but
more likely how you got it) dopes!
The big question is how does something so blatant get overlooked by the
overpaid dopes that are there to examine the software and catch the
mistakes? They should have folks like me in place to catch them. That
appears obvious.
When you detail a hyperlink, all is fine. When you format the
hyperlink, all is fine.
IF you subsequently edit the hyperlink in any way, the formatting gets
reset to the STUPID MS default, which should ALSO be something that we
can set down as OUR standard defaults.
Another one is the validation comments. They too should be something
the workbook author can set, and the default setting should also be able
to be modified.
The bug alone wastes hours when one has a sheet that was copied as a
template to other sheets, and then each hyperlink has to be edited for
the pointer, and THEN one has to re-edit the damned thing to put the
formatting back in place!
Fix it, you overpaid, undereducated (not talking about your degree, but
more likely how you got it) dopes!
The big question is how does something so blatant get overlooked by the
overpaid dopes that are there to examine the software and catch the
mistakes? They should have folks like me in place to catch them. That
appears obvious.