In the image below is an example of the file opened with our default Web Browser. ![]() If we want to continue we just press the Yes button or the No button if we don’t want to open it. Once the Open In Browser command is selected, a security dialog box appears, warning us about potential security concerns as shown in the image below. If we have saved the file as an ordinary file, the command will not be available to use. When we use this command, it opens the file that we have previously saved as a Web Page with our default browser. We can open as many copies as we want, but each time the number will change depending on how many copies we have opened. In the image below is an example of using the command Open As Copy, where we notice the Copy (1) at the left of the workbooks file name. We can always have the original file as a backup copy. This is a quite handy feature in case we don’t want to mess up with the original file. When using this command, it opens a copy of the file that we have selected. In the image below is an example of using the command Open Read– Only, where we notice the at the right of the workbooks file name. In order to save it, we must use the Save Ascommand and give the file a new name. When using this command we can only look at the file, which means we can edit it, but we can’t save the changes that we have made to the actual file. This is the most ordinary way we Open files in order to edit them. ![]() All the above commands let us open the files in a different way which I will describe below:
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