Vba Converter Pack For Microsoft Office Excel 2010

  1. Office Vba Converter
  2. Excel Formula To Vba Converter
  3. Vba Converter Pack Hotfix Download

The instructions are in there for Office 2010 but this doesn't work for the Office 2010 64 bit version. It does contain how to implement it for a 64 bit OS and 32 bit Excel 2010. I tested just to make sure. As specifically stated in the KB: Note The VBA Converter Pack is available only as a 32-bit download.

Microsoft is rolling out a consistent JavaScript API across the Windows, Mac and mobile version of Office.

Office Vba Converter

  1. 'The VBA Converter Pack is not included as a part of the Microsoft Office suites. At the top of this article, click View and request hotfix downloads' I cant see this option.
  2. Microsoft Office Compatibility Pack Service Pack 3 (SP3) provides the latest updates to Office Compatibility Pack. These updates include two main categories of fixes: Previously unreleased fixes that were made specifically for this service pack. In addition to general product fixes, this includes improvements in stability, performance,.
  3. Using Microsoft Excel 2010 VBA scripting features, Excel users can save dozens - or even hundreds - of hours per year. But most Excel users have never written a VBA script: many haven't even used Excel's built-in Macro Recorder. VBA and Macros is the solution. One simple step at a time, two leading Excel VBA scripting experts teach all the.
  4. The link you offered is for a different converter-to allow users of older versions of Excel to open files created with the newer version. Mine is an issue of forward compatibility. I find it surprisng that even Microsoft would create a new version of a product without full forward compatibility.

Exploring Office development is like looking at a cross-section of an old tree; you'll find different layers from different eras, each carefully preserved for compatibility. Run the just-released Word 2016, enable the Developer ribbon, click VBA, and there is Visual Basic for Applications 7.1, using old-style VB as found in the long-deprecated VB 6.0 from 1998.

VBA is well suited to automating Office, since it is built on COM (Microsoft’s object technology) and has fast access to the COM interfaces exposed by Office applications. There is also a great developer feature, which is the ability to record your actions as editable VBA macros. You can also write COM add-ins for Office applications in any language that supports COM, still fully supported in Office 2016.

Another approach is to develop Office extensions using .NET languages, via another technology called Visual Studio Tools for Office (VSTO). This one dates from 2003, and the last major version was 4.0 in 2010. VSTO projects also access the Office COM interfaces, but via interop which is slower. The languages and frameworks are more powerful than VBA but VSTO projects are applications which have to be installed, unlike VBA projects which are embedded in documents or templates. VSTO also still works fine in Office 2016.

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The Problem

The Solution

Office VBA protection is infamous for its weakness. Numerous blog posts describe how to reset password locked VBA projects using free tools. In addition, several companies have published professional password breakers to automate code recovery.
Products that convert Excel workbooks into executables (.exe) most often limit Excel's functionality, depend on runtime DLLs and may trigger anti-virus warnings when executable files are distributed. Needless to say that executables cannot be loaded as native Excel VBA add-ins.
VBA obfuscation is a set of techniques that hide the intent of an Excel VBA program without changing its runtime behavior. It is difficult to obfuscate complex VBA programs without breaking them. In addition, visible obfuscated source code can reveal valuable bits and pieces of information to a potential attacker.
Converter

Compiled VBA Code Is Secure

Excel Formula To Vba Converter

For years, I have been intrigued with the idea of removing editable VBA code from macro-enabled Office files. Unfortunately, Excel doesn't offer a file format similar to MDE in Access.
Our Secure++ VBA windows application (written in Delphi) can convert macro-enabled workbooks or add-ins along the sames lines of an Access MDE/ACCDE file. However, our solution doesn't alter file extensions (.xlam, .xlsm, .xlsb, pptm, ppam). Secure++ files are normal OpenXML containers, which contain compiled VBA code only.
We believe that compiled VBA code is as secure as a Visual Basic 6 compiled DLL. If your VBA application runs in Office 64-bit, so will its Secure++ version (VB6 cannot run under Office 64-bit)

Testimonials

Vba Converter Pack Hotfix Download

Simply put, I love the Secure++ VBA application! I have used it several times to protect VBA code in my addin files (.xlam). I work for a non-profit organization in their headquarters and my daily duties involve computation and calculation of complex financial analysis.
Though, by profession I am not a developer, I have been using Excel and VBA solutions for more than a decade. I develop custom solutions in Excel and other popular applications to increase the productivity of myself and that of my colleagues at work. One challenge I had, was that my custom user defined functions (UDFs) were poorly protected. The non-profit organization where I work, employs approx 7000 employees around the globe. I was frustrated when I learned that intruders were hacking my VBA projects. I like sharing my knowledge, but not my personal custom VBA solutions.
I could have wrapped my code in DLL, but I wanted a simple solution without any change to the existing addin file format (xlam) I was hoping that someday there will be a software that can protect VBA projects and make them unbreakable, and here is the Secure++ application! My dream has finally come true :-)
Secure++ VBA does exactly what it says on the tin and I love it. I have published my feedback online and referred several Excel community users to use Secure++ VBA, if they really want their VBA unbreakable.
From an Excel MVP (May 2015)