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The Water Cooler
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<blockquote data-quote="joegrizzy" data-source="post: 3897894" data-attributes="member: 45524"><p>or run this script:</p><p></p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/msoffice/forum/all/batch-convert-xls-to-xlsx/1d9b3d78-daf0-4014-8fb2-930aca6493b0[/URL]</p><p>looks pretty straight forward like most batch jobs: place all files in a particular folder, run automated task on entire folder, either save to new folder to overwrite existing files (usually don't recommend, but when batching BIG files (i get this, my images are usually gigs each) i understand not wanting redundancy. but if something goes wrong you also want to keep the original. be sure to run a few tests with some test documents you make. always a good idea. </p><p></p><p>any time i'm running a photoshop action for the first time i use a burner image. def a good practice.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="joegrizzy, post: 3897894, member: 45524"] or run this script: [URL unfurl="true"]https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/msoffice/forum/all/batch-convert-xls-to-xlsx/1d9b3d78-daf0-4014-8fb2-930aca6493b0[/URL] looks pretty straight forward like most batch jobs: place all files in a particular folder, run automated task on entire folder, either save to new folder to overwrite existing files (usually don't recommend, but when batching BIG files (i get this, my images are usually gigs each) i understand not wanting redundancy. but if something goes wrong you also want to keep the original. be sure to run a few tests with some test documents you make. always a good idea. any time i'm running a photoshop action for the first time i use a burner image. def a good practice. [/QUOTE]
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