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On the surface, it doesn't appear as if much in Excel 2003 has changed. There are a handful of new objects and the user interface is largely the same. But beyond a superficial glance, you'll see that there are fundamental shifts implied by the new features: Lists, XML, web services, .NET, and InfoPath build a framework for entirely new ways to exchange data with Excel. In fact, that's much of what Excel 2003 is all about--solving problems that deal with teamwork-- collecting and sharing data, programming across applications, and maintaining security.
The latest in our Developer's Notebook series, this guide introduces intermediate to advanced Excel VBA programmers to the newest programming features of Excel 2003,--focusing just on what's new--so you can get up to speed quickly. Light on theory and long on practical application, the book takes you directly to the topics you'll want to master through a series of hands-on projects. With dozens of practical labs, you'll be able to decide for yourself which new aspects of Excel will be useful or not in your own work. And best of all, you won't have to buy an expensive revision of a legacy Excel programming tutorial to learn about the new features--if they're covered there at all.
Excel 2003 Programming: A Developer's Notebook shows you how to work with lists and XML data, secure Excel applications, use Visual Studio Tools for Office, consume Web Services, and collect data with Infopath. Each chapter is organized into a collection of labs, each of which addresses a specific programming problem. You can follow along to complete the lab on your own, or jump ahead and use the samples the author has built for you.
The new Developer's Notebooks series from O'Reilly covers important new tools for software developers. Emphasizing example over explanation and practice over theory, they focus on learning by doing--you'll get the goods straight from the masters, in an informal and code-intensive style that suits developers. If you've been curious about Excel 2003, but haven't known where to start, this no-fluff, lab-style guide is the solution.
Table of Contents:
The Developer's Notebook Series
Preface
Chapter 1. Program the New Excel
Dude, Where's My Data?
How the Pieces Fit
Try It
Kick-Start Lists and XML
Kick-Start SharePoint
Kick-Start Web Services
Kick-Start Security and .NET
Kick-Start InfoPath
What Next?Chapter 2. Share Workspaces and Lists
Get SharePoint Services
Create a Shared Workspace
Share a Workbook
Open a Shared Workbook
Display a SharePoint Site
Remove Sharing
Add Users and Permissions
Allow Anonymous Users
Create a List
Share a List
Update a Shared List
Insert a Shared List
Delete or Unlink a Shared List
Use the Lists Web ServiceChapter 3. Work with XML
Speak XML
XML Side-story
Save Workbooks as XML
Transform XML Spreadsheets
Transform XML into a Spreadsheet
Use XML Maps
Exporting Through XML Maps
Use Templates with XML
Respond to XML Events
Program with XML Maps
Get an XML Map from a List or RangeChapter 4. Get Data from the Web
Perform Web Queries
Modify a Web Query
Perform Periodic Updates
Manage Web Queries
Use Web Services
Use the Web Services Toolkit
Use Web Services Through XML
Call a Web Service Asynchronously
Reformat XML Results for ExcelChapter 5. Program Excel with .NET
Work with .NET
Create .NET Components
Use .NET Components
Respond to Errors and Events from .NET
Debug .NET Components
Distribute .NET Components
Use Excel as a Component in .NET
Work with Excel Objects in .NET
Respond to Excel Events in .NET
Respond to Excel Errors in .NET
Distribute .NET Applications That Use Excel
Create Excel .NET Applications
Set .NET Security Policies
Respond to Events in .NET Applications
Debug Excel .NET Applications
Display Windows Forms
Distribute Excel .NET Applications
Distribute Excel .NET Documents
Migrate to .NETChapter 6. Explore Security in Depth
Dress in Layers
Use Windows Security
Password Protect and Encrypt Workbooks
Program with Passwords and Encryption
Protect Items in a Workbook
Program with Protection
Use Identity-Based Security (a.k.a. IRM)
Program with Permissions
Add Digital Signatures
Set Macro Security
Distribute Security Settings
Common QuestionsChapter 7. Build InfoPath Forms
Are InfoPath Forms Better?
InfoPath and Excel
Share Data
Link a Form to a Database
Populate a Control from a Data Source
Validate Data
Link a Form to a Web Service
Script InfoPath
Program InfoPath in .NET
Generate HTML Output
Prevent Design ChangesIndex