To: Perspective who wrote (22132 ) 11/22/2001 4:35:36 PM From: Box-By-The-Riviera™ Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 209892 there's some stuff in your help file re: saving as a web page/folder Put a worksheet on a Web page Use this procedure to put a worksheet on a Web page so that others can interact with the data. You can also put a worksheet on a Web page so that others can only view the data. Before you save or publish data on a Web page, save your workbook as an .xls file so that you have a version you can modify if you want to later change your Web page. Click the worksheet you want to put on a Web page. On the File menu, click Save as Web Page. Show Me Click Publish. Make sure that Items on sheetname is selected in the Choose box and Sheet All contents of sheetname is selected in the list. Under Viewing options, select the Add interactivity with check box, and click the type of functionality you want for your worksheet. Learn about the differences between spreadsheet and PivotTable functionality. To add a title to the published worksheet, click Change, type the title you want, and click OK. In the File name box, click Browse, and locate the drive, folder, Web folder, Web server, or FTP location where you want to save or publish your Web page. If you want to view the Web page in your browser after you publish it, select the Open published Web page in browser check box. Click Publish. Notes If you select a worksheet that contains a chart and publish it with interactive functionality, the chart will not be included on the Web page. To put an interactive chart on a Web page, you must save it separately. Some formatting and features of your worksheet are not retained when you save it as a Web page. After you save your worksheet as a Web page, you can't open and modify the .htm file in Microsoft Excel without losing formatting and functionality. Use Microsoft FrontPage 2000 or data access page Design view in Microsoft Access 2000 to modify the Web page.