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Apr 17, 2018 Learn how to keep in touch and stay productive with Microsoft Teams and Office 365, even when you’re working remotely. 'The document is locked for editing.
- Oct 08, 2013 How to Pass Excel Assessment Test For Job Applications - Step by Step Tutorial with XLSX work files - Duration: 19:48. Online Training for Everyone 202,164 views.
- 2009-10-18 Office 2016 for Mac is available for Office 365 and Volume Licensing customers. The new versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote provide the best of both worlds for Mac users: the familiar Office experience paired with the best of Mac. Paragraph not being locked editing for some clients (Co-Authoring) SharePoint SharePoint.
Important
Office 365 ProPlus is being renamed to Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise. To learn more about this name change, read this blog post.
For details of when this change takes effect, and what actions admins might need to take, read this article.
The Office Customization Tool creates the configuration files that are used to deploy Office in large organizations. These configuration files give you more control over an Office installation: you can define which applications and languages are installed, how those applications should be updated, and application preferences. After creating the configuration files, you can use them with the Office Deployment Tool to deploy a customized version of Office.
Note
The Office Customization Tool is part of the deployment process for installing Office on hundreds or thousands of computers. To follow this process end-to-end, we recommend completing the assessment and planning phases for your Office deployment. If you're not an enterprise administrator and are looking to install Office 365 in your home or business, see Install Office with Office 365.
Get started
To work with the service, go to Office Customization Tool and choose the products, languages, and application preferences you want to configure. For example, you can create a configuration file that downloads the 64-bit English version of Office 365 ProPlus, or you can create a file that installs the 64-bit English and German version of Office without Access and Publisher and with the EULA automatically accepted. When you're done, you export the configuration file, which you can then use with the Office Deployment Tool or another software distribution solution to deploy Office in your organization.
Microsoft Office For Mac Locked For Editing Free
Note
If you use Microsoft Endpoint Configuration Manager (current branch) to deploy Office, we recommend using the Office 365 Installer wizard in the Configuration Manager console. That wizard includes a customized version of the Office Customization Tool. For more details, see Deploy Office 365 ProPlus with Microsoft Endpoint Configuration Manager (current branch).
Create a configuration file
Follow these steps to create a configuration file that can be used by the Office Deployment Tool or another software distribution solution to install Office.
Note
We recommend saving and managing your configuration files in the cloud. To do so, sign in to the Office 365 Client Configuration Service before you create your configuration file. For more details, see Save and manage configuration files in the cloud.
Microsoft Office For Mac Student
- Go to Office Customization Tool.
- In the Product and releases section, choose the architecture you want to deploy. Each configuration file can only deploy one architecture. For details on which architecture to choose, see Choose the 32-bit or 64-bit version of Office.
- Choose the products and applications you want to deploy.
- Choose the update channel you want to deploy. The update channel determines how frequently your client devices are updated with new features. For best practice recommendations, see Step 3 - Choose your update channels.
- Choose which version you want to deploy. Unless you require a particular version, we recommend choosing the latest. For details on previous versions, see Update history for Office 365 ProPlus.
- In the Language section, choose which languages to include. You can include multiple languages and you can select Match operating system to automatically install the same languages that are in use on the client device. For more details, see Overview of deploying languages in Office 365 ProPlus.
- In the Installation section, choose whether to install the Office files directly from the cloud or from a local source on your network. For more details, see Choose how to deploy.
- Choose whether to display the installation to your end users and whether to pin the Office icons to the taskbar. For more details on these options, see Display element and PinIconsToTaskBar property.
- In the Update and upgrade section, choose whether to install updates directly from the cloud, from a local source on your network, or with Configuration Manager. If you want to update your client devices automatically, choose CDN and Automatically check for updates. For best practice recommendations, see Choose your update channels.
- Choose whether to automatically remove all MSI-versions of Office, and whether to automatically install the same language as the removed MSI-version of Office. For more details, see Install the same languages as a previous MSI installation.
- If you are deploying a volume-licensed version of Office, Visio, or Project, specify the appropriate license key in Licensing and activation settings. Note that Office 365 ProPlus is not volume licensed and does not require a KMS or MAK activation. For more details, see Overview of volume activation of Office.
- In the General section, type your organization name and a description for this particular configuration. For example, you might want to use this file to install the 64-bit version of Office for your finance department.
- Choose whether to automatically accept the EULA.
- Choose whether to enabled shared computer activation. For more details, see Overview of shared computer activation for Office 365 ProPlus.
- In the Application preferences section, choose what preferences to apply when deploying Office. You can search for a setting, filter the preferences by Office app, and learn more about each setting by clicking it and reviewing the detailed description.
- Click Finish, review the configured settings in the right-hand pane, and then click Export.
- Accept the terms in the license agreement, name the configuration file, and then click Export or, if you're saving the configuration file to the cloud, click Done.
- You can now use the configuration file in your deployment workflow with the Office Deployment Tool or another software distribution solution.
Edit an existing configuration file
Follow these steps to import and edit an existing configuration file.
- Go to Office Customization Tool.
- Click Import, and then select the configuration file you want to edit.
- Change the settings you want, and then export the updated file.
Save and manage configuration files in the cloud
You can now use the Office Customization Tool to create, save, and manage your deployment configuration files in the cloud. You can also refer to these cloud-based files directly when running the Office Deployment Tool.
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To work with configuration files in the cloud, sign in to the Office 365 Client Configuration Service and go to the Device Configuration page. From that page, you can do the following:
- To create a new file, click Create, create a configuration file, and then click Done. The configuration file is automatically saved to the cloud as part of your tenant.
- To edit an existing file, click the name of the file, make your changes, and then click Done.
- To get a link to a configuration file, select the file, click Get Link, and then click Copy. You can use the link to refer to the configuration file when you use the Office Deployment Tool.
When running the Office Deployment Tool, you refer to the cloud-based configuration file by including the link in quotes. To deploy with the ODT, for example, use
setup.exe /configure 'link'
.You can also copy, upload, or download configuration files from the Device Configuration page. For example, you can create a baseline configuration file and then create copies of that baseline for custom configurations.
Define application preferences
As part of the Office Customization Tool, you can define application preferences for supported products, including VBA macro notifications, default file locations, and default file formats. When you define these preferences, you can apply them as part of deploying Office or you can apply them to an existing installation of Office without changing any other deployment settings. For more details, see Apply application preferences and Apply application preferences to an existing installation of Office.
Notes
![Windows Windows](https://www.aurelp.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/b1.jpg)
When creating a configuration file, the Office Customization Tool includes two attributes for the Configuration element: The ID attribute, which identifies the deployment method, and the Host attribute, which identifies the deployment options that have been selected. These attributes don't contain any personally identifiable information (PII), but Click-to-Run sends the attribute values to Microsoft so that we can better understand what configurations customers use and make customization even easier. Because of these insights, we recommend keeping the attributes. They are optional, however, and can be removed without affecting your deployment.
Issue started today when I tried to open a few xlsx files. There are 8 files in the same folder but only 3 are giving me this problem (I had those 3 opened last week and had no issues). I get the message 'File is Locked for Editing' and gives me the option to cancel or open Read Only. Microsoft powerpoint for mac 2018 cant get slide numbers. I opened RO and after several seconds another pop up says the file 'is available. do you want to edit it now?' I click on Edit and the original message of it being locked for editing pops up. Vicious cycle.
So I renamed the file and saved it to my desktop. I then command-delete the original, then copied the newly named file to the folder (after first opening from the desktop to verify all was good. It was). I opened the new file and it opened ok. After closing I renamed it to the original file name and lo and behold got the same errors again. Vicious cycle continues.
I've restarted but it hasn't corrected the issue. Would appreciate a solution if anyone has one. I've read about hidden files and such but have no idea where to even look. This all started today after a cold start up.
OS X is El Capitan 10.11.3. I run MS Office for MAC and Word files opened w/o issue as do other xlsx files. I've deleted my recent items list but nothing works.
iMac (21.5-inch, Late 2013), OS X El Capitan (10.11.3), MS Office for MAC is up to date
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