Microsoft Excel Error: "There was a problem sending the command to the program."

For the last three years or more, I’ve been living with a little annoyance with Microsoft Excel.  It’s one of those things that’s just not quite annoying enough to get to the bottom of, and I figured it was some obscure registry setting I’d never find and must be something odd about my laptop setup only.  Sure, I tried a few times to fix it, but I never got anywhere.

Well, today as I was moving from the laptop I’ve been using through the last three years to my brand spanking new HP Envy 15 (more about this bad boy later), I got the dreaded “There was a problem sending the command to the program.” error on the new machine.  Ok, now it was personal.

The error occurred anytime I tried to open an Excel file from outside Excel by clicking on it in Windows Explorer or an email.  It can look like either of these two examples:

image 

image

The bottom line is that while the Excel application opens just fine, it doesn’t open the file, showing the error instead. (“Was this information helpful?” No, not so much.)

Off to the Interwebs, and I finally found a post in some obscure forum (three or four reboots later, I have no idea where it was) that gave me a clue about the cause.  There’s a setting in Excel 2007 which prevents it from opening files if the request comes via Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE), and it is enabled by default.  Go to the Office Button / Excel Options / Advanced, and scroll all the way down to the General section.  There you will see the “Ignore other applications that use Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE)” setting checked.  Uncheck the box, click OK to apply, and you’re good to go.  Never mind that those very applications that want to use DDE may be other Office apps!

Office Button in Office 2007

<UPDATE dateTime=”2011-07-21T16:48″>If you’re using Office 2007, the Office Button is the big circle with the logo in the upper left of the screen shown above. If you’re using Office 2010, there’s no longer a button, but what’s called “backstage”, shown below.</UPDATE>

Office 2010 Backstage

 

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118 Comments

  1. Brilliant! I suddenly started receiving those same error messages and had no idea how to solve the problem. Thanks,
    Kim

  2. Here’s an odd thing: The “Ignore other apps that use DDE” box was unchecked when I went there. Puzzled, I checked the box—and that fixed the problem! I’m not sure why doing the opposite of your advice worked, but I never could have done it without your directing me there in a concise way. Thank you! It’s finals week and suddenly I was unable to access my gradebooks!!!!

  3. After spending half a day diddling around with DDE, Microsoft help telling me that the software my university uses for a CSV file is incompatible with Excel 2010, etc., this worked for me:

    1) In the Start menu, right click on Excel
    2) click Properties
    3) click the Compatibility tab
    4) uncheck any boxes on the Compatibility tab
    5) press the Apply button

    hth,

    solana

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