I have been using Word 2008 for Mac 12.1.0 for 4-5 weeks now. Occasionally, Word freezes and has to close. (Lately, it is more frequent than occasional.) Sometimes the whole computer freezes (I have a 24-inch iMac with 4GB RAM). I notice that when I re-open Word after a freeze, at least one of my settings has reverted to its default vaue. It's the setting for automatically saving documents as I work. The default is every 10 minutes.

  1. A .docx In Windows Keeps Crashing In My 2008 Word For Mac Free

I set it to every minute. This is important, because I have to rely on the recovery document when I re-open Word. Anyone having similar problems?

A .docx In Windows Keeps Crashing In My 2008 Word For Mac Free

Jun 28, 2017 - The best way to recover files is not to lose them in the first place, but failing. So it's best to keep your documents in the corresponding app folders. If Word, Excel, or PowerPoint crashes, or if your computer. For Microsoft Office 2008. Hidden files on Mac OS X as there is on Windows – but it is possible.

MSFT users I propose a Class Action Dear fellow users: I have the same problem. My Word 2008 for Mac would freeze, resulting in loss of data, soon after being opened, and typing in a few keystrokes. I looked in several blogs, that suggested Fonts incompatibility, and I bought the excellent Font Doctor X, that was not able to fix the problem.

  1. Aug 14, 2015 - The problem is not with the track changes and comments but how Word tries to. I use track changes all the time on MS Word on my Mac and it.
  2. I have a MacMini, using Mac OS X 10.5.5, Leopard, my last updates were these three: Remote Desktop Client Update 3.2.2 Mac OS X Update 10.5.5 Java For Mac OS X 10.5 Update 2 1.0 At first, I was working on a file I have a had for a few weeks now, saved as a docx, when I went to save and close it, I got a message that Word had encountered an.

This is definitely intolerable from Microsoft. I am fed up of losing hours of work, and money, dealing with such a problem. This is August 4th 2008, and I suggest that each of you who is reading this post, would just post a small message, stating: 'Same here. Class Action a good idea'. Maybe, Microsoft would move faster if they understand that it could cost them to disrespect customers.

I have a strong Consumer Law background, and believe me, this one will hold court properly. I am using a Mac Mini 1.83 GHz, 2GB memory, and a Samsung 245T, 1920x1200, with word 2008. I have so far only experienced this with one document which I have been working on for several years. No graphics, but some 60 pages with lots of footnotes.

I do not have to do much in order to have word to hang, nothing actually. Sometimes I only have to open the document, and after a while, less than one minute, the computer hangs. Best way to have it hang is to do a lot of cut and paste, or work with the footnotes. Procedure two did not work for me. My document is full of unicode characters, and I do not want to lose anything as it would require a lot of extra work.

The document is originally from a PC, but I have made a lot of changes and can not use the original document anymore. So, right now I only have the.DOCX document, and I do not want to lose any characters or formating. Personally I am quite convinced that I should try procedure four on, but I do not really know what I am looking for. I have probably sent more than 50 error reports to Apple. Would be great if MS could fix this so that word fixes the errors in the document rather than having me throwing things around me in frustration. Click to expand.It's pretty much impossible to guess what you're looking for.

The divide-and-conquer tactic is first and foremost about figuring out where the problem might lie - and knowing where the problem is located is half the battle. You divide the document in half and figure out which half is still having trouble. Since you're seeing problems happening in this particular document pretty much immediately after you've opened it, it seems like you'll be able to quickly narrow down where the problem might lie. Divide it in half, pick one of the halves, and start typing 'the quick brown fox' over and over again. If you can do that for a couple of minutes and nothing happens, do the same thing on the other half.

Once you figure out which half of the document has the problem, do it again. Wash, rinse, repeat.

Eventually, you should get to a point where you have a reasonably narrow range of the document where the problem is located, and then you can carefully comb through that section to see if you can figure out what you're seeing. This technique is just as much about figuring out where you don't have problems, because then you don't have to waste any time/energy looking at stuff that's perfectly okay. You might also want to try posting to the. Lots of Word experts hang out there, and they help out folks who are running into problems. If you go through the divide-and-conquer tactic and figure out where the problem is located but can't figure out what it might be, they're likely to be able to help you figure out what's happening. Also, if you're coming to Macworld Expo in January, swing by our booth - 'most everyone in there is a member of the technical team, so you might be able to explain what you're seeing to one of the Word developers or testers and get some assistance that way.

But that's not until January, so if I were in your shoes, I'd go through the divide-and-conquer method first and see where you get with that. Regards, Nadyne. I have turned my original document into several now. Some of the pieces are still hanging repeatedly. Other are fine.

One of them hangs even in when converted to.doc. It seems as if OpenOffice can handle them though, but openoffice makes a mess of the formating. Anyhow, I will continue to turn the documents into smaller and smaller pieces.

You are right, this is the best way to do it, I will continue. Thanks for the link, I will check it! I am on the other side of the Atlantic so no macworld for me. I had a lot less trouble with hanging after I started shutting my MacBook down every night.

I tried that after hearing it's a fix for AutoComplete's tendency to get the date wrong. I also do frequent saves, and if things seem logy, I save the file and it seems to perk up again. As for corrupt documents, I had one a while back that I could open and work with but a PC user couldn't open. I selected everything but the final paragraph mark, copied and pasted it into a new document, and it opened fine for the PC user after that. First, try to find out if it's a problem with a particular document.

This can happen sometimes. Try copying all the information in it (CMD+A, CMD+C) and pasting it in to a new file and saving. Use the new file for a bit and see if it still crashes. Try resaving the original file in another format that both applications understand (like the Word 2003 format). You can also try opening the.docx file in another program. Try the free TextEdit.App which is pre-installed on your Mac, or Apple's Pages or even another office app such as OpenOffice. All of these can open DOCX files.

If it comes to that, you may even want to give Google Docs a try. Microsoft applications for OSX tend to be rubbish in my experience. It's nice that they're offered, but really, iWork is the way to go for a Mac office suite. Keynote is the best presenting application on any platform; Numbers is quickly gaining support; and I've just written a 40-page university report with Pages and found getting the layout I want to be a breeze after years of tearing my hair out in front of Word. MSN Messenger still lacks Video and Audio chat support too, even though Skype seems to do cross-platform chatting just fine. You can do so much better than Microsoft. (1) The problem is sporadic.

For

It can happen repeatedly over a few hours or days; and then not happen for weeks. Right now, I haven't had a problem for weeks. (2) It is my impression the problem is only with certain documents, usually long documents, but I can't identify precisely what it is that makes these documents problematic.

I have tried various ways of 'uncorrupting' such documents. Things seemed to get better for a while, but then the problem started up again. (3) I have turned my spell and grammar check off, as suggested in a posting above, but I a skeptical about whether this really is a solution to the problem. And I miss the spell check feature! Too much for word. Hi, Please let me know if removing the automatic 'check spelling and grammar' works.

My word was freezing when I was opening large files, with lots of text to 'check'. I think it was too much to check at once for word and so it was freezing after a few seconds. Now what I do is that I have this feature turned off. I type my text, and at the end, I run the 'spell and grammar check'. Again, might not be the perfect solution since you have to remove this automatic feature but worked for me.

Oh, forgot to mention that I had tried every possible suggested solution before (Validate Fonts, remove/re-install office, etc) and nothing worked. Found this one by myself and seems to fix the problem (at least for me). I have been using Word 2008 for Mac 12.1.0 for 4-5 weeks now.

Occasionally, Word freezes and has to close. (Lately, it is more frequent than occasional.) Sometimes the whole computer freezes (I have a 24-inch iMac with 4GB RAM).

I notice that when I re-open Word after a freeze, at least one of my settings has reverted to its default vaue. It's the setting for automatically saving documents as I work. The default is every 10 minutes.

I set it to every minute. This is important, because I have to rely on the recovery document when I re-open Word. Anyone having similar problems?