MORE INFORMATION
Order of installation
If you want to install and use more than one version of Office on
the same computer, you must install the earliest version first. For example, if
you want to use both Office 95 and Office 2000 on the same computer, you must
install Office 95 first. This step is required because of the way that registry
keys, shared programs, file name extensions, and other settings are managed for each
version of Office and for the programs that are included with each version of
Office.
The following table shows the order in which the versions of
Office should be installed:
Office Installation
version order
------- -------
4.x First
95 Second
97 Third
2000 Fourth
The rest of this article assumes that you installed the
versions of Office in this order.
Default install location changes to Office2k folder
If the Setup programs detects that you installed a distributed
application by using Microsoft Access run-time files, the default folder for
Setup is Office2k, instead of Program Files\Microsoft Office.
Multiple versions of Outlook
You cannot run multiple versions of Outlook on the same computer. For example, Microsoft Outlook 2000 cannot coexist with any earlier versions
of Outlook. If you choose to install Outlook 2000, the Setup program will not
let you keep any earlier version. Outlook 97 or Outlook 98 will be
removed even if you click to select the
Keep these programs check box in the
Removing Previous Versions dialog box.
Microsoft ClipArt Gallery and Microsoft Graph
These programs will not run correctly when they are installed on the same
computer together with earlier versions of Office. Because ClipArt Gallery and Graph
overwrite registry entries that are used in the earlier versions of Office, the installation of
multiple versions of ClipArt Gallery and Graph is not a supported
configuration.
Using the Office Shortcut Bar
When earlier versions of Office are installed on the same
computer, the Office 2000 Shortcut Bar does not use buttons from the Office 7.0 ShortCut Bar or from the Office
97 Shortcut Bar. Because the Office 2000 Shortcut Bar uses Windows Installer
shortcuts, it cannot use the existing toolbars or buttons from earlier versions
of the Office Shortcut Bar.
When either Office 7.0 or Office 97 is
installed together with Office 2000, the Shortcut Bars can be started separately. The Shortcut Bars cannot be started at the same time. Each Shortcut Bar can have its own set of custom toolbars
and buttons. These toolbars and buttons cannot be shared between the two Office
Shortcut Bars.
For more information about Office Shortcut Bars, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
220914
An earlier version of the Office Shortcut Bar runs instead of the Office 2000 Shortcut Bar
Shortcuts on the Start menu
Office 7.0 and Office 97 use the same shortcuts on the
Start menu to start programs. Therefore, when you
install Office 97, the Setup program overwrites the shortcuts for Office 7.0
programs. The following shortcuts are affected:
Microsoft Access
Microsoft Binder
Microsoft Excel
Microsoft PowerPoint
Microsoft Word
If you rename the Office 7.0 or Office 97 shortcuts before you
install Office 2000, you can use the shortcuts for both sets of programs on the
Start menu. To avoid confusion, Microsoft suggests that you add the
words
7.0 or
97 to each renamed
shortcut. For example, rename Access to
Microsoft Access
97 before you install Office 2000. This action keeps a separate icon for each
different version of Access.
You can also move the Office 7.0 or 97
shortcuts to a subfolder on the
Start menu.
For more information, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
220885
Setup overwrites Office 95 or Office 97 Start menu items
Microsoft Office Binder
When Office 7.0 and Office 97 are installed on the same computer
as Office 2000, the
Add Section dialog box in Office Binder displays document types for the most
recently installed version of Office. Therefore, when you insert a section, an
Office 2000 document type is used.
This behavior may cause problems
when you try to share a binder file with users who use earlier versions of
Office.
Double-clicking files in Windows Explorer
When you double-click an Office document in Windows Explorer or
from the recent documents folder of Windows, the following rules apply:
- If a version of the program in which the document was
created is running, the document is opened in that version.
- On Microsoft Windows 95, Microsoft Windows NT 4.0, Microsoft Windows 2000:
With Excel and PowerPoint 7.0, 97, or 2000, if no
version of the program in which the document was created is running, the
document is opened in the version of the program that you most recently
installed. With Office 4.x, every time that you start an Office 4.x program, it will register itself as the latest version installed
and try to load the document by using that version of the program.
With Microsoft Access and with Word 7.0, Word 97, or Word 2000, if no version of the
program in which the document was created is running, the document is opened in
the version of the program that was most recently open. With Office 4.x, every time that you start an Office 4.x program, the program registers itself as the latest version installed and
tries to load the document by using that version of the program.
On Microsoft Windows 98 and on Microsoft Windows Millennium:
With Office 7.0, Office 97, or Office 2000, if no version of the
program in which the document was created is running, the document is opened in
the most recent version of the program. With Office 4.x, every time that you start an Office 4.x program, the program will register itself as the latest version installed
and will try to load the document by using that version of the program.
For more information about how to use Windows Explorer, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
141275
How to open a file with other than associated program
Inserting Office OLE objects into other programs
If you install multiple versions of Office on the same computer
and you insert an Office object, such as an Excel worksheet object, into
another program, such as a Word document, the newest version of the program is
used. This may cause problems if you share the container file with users who
are not using the same version of Office, such as a Word document that contains an Excel
worksheet object.
Shared programs
If you installed the versions of Office in the order described in
the "Order of Installation" section, you will not experience any problems when
you use shared programs such as Equation Editor and Clip Gallery. The
Object dialog box may display more than one entry for each shared
program. This behavior occurs because multiple versions of the shared program
may be installed on the computer.
Related articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base
For more information about the behavior of multiple versions of Office programs on a single computer, click the following article numbers to view the articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
214388
How to run multiple versions of Excel on the same computer
212268 Part 1: Limitations converting from Word document format to Word 6.0/95 format
216920 Part 2: Limitations converting from Word document format to Word 6.0/95 format