Is there a solution for this problem? Repair your MS Project Professional 2003 using the following instructions. Reference How to repair problems in 2007 Office programs and features that are already installed You can use either one of the following methods to detect and to repair problems that are associated with 2007 Office programs and features taht are already installed, For example, incorrect registry settings or missing installation files. You cannot use these methods to repair personal files.
Results 1 - 48 of 150 - Microsoft Office Access 2003 GENUINE full retail Win 2000/XP/7 - Lot #1. Microsoft Office 2003 PROFESSIONAL EDITION for Windows with media. Microsoft Office Project Professional 2003 - serial number only. After reading several posts and searching software compatability, I felt assured the Office 2003 would work with the new Windows 7 64 bit program. Although it seemed to load just fine I've encountered two issues. First, everytime I open it on my profile, I have to check that I accept the. Hello SA Rose Thanks for the post.
Method 1: Run the Microsoft Office Diagnostics feature To run the Microsoft Office Diagnostics feature from a 2007 Office program, follow these steps:. Start the Office Diagnostics tool.
To do this, use either of the following methods:. For a menu-based 2007 Office program, click Office Diagnostics on the Help menu.
For a ribbon-based 2007 Office program, follow these steps:. Click the Microsoft Office Button, and then click Program Options. Note In this option, Program represents the name of the program. In the Navigation Pane, click Resource. Click Diagnose.
Click Continue. Click Start Diagnostics.
Note If the Office Diagnostics tool identifies a problem, it tries to fix the problem. When the Office Diagnostics tool completes, click Close. Note You can also run the Microsoft Office Diagnostics feature from the Start menu. To do this, follow these steps:.
![Project Project](https://images.bonanzastatic.com/afu/images/3785/4774/91/s-l1600.jpg)
In Windows, click Start. Point to All Programs, point to Microsoft Office, point to Microsoft Office Tools, and then click Microsoft Office Diagnostics. Method 2: Run the Detect and Repair feature. Click Start. If you are running Windows Vista or Windows 7, copy and paste (or type) the following command in the Search programs and files box, and then press ENTER:. appwiz.cpl.
If you are running Windows XP, click Run, copy and paste (or type) the following command in the Open box, and then press ENTER:. appwiz.cpl. Click the name of the Microsoft Office Edition 2007 that you want to change, and then click Change. Click the option Repair, and then click Continue.
To prevent the formatting, autotext, and macros that are stored in the global template (Normal.dot) from affecting the behavior of Microsoft Word and other applications, rename your global template (Normal.dot). When you do so, you can quickly determine whether the global template is causing the issue. Important: When you rename the Normal.dot template, you reset several options to the default settings, including custom styles, custom toolbars, macros, and AutoText entries. Therefore, Microsoft strongly recommends that you not delete your Normal.dot file.
Certain configurations may create more than one Normal.dot file. For example, this issue may occur if a computer runs more than one version of Word or if several workstation installations exist on the same computer. To rename the Normal.dot file: Note: The following steps are specific to Microsoft Word, but may also be used with slight modification for other Microsoft Office applications. Do not use the /a switch to restart Word or another application after you complete these steps. On Windows 2000. Acrobat 7.0-8.0 installs a COM add-in file to the Acrobat 7.0/PDFMaker/Office or Acrobat 8.0/PDFMaker/Office folders.
![Project Project](http://img.brothersoft.com/screenshots/softimage/m/microsoft_office_2003-169273-1.jpeg)
This file provides PDFMaker icons and menu commands for Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, Publisher and Project. The COM add-in file must be checked into the Windows registry before it appears in applications. PDFMaker icons don't appear in the toolbar if an Office application crashes and disables the COM add-in file. Other COM add-in files and macros may conflict with the COM add-in file for PDFMaker and may prevent the Convert To PDF icons from appearing in the toolbar.
In Access, if the Utility1 Toolbar isn't enabled for viewing, then PDFMaker icons won't appear.: Message 'Missing PDFMaker files' when you right-click a file to convert to PDF.