
- #EXCEL 2010 FOR MAC WON'T STOP TALKING HOW TO#
- #EXCEL 2010 FOR MAC WON'T STOP TALKING WINDOWS 8#
- #EXCEL 2010 FOR MAC WON'T STOP TALKING WINDOWS#
#EXCEL 2010 FOR MAC WON'T STOP TALKING HOW TO#
Such as why Does Excel Keep Crashing or what error comes after Excel crashing and most important how to fix Excel keeps crashing issues? Why Does Excel Keep Crashing? It shows the Narrator shortcut that turns it on and off.As today in this article, I am going to discuss deeply on this specific Excel crashing problem.

To see the steps to turn off the voice in Excel, please watch this short video. In the screen shot below, the command is activated - it has a light green background, instead of dark green.

The Microsoft article didn’t mention any shortcuts for turning off the voice, so I pressed the Window key and Enter again, to see what would happen.

Instead of putting in a line break, I had turned on the Narrator.
#EXCEL 2010 FOR MAC WON'T STOP TALKING WINDOWS#
So that explained how I turned it on – the Windows logo key is beside the Alt key. On a keyboard, press the Windows logo key+Enter.But, a few rows down, the article mentioned Windows Narrator, and showed the shortcut for starting it (I had to squint to read it): It seemed like a bad sign that an accessibility page had some of the smallest print that I’ve ever seen.
#EXCEL 2010 FOR MAC WON'T STOP TALKING WINDOWS 8#
I’m using Windows 8.1, and my search brought me to this page on the Microsoft site: Accessibility in Windows 8 I figured that this was a text to speech accessibility feature, and Google might know how to turn it off. I’m afraid I can’t do that,” and clicked on that cell so the voice could read it, in its best HAL 9000 voice. The voice just taunts you by saying “Escape.” Just for fun, I typed “I’m sorry Dave. The Esc key turns off lots of things in Excel, but it does not turn off mysterious voices. Apparently I had angered it in some way! Trying to Turn Off the Voice in Excel Suddenly, Excel began to speak, and sections of it were outlined with a blue border. It’s easier to read them that way, especially if you make the formula bar tall enough to see a few lines. Just like putting a break in a text entry, I was pressing Alt + Enter, to make each section of the formula start on a new line.

I had been working on an Excel file, and was putting line breaks in a long formula. No, I hadn’t been drinking, and it’s almost winter, so heat stroke wasn’t a possibility. But a few days ago, the voices started to come from Excel – and that was a bit alarming! I finally managed to turn off the voice in Excel, as you’ll see at the end of this article. The voices are right sometimes, and other times I just ignore them. There are days when we can hear the voices in our heads, whispering encouraging things like, “Oh go ahead – another cookie won’t hurt!” Or, “Wow, that’s an amazing formula you just built in that worksheet! You should take a break now.”
