Get more done at home and at work. Find out how our Office training courses can help you harness the power of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and more.
- Excel for Mac crashes and slow performance. Excel for Mac features and add-ins issues. Problem opening files or folders with hyperlinks FIXED When you click a hyperlink to open a file or folder, it may not open a Finder window to show the folder or it may not open the linked file.
- Microsoft may use your contact information to provide updates and special offers about Microsoft products and services. Get a crash course in how adopting cloud-based Office 365 gives you ever-improving versions of those apps, with new capabilities delivered every month. Download 'A Crash Course in Office 365” for practical.
Note
Office 365 ProPlus is being renamed to Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise. For more information about this change, read this blog post.
Symptoms
Excel 2016 for Mac crashes when you click Data > New Database Query > From Database.
Cause
This issue occurs if you 're running Excel 2016 for Mac version 15.25 or later, and you have an older 32-bit ODBC driver installed on your Mac.
Resolution
To resolve this issue, remove the 32-bit driver, and then install a new 64-bit driver. For information about how to remove and install the drivers, contact the driver manufacturer or supplier.
More Information
Free Microsoft Excel Course
In September 2015, Excel 2016 for Mac was originally released as 32-bit software. However, in August 2016, the software was updated to 64-bit. To check whether you have this update, click About Excel on the Excel menu. If you have version 15.25 or later, you have the 64-bit version.
Free Excel Crash Course
If you have the 64-bit version and an older 32-bit ODBC driver, this may cause Excel to crash. To prevent this issue, install a 64-bit driver from the provider or from the company's website. Some of the most common drivers are provided by Openlink Software and Actual Technologies.
Excel Crash Course Free
To determine whether your driver is 32-bit or 64-bit, follow these steps:
- Go to the Finder.
- Click Go > Utilities, and then double-click System Information.
- On the left side, scroll down, and then click Applications.
- Scroll through the list of applications to find the name of your driver.
- Click the driver, and then look in the 64-bit column.
For more information about compatible ODBC drivers, see ODBC drivers that are compatible with Excel for Mac.
Third-party information disclaimer
Microsoft Excel Crash Course On Mac Download
The third-party products that this article discusses are manufactured by companies that are independent of Microsoft. Microsoft makes no warranty, implied or otherwise, about the performance or reliability of these products.