Security Security vulnerabilities in external files or controls may extend to Web pages that use those items. For example, external style sheets (files with a .css extension), script files (files with a .js extension), custom ASP.NET controls, or other items, may pose a security risk. Be sure your style sheets, add-ins, themes, executables, scripts, controls, or other files come from trusted sources.
- If you have not already done so, add
Show All Scripts to the
Tools menu.
How?
-
On the
Tools menu, click
Customize, and then click the
Commands tab.
-
In the
Categories box, click
Tools.
-
Drag
Show All Scripts from the
Commands box over the
Tools menu.
- When the
Tools menu displays the menu commands,
point to the
Macro submenu.
- When the
Macro submenu displays the menu commands,
point to the location where you want
Show All Scripts to appear on
the menu, and then release the mouse.
-
In the
Customize dialog box, click
Close.
-
On the
Tools menu, point to
Macro, and then click
Microsoft Script
Editor.
- If you have edited your script in
the Microsoft Script
Editor (Microsoft Script Editor: Used to add text, edit HTML tags, and edit any Microsoft Visual Basic Scripting Edition (VBScript) code in a data access page. You can also view your page in the Script Editor as it would appear in a Web browser.), return to the Office program and
update your Web page by clicking
Refresh
on the
Refresh
toolbar (toolbar: A bar with buttons and options that you use to carry out commands. To display a toolbar, click Customize on the Tools menu, and then click the Toolbars tab.).
Tip
To quickly view or edit a Web script, double-click a script anchor (script anchor: The visual representation of a script on a Web page that you open in a Microsoft Office program. Script anchors are not displayed by default. Different script anchors represent scripts written in different scripting languages.) on the Web page.
To show script anchors