

We were all confused by the VBA password that we’ve forgotten in certain circumstances. Ruby on rails 34 ruby 26 rails3 17 rails 15 oracle 11 rspec 9 rspec2 7 jquery 7 ubuntu 5 javascript 5 windows 5 activerecord 3 refactoring 3 geoserver 3 gis 3 arrrrcamp 3 actionmailer 2 oracle spatial 2 tdd 2 postgis 2 routing 2 rvm 2 mongoid 2 csharp 2 thin 2 win32 2 gem 2 rails4 2 git 2 service 2 haml 2 cucumber 2 view testing 2 i18n 1 displaysleep 1 spatial 1 gemsets 1 wubi 1 oracle_enhanced_adapter 1 migrations 1 watchr 1 ci 1 plugins 1 coderetreat 1 ie8 1 ssl 1 oci 1 nested model form 1 wcf 1 11.I’ve been locked from editing my excel file what’s important to me, it asks for VBA password, but I don’t know what is it, can anybody help me? Is there any VBA password breaker? This method seems to work for Excel, AutoCAD, let me know if it works for other VBA password protected documents or applications (e.g. A more detailed description can be found here. Load the project, click through all error-messages, open the properties of the project, and set the password again to something you know and remember, and after that you can remove the password protection all together (if you want).

In the *.dvb file, look for the tag "DPB=", and replace that with "DPx=" using a hex editor. Apparently there is a very simple way, which took my hours to find. So i looked for ways to break a VBA password. Anyway, i needed to get in the code, and the person was either unreachable or not willing or forgot the password himself. Stop reverse engineering? I could get into a whole discussion about protecting knowledge and sharing knowledge. I am not quite sure why one would do such a thing, one valid reason would be that some user would accidently get into to the code, and change stuff? No idea. So i was left with a program to change, which was locked using a password. But unfortunately as well, a lot of programmers have come and went again. In my current working environment, these programs are used extensively, and a lot of software has been written for it.

Both AutoCad and MicroStation can now be automated/extended using VBA.
