Hi again Paul,

Sorry, for following up my own email, but I decided it was worthwhile in
this case.

Reading over the issue and thinking about it, I believe he is correct. The
document should not be treated as being modified because it has not been.
The spreadsheet contains a cell with a formula, that formula displays the
current date in the cell, every time the document is opened. When the
document is closed it still contains a formula in the cell that displays
the
current date, not the current date value. So the document has not been
modified. The current rendering of the document is different from what it
was when opened yesterday, that's all.

As I said in my last email however, if you think that reasoning is wrong
then you should by all means put your reasoning as a update to the issue.


That's cool. However if the spreadsheet only contains the formula then the
'modified document' status does not get set when opened (regardless of
whether the formula results are different or not). It is only when you
insert a chart that is built on the changing results of the formula that the
modified document value gets set each time it is opened.

I'll wait for the original poster to reply and see what rationale he can
come up with. I think this is one that can be argued either way. However
<puts on overly cautious hat> I'm sure there are bigger issues to resolve
than this one so my opinion would still be to close it and look at it when
there is nothing else to do...

Just my $0.02 worth...

/paul

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