![]() You cannot install different versions of Office on one operating system e.g., Office 2010 and Office 2013. You cannot mix the bitness of Office programs e.g., installing 32-bit Word and 64-bit Excel. You cannot install both 32-bit and 64-bit Office versions side by side. (The same goes for 32-bit ODBC drivers and data sources (DSNs).) With 64-bit Office, you lose your 32-bit add-ins and 32-bit ODBC drivers the only gain might be in Excel with extremely large spreadsheets (> 3GB files), and then only if your computer has more than 4GB of physical memory. Microsoft recommends, and ITS agrees, that the best version for 64-bit Windows is 32-bit Office, so that all the Office add-ins in the world, which today are still 32-bit, continue to work as you expect. No, and you'll be more productive with the default 32-bit version, described here. ![]() ![]() Overview I have 64-bit Windows don't I need 64-bit Office? ![]()
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