
Newest 'vba' Questions - Stack Overflow
6 days ago · Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) is an event-driven programming language which was first introduced by Microsoft in 1993 to give Excel 5.0 a more robust object-oriented language for …
excel - Declare and use range in vba - Stack Overflow
Dec 10, 2014 · I am quite new to VBA, Today developing a macro I noticed something funny. Using Range like this is working : Dim rg As Range Set rg = ActiveSheet.Range("A1:B2") Using Range like …
How to show current user name in a cell? - Stack Overflow
In most of the online resource I can find usually show me how to retrieve this information in VBA. Is there any direct way to get this information in a cell? For example as simple as =ENVIRON('Use...
filter out multiple criteria using excel vba - Stack Overflow
Feb 18, 2015 · 1 Alternative using VBA's Filter function As an innovative alternative to @schlebe 's recent answer, I tried to use the Filter function integrated in VBA, which allows to filter out a given …
Excel VBA Loop on columns - Stack Overflow
Dec 21, 2012 · Excel VBA Loop on columns Asked 13 years ago Modified 5 years, 2 months ago Viewed 284k times
vba - Get User Selected Range - Stack Overflow
Nov 2, 2010 · How can I get a range of cells selected via user mouse input for further processing using VBA?
VBA: Selecting range by variables - Stack Overflow
I want to select the formatted range of an Excel sheet. To define the last and first row I use the following functions: lastColumn = ActiveSheet.UsedRange.Column - 1 + ActiveSheet.UsedRange.Columns.
VBA to copy a file from one directory to another - Stack Overflow
I have an access file that I regularly need to copy to another directory, replacing the last version. I would like to use an Excel macro to achieve this, and would also like to rename the file in the
How to do a "Save As" in vba code, saving my current Excel workbook ...
I have an Excel Workbook that on form button click I want to save a copy of the workbook with the filename being the current date. I keep trying the the following ActiveWorkbook.SaveAs ("\\\\filePath\\
Properly Handling Errors in VBA (Excel) - Stack Overflow
Block 2 looks like an imitation of a Try/Catch block. It should be okay, but it's not The VBA Way. Block 3 is a variation on Block 2. Block 4 is a bare-bones version of The VBA Way. I would strongly advise …