General Coding Procedure Question
The other point about separation is that it can make testing easier. For
instance, you could design your tidy-up code and test it before even
building the form. In doing so, you might find some design improvements that
will make the form building even easier.
--
HTH
Bob Phillips
... looking out across Poole Harbour to the Purbecks
(remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct)
"CB Hamlyn" wrote in message
...
Thanks, that's how I have it set up now, just wondering if there's logic
in
doing it the other way.
Thank you for the input.
CB
"Bob Phillips" wrote in message
...
CB,
When it comes to 'better' I don't think there is a clear-cut answer that
one
is better than the other, but I like to keep my forms simply to event
code,
that is code that handles the events associated with the object, and if
there is any other action required, such as clearing workbooks, if this
is
complex, then put it in modules.
The way I logically separate it is that the forms are the
presentational/GUI
layer, the VBA modules then become the application layer, and there is
then
a data layer, which can be a database, or in your case is Excel .
Separation
makes for better maintenance IMO. It also facilitates migration to
another
platform should tyhat ever be needed.
--
HTH
Bob Phillips
... looking out across Poole Harbour to the Purbecks
(remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct)
"CB Hamlyn" wrote in message
...
I'm working on a fairly large Excel project.
One of the larger bits is a repair feature, where clicking on the
toolbar
button brings up a screen with a list of all the available worksheets
in
the
workbook. The user checks off which sheets will be effected then can
either
clear or repair the selected items. Clear blanks out the user
editable
cells, repair restores all the formulas for the selected worksheets.
Currently the code is like this:
The user checks off the sheets they want to effect and hits the clear
or
repair button. The code checks to see which sheets were selected and
for
every one it finds it runs that sheet's clear/repair sub procedure
which
is
contained in a general "ClearRepair" module.
Generally speaking is it better to have long bits of code in a form or
in
a
module. I'm wondering if I'm being smart by doing it the way I'm
doing
it
or if it will run better/cleaner/smaller to pull all the subs out of
the
module and put them into forms code.
Thanks for any advice.
CB Hamlyn
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