Thread: With statement
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Bob Phillips Bob Phillips is offline
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Default With statement

That's how I do it also.

--
HTH

Bob Phillips

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"ChadF" wrote in message
...
Thanks Bob, that's pretty much what I figured. In the example I provided,

I
wound up simply defining a worksheet variable at the top of my subroutine

and
referenced it that way ... reads like :

Dim aWS as Worksheet
...

Set aWS = Workbooks(AnotherWorkbook).Sheets(3)
With Workbooks(ThisworkBook).Sheets(MySheet.Name)
' (some code)

aWS.Activate
aWS.Range("B1:B10").Value = .Range("someRange").Value

' (and so forth)

End With

Appreciate your help.
Chad


"Bob Phillips" wrote:

You can, but the object within the secondary With must be part of the
primary with object, or totally independent. You cannot refer to both

with
objects from within either structure using the dot notation, one would

have
to be fully qualified.

So you cannot do what you are trying to do.
--
HTH

Bob Phillips

(replace somewhere in email address with gmail if mailing direct)

"ChadF" wrote in message
...
Is it possible to have nested With statements ??

Problem I have - VBA application that refers back and forth between
workbook / worksheets. I have an 'exterior' With statement like

this...

With Workbooks(ThisworkBook).Sheets(MySheet.Name)
' (some code)

Workbooks(AnotherWorkbook).Sheets(3).Activate
With Workbooks(AnotherWorkbook).Sheets(3)

' interior code here will make references to inner With
.Range("someRange").Value = ...

End With
End With

I want to refer to a range defined in the outer With ...is that

possible
(and how ?)

Appreciate any advice.

Thanks,
Chad