Thank you all for your continued assistance.
I replaced the False with 0, and still have the same symptom, which makes me
think that this is not actually a links issue that I'm seeing.
The formulas in the source workbook seem to refer to an XLA which I don't
have (and am unlikely to get), based on the pop-up:
It bypasses that initial warning, but then pops up the filesearch
wizard/userform with the title bar "Update Values: HsTbar.xla"
An example of the formula is:
='C:\Hyperion\SmartView\Bin\HsTbar.xla'!HsGetValue ("CorpHFM","Scenario#"&$C$1&";Year#"&E$12&";Period #"&E$13&";View#"&$C$2&";Entity#"&$A15&";Value#"&$C $4&";Account#"&$B15&";ICP#"&$C$3&";Custom1#"&$C$5& ";Custom2#"&$C$6&";Custom3#"&$C$7&";Custom4#"&$C$8 &"")*2204.6
I think what confused me was that when I open the file manually (without
VBA) and decline to update links, I do not get this secondary pop-up asking
for the file location of HsTbar.xla.
So, my best deduction is that there is different behavior between
UpdateLinks:=0 vs what happens when the file is manually opened and the user
declines to update links.
So I guess my question should be rephrased; what additional parameters or
settings do I need to use to open a file with VBA without triggering any
sheet updates at all, so that it won't ask for the xla location?
Many thanks,
Keith
"Ron de Bruin" wrote:
Hi Barb
I always use the numbers (never test it with False)
Excel 2003 and 2007 Help
1 User specifies how links will be updated
2 Never update links for this workbook on opening
3 Always update links for this workbook on opening
If you use 2 or 3 both will update the links so the help is not correct
Excel 2000 Help
0 Doesn't update any references
1 Updates external references but not remote references
2 Updates remote references but not external references
3 Updates both remote and external references
I think 3 and 0 are the best options if you want to update or not and is
working in all Excel versions as far as I know.
--
Regards Ron de Bruin
http://www.rondebruin.nl/tips.htm
"Barb Reinhardt" wrote in message
...
Ron,
I've used UpdateLinks:=False.
I'm guessing False equates to 0. Is there some reason I should use 0
instead of False?
Barb Reinhardt
"Ron de Bruin" wrote:
Correct, it is wrong in the help of a lot of Exel versions, i believe it is correct
in the good old Excel 2000
If you have links in your workbook this (UpdateLinks:=0) will avoid the message
do you want to update the links or not "0 Doesn't update any references"
Use 3 instead of 0 if you want to update the links.
--
Regards Ron de Bruin
http://www.rondebruin.nl/tips.htm
"ryguy7272" wrote in message ...
If you have links in your workbook this (UpdateLinks:=0) will avoid the message
...from a Ron de Bruin post...
--
Ryan---
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"ker_01" wrote:
'Open workbook
Application.DisplayAlerts = False
Set twb = Workbooks.Open(FileName:=MyFullFilePath, ReadOnly:=True)
Application.DisplayAlerts = True
When my target workbook contains links, I still get a warning pop-up asking
if links should be updated, even with displayalerts = False.
So I changed the open statement to:
Application.DisplayAlerts = False
Set twb = Workbooks.Open(FileName:=MyFullFilePath, UpdateLinks:=False,
ReadOnly:=True)
Application.DisplayAlerts = True
It bypasses that initial warning, but then pops up the filesearch
wizard/userform with the title bar "Update Values: HsTbar.xla" which I'm
guessing is an add-in used by the person providing me the data sheet. This is
not what I'd expect, since I set UpdateLinks = False
I'm just trying to copy the data out of one sheet (format and values, not
formulas or links) but I need to do so in a way that is fully automated (no
user prompts) so that my code can run overnight.
How can I completely bypass the links alerts and just open the file via VBA?
Thank you,
Keith
.
.