book
Bob,
No disrespect taken.
However I read what Rich wanted as specifics on certain bits of syntax
'rather than a set of prebuilt programs'. The book you refer to may well
provide this, however so does help (yes albeit without the fluffy stuff, and
I accept over time I've found some of it incomprehensible).
Fundamentally you learn over time by using not by reading books (on the bus
or otherwise). Help is integrated into the product, 'F1' and you get
something, why not use it? (And no I don't work for Microsoft ...)
Regards,
Chris.
--
Chris Marlow
MCSD.NET, Microsoft Office XP Master
"Bob Phillips" wrote:
No disrespect Chris, but you have to be joking. It is 'okayish' to look up
individual questions, but it is not structured as a good book is, and
doesn't put the object model into context, unless you go down a hugely
onerous object model tree.
Bob
"Chris Marlow" wrote in message
...
Hi,
I'm not trying to be funny but have you tried using help? I accept that it
is not big and papery & you can't read it on the bus, but if you have a
printer to hand ...
Regards,
Chris.
--
Chris Marlow
MCSD.NET, Microsoft Office XP Master
"Rich Mcc" wrote:
am looking for a vba refrence book .. rather than a idiots guide ..
i.e one that list the various "codes" and what their options are,,
rather
than a set of pre built programs
and ideal would be apreciated
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