No, it makes not difference. A VBA macro that is called from a formula in a
worksheet cell can do NOTHING except calculate a result and return that result
to the cell containing the formula. i.e. it behaves the same as the built-in
functions like SUM, AVERAGE, etc.
To actually "run a macro" (what most people mean by that) requires an Event
macro.
On Thu, 17 Mar 2005 09:45:06 -0800, Rod wrote:
I need to paste this if conditional into a few hundred cells. It would look
something like:
=if(and(j59<"",K59=""),RunMacro,"")
...
=if(and(j2059<"",K2059=""),RunMacro,"")
Does this make a difference for your recommendation?
Thanks
"Bob Phillips" wrote:
You can't. A function can only return a value.
You could use event code to monitor a cell and then run the macro if it
takes a certain value
Private Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Range)
On Error GoTo ws_exit:
Application.EnableEvents = False
If Not Intersect(Target, Me.Range("H10")) Is Nothing Then
With Target
If .Value = "a" Then
myMacro
End If
End With
End If
ws_exit:
Application.EnableEvents = True
End Sub
'This is worksheet event code, which means that it needs to be
'placed in the appropriate worksheet code module, not a standard
'code module. To do this, right-click on the sheet tab, select
'the View Code option from the menu, and paste the code in.
--
HTH
RP
(remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct)
"Rod" wrote in message
...
How can I have an "IF" statement run a macro, i.e.
=If("a"="a",RunMacroHere,"") ?
Thanks
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