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#1
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I am using VB.NET to read Excel workbooks which have various named
ranges, some of which may not exist in any given workbook. I am trying to get a list of all the range names -- otherwise I need to use a Try block to avoid throwing an exception when I try to read data from ranges which aren't there, and this slows things down considerably. I am able to find the *number* of named ranges in a particular workbook using this expression: xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names.Count (where xlApp is my open Excel application handle, typed as Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Application). And knowing the names I can retrieve the ranges themselves using: xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names.Item("MyRangeName").Ref ersToRange But try as I might I can't seem to figure out how to get a list of the actual names! I tried giving the Item property an integer index, but that throws an exception. Can anyone give me a clue? (I'd also like to get a list of styles in the workbook, and I suspect this is the same problem, since I can get the number of styles defined using xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Styles.Count). -- John Brock |
#2
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John Brock wrote...
.... But try as I might I can't seem to figure out how to get a list of the actual names! I tried giving the Item property an integer index, but that throws an exception. Can anyone give me a clue? VB.NET provides an object type for Excel defined names, doesn't it? If that type were Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name, then try Dim n As Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name For Each n In xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names MsgBox Prompt:=n.RefersToRange.Address, Title:=n.Name Next n If you're coding in Visual Studio, doesn't it provide an object browser? If so, you should be able to find all the Excel object types in it. |
#3
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In article . com,
Harlan Grove wrote: John Brock wrote... ... But try as I might I can't seem to figure out how to get a list of the actual names! I tried giving the Item property an integer index, but that throws an exception. Can anyone give me a clue? VB.NET provides an object type for Excel defined names, doesn't it? If that type were Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name, then try Dim n As Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name For Each n In xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names MsgBox Prompt:=n.RefersToRange.Address, Title:=n.Name Next n If you're coding in Visual Studio, doesn't it provide an object browser? If so, you should be able to find all the Excel object types in it. Visual Studio shows me plenty of object types, I just can't get anything to work. I tried your suggestion, but it still doesn't work. I didn't want to throw up messages boxes, so I did it this way: Dim n As Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name For Each n In xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names Console.Debug("Name is: " & n.Name) Next I get a COMException exception, with the additional information "Member not found". I wonder if this could be related to the fact that I couldn't even define an enumerator for the Names property: Dim e as IEnumerator = xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names.GetEnumerator This statement also throws an the same exception, and yet GetEnumerator is one of the methods that Visual Studio suggests for Names. -- John Brock |
#5
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In article ,
Tushar Mehta wrote: Does Console have a Debug member? VS Intellisense indicated otherwise. Um..., I meant Debug.Writeline. :-/ The following works fine. Two things worth noting. Usually, I have Option Strict On. That disallows late binding and requires all the type casts in the code. Also, VS Intellisense indicated that the Names collection has no default property. Dim i As Integer With ThisApplication.ActiveWorkbook For i = 1 To .Names.Count CType(CType(.ActiveSheet, Excel.Worksheet). _ Cells(i, 1), Excel.Range).Value = _ .Names.Item(i).Name Next i End With Damn! I was doing it correctly from the beginning, except I was using 0-based indexing, and misunderstood the error message. Ouch! I'm new to VB.NET, and there is a lot I like about it, but while I am sure there are valid historical reasons for mixed indexing it is still a huge misfeature. Personally I actually prefer 1-based indexing -- which I think makes me a minority -- but please, one or the other!!! In article , says... In article . com, Harlan Grove wrote: John Brock wrote... ... But try as I might I can't seem to figure out how to get a list of the actual names! I tried giving the Item property an integer index, but that throws an exception. Can anyone give me a clue? VB.NET provides an object type for Excel defined names, doesn't it? If that type were Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name, then try Dim n As Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name For Each n In xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names MsgBox Prompt:=n.RefersToRange.Address, Title:=n.Name Next n If you're coding in Visual Studio, doesn't it provide an object browser? If so, you should be able to find all the Excel object types in it. Visual Studio shows me plenty of object types, I just can't get anything to work. I tried your suggestion, but it still doesn't work. I didn't want to throw up messages boxes, so I did it this way: Dim n As Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name For Each n In xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names Console.Debug("Name is: " & n.Name) Next I get a COMException exception, with the additional information "Member not found". I wonder if this could be related to the fact that I couldn't even define an enumerator for the Names property: Dim e as IEnumerator = xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names.GetEnumerator This statement also throws an the same exception, and yet GetEnumerator is one of the methods that Visual Studio suggests for Names. -- John Brock |
#6
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In article , says...
In article , Tushar Mehta wrote: Damn! I was doing it correctly from the beginning, except I was using 0-based indexing, and misunderstood the error message. Ouch! I'm new to VB.NET, and there is a lot I like about it, but while I am sure there are valid historical reasons for mixed indexing it is still a huge misfeature. Personally I actually prefer 1-based indexing -- which I think makes me a minority -- but please, one or the other!!! LOL! Yes, it can get confusing, but that inconsistency has been around for a while. Even if we restrict ourselves to Office, the userform components (such as ListBox) have been zero-relative whereas application collections have always been 1-relative. The same issues affect .Net. It would have been nice if MS had carried forward the VB tradition of any lower bound for an array instead of forcing it to be zero. However, this requirement applies only to .Net *arrays.* The Names collection, on the other hand, is a collection and also a part of the XL object model. -- Regards, Tushar Mehta www.tushar-mehta.com Excel, PowerPoint, and VBA add-ins, tutorials Custom MS Office productivity solutions In article , says... In article , Tushar Mehta wrote: Does Console have a Debug member? VS Intellisense indicated otherwise. Um..., I meant Debug.Writeline. :-/ The following works fine. Two things worth noting. Usually, I have Option Strict On. That disallows late binding and requires all the type casts in the code. Also, VS Intellisense indicated that the Names collection has no default property. Dim i As Integer With ThisApplication.ActiveWorkbook For i = 1 To .Names.Count CType(CType(.ActiveSheet, Excel.Worksheet). _ Cells(i, 1), Excel.Range).Value = _ .Names.Item(i).Name Next i End With Damn! I was doing it correctly from the beginning, except I was using 0-based indexing, and misunderstood the error message. Ouch! I'm new to VB.NET, and there is a lot I like about it, but while I am sure there are valid historical reasons for mixed indexing it is still a huge misfeature. Personally I actually prefer 1-based indexing -- which I think makes me a minority -- but please, one or the other!!! In article , says... In article . com, Harlan Grove wrote: John Brock wrote... ... But try as I might I can't seem to figure out how to get a list of the actual names! I tried giving the Item property an integer index, but that throws an exception. Can anyone give me a clue? VB.NET provides an object type for Excel defined names, doesn't it? If that type were Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name, then try Dim n As Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name For Each n In xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names MsgBox Prompt:=n.RefersToRange.Address, Title:=n.Name Next n If you're coding in Visual Studio, doesn't it provide an object browser? If so, you should be able to find all the Excel object types in it. Visual Studio shows me plenty of object types, I just can't get anything to work. I tried your suggestion, but it still doesn't work. I didn't want to throw up messages boxes, so I did it this way: Dim n As Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Name For Each n In xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names Console.Debug("Name is: " & n.Name) Next I get a COMException exception, with the additional information "Member not found". I wonder if this could be related to the fact that I couldn't even define an enumerator for the Names property: Dim e as IEnumerator = xlApp.ActiveWorkbook.Names.GetEnumerator This statement also throws an the same exception, and yet GetEnumerator is one of the methods that Visual Studio suggests for Names. |
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