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Marco,
I don't get it. As I said, in VBA you create a range object, it has to refer to something otherwise it is null, and you can't do a lot with a null object. -- HTH Bob Phillips ... looking out across Poole Harbour to the Purbecks (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "Marco Roberto" wrote in message ... Bob, first of all, thaks for your reply. In fact, I don't want to refer to Test. I just want to create the range in memory and perform some operations with this range like: input some values, etc. I will use this range as a parameter to the DSum worksheetfunction. Tks "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... Marco, dim r as range set r = new range creates a range object, but doesn't actually assign it to a physical range. so something like set r = Worksheet("Sheet1").Range("Test") is required to actually assign a range to the range object, and then whenever you refer to r it implicitly refers to Test. -- HTH Bob Phillips ... looking out across Poole Harbour to the Purbecks (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "Marco Roberto" wrote in message ... Hi, is there anyway to create a range in memory like: dim r as range set r = new range or I really need to set a range in a worksheet like: set r = Worksheet("Sheet1").Range("Test") Tks, Marco |
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