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identifying which cell calls my VBA function.
My formula is spread over 1000 cells. Only in some of these it is wrong.
I would analize the code when the code runs for those cells. So I would set a breakpoint that consider the calling cell. I don't want to move my formula, and others one it needs, to a new workbook and reproduce the conditions for tose cells. Thanks you, Alex. |
identifying which cell calls my VBA function.
Something like
If Application.Caller.Address = "$A$1" Then ' do your stuff -- HTH Bob Phillips ... looking out across Poole Harbour to the Purbecks (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "y" wrote in message ... My formula is spread over 1000 cells. Only in some of these it is wrong. I would analize the code when the code runs for those cells. So I would set a breakpoint that consider the calling cell. I don't want to move my formula, and others one it needs, to a new workbook and reproduce the conditions for tose cells. Thanks you, Alex. |
identifying which cell calls my VBA function.
Application.Caller.Address
will give you the location of the cell that calls your UDF. -- Vasant "y" wrote in message ... My formula is spread over 1000 cells. Only in some of these it is wrong. I would analize the code when the code runs for those cells. So I would set a breakpoint that consider the calling cell. I don't want to move my formula, and others one it needs, to a new workbook and reproduce the conditions for tose cells. Thanks you, Alex. |
identifying which cell calls my VBA function.
Hi Alex,
Did Bob and Vasant's suggestion that use the Application.Caller.Address works for you? If you still have any concern on this issue, please feel free to post here. Best regards, Peter Huang Microsoft Online Partner Support Get Secure! - www.microsoft.com/security This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. |
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