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Brian,
I called it famously kludgy, meaning that it was very kludgy, not that it was actually famous. -- HTH Bob Phillips ... looking out across Poole Harbour to the Purbecks (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "Brian Murphy" wrote in message ... Hello Bob, Thanks for the reply. I'm curious about why you call the solution "famous". Has this solution been discussed or otherwise posted on this group before? Last night I had cooked up a much kludgier solution where I also detect the presence of the sheet level name being returned in place of a book level name, but then I insert a blank worksheet into the file to temporarily be the first sheet, then delete the sheet after I'm done. I like yours better, and I'm going to give it a try. Thanks, Brian ps: We've been in Austin since 1993. It's hot in the summer, but we're not exactly the cold weather sort. "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... Hi Brian, There must be a better way, but as I can't see it right now, I have come up with this famously kludgy solution - I delete the worksheet name then re-instate it Dim iPos As Long Dim nme As String Dim refersto As String Debug.Print ActiveWorkbook.Names("Bob").Name Debug.Print Evaluate(ActiveWorkbook.Names("Bob").refersto) If InStr(1, ActiveWorkbook.Names("Bob"), "!") 0 Then nme = ActiveWorkbook.Names("Bob").Name refersto = ActiveWorkbook.Names("Bob").refersto ActiveWorkbook.Names("Bob").Delete End If Debug.Print ActiveWorkbook.Names("Bob").Name Debug.Print Evaluate(ActiveWorkbook.Names("Bob").refersto) If nme < "" Then ActiveWorkbook.Names.Add Name:=nme, _ refersto:=refersto End If How is Austin. Lived there in the late 80's, and loved the place, especially the music scene. Used to go and see Jimmy Dale Gilmore in a diner up north, great days. -- HTH Bob Phillips ... looking out across Poole Harbour to the Purbecks (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "Brian Murphy" wrote in message ... I'm having trouble finding a fail safe syntax to return a Name object that refers to a cell range. set obj = ActiveWorkbook.Names(somename) Here "somename" is a book level name that refers to a range of cells. The statement above returns a range object for the cells. Well, sometimes, but not all the time. If the first sheet in the workbook also contains a sheet level name called "somename", then the above statement returns those cells instead. So, I'm hoping there is some sort of statement syntax that will work regardless of whether the first sheet has a like named sheet level name. Thanks, Brian Murphy Austin, Texas |
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