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An alternative to Harlan's suggestion would be to put the x value
first, and then use a ParamArray. For more on ParamArray see the Sub statement in XL VBA help. One compiled but otherwise untested sample: Option Explicit Function Fx(ByVal x As Double, ParamArray Coeff() As Variant) Dim i As Integer, Power As Integer Power = 0 For i = LBound(Coeff) To UBound(Coeff) Fx = Fx + Coeff(i) * x ^ Power Power = Power + 1 Next i End Function And, for all those tempted to point out that I could have just as easily used i instead of Power, yes, it may be possible. However, I am not sure if the lower bound of a paramarray is guaranteed to be zero. Using my own variable works around the uncertainty. -- Regards, Tushar Mehta www.tushar-mehta.com Excel, PowerPoint, and VBA add-ins, tutorials Custom MS Office productivity solutions In article , says... I am trying to write a user-defined function that calculates a complex function, based on a given set of coefficients. For simplicity, let's say the equation is y=a + bx + cx^2. I would like to set up the user-defined function so that the argument for the coefficients can be input as a range. Thinking something like this: Function Polynomial(Coefficients,X_value) Polynomial=Coefficient(1,0) + Coefficient(2,0)*X_value + Coefficient(3,0)*X_value^2 End Function Which would be a lot handier for my application than having to set up the code as Function Polynomial(a,b,c,X_Value) Polynomial=a + b*X_value + c*X_value^2 End Function The actual function is more complex, and contains some logic testing requirements. So I am trying to avoid writing a function that requires 15 input arguments. Can you offer some insight into a classy method to accomplish this? |
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