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UPPER CASE macro shortcut key anomaly
The following demonstrates that a macro behaves differently if the shortcut
key assigned is UPPER CASE than if the shortcut key assigned is lower case. o Create four new blank workbooks: c:\temp\a.xls, c:\temp\b.xls, c:\temp\c.xls, and c:\temp\d.xls O Put an "a" in cell A1 of workbook a.xls, a "b" in cell A1 of workbook b.xls, etc. o In workbook a.xls create two macros as follows: Sub open_them() Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\b.xls" MsgBox "Opened b.xls" Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\c.xls" MsgBox "Opened c.xls" Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\d.xls" MsgBox "Opened d.xls" End Sub Sub close_them() Windows("b.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close Windows("c.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close Windows("d.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close End Sub o Assign shortcut key (Tools/Macro/Macros/Options) o (Ctrl+o) to open_them and c (Ctrl+c) to close_them in workbook a.xls. o Enter Ctrl+o in workbook a.xls. Click OK to acknowledge the MsgBox for each of b,c, and d. The three workbooks b,c, and d are opened as expected. o Enter Ctrl+c in workbook a.xls to close the auxiliary workbooks b,c, and d. O Reassign the shortcut key for open_them in workbook a.xls to O (capital letter O) (Ctrl+Shift+o) o Enter Ctrl+Shift+o in workbook a.xls. The macro opens workbook b.xls and proceeds no further. Neither the MsgBox statement for "Opened b.xls" is displayed nor are workbooks c.xls or d.xls opened. o The above sequence fails regardless of what letters are assigned. Any upper case letter assigned to open_them fails as above. The problem is easily avoided by not using upper case letters for macro shortcut keys but is rather perplexing until the cause is identified. I had recovered/repaired/reinstalled several workbooks and Excel before isolating the difficulty. -- *** |
UPPER CASE macro shortcut key anomaly
This is a well know problem (documented in the Knowledge base or at least it
was - haven't looked lately). If you hold down the Shift Key when you open a workbook, macros are disable. As to cause; It is assumed (by me) that this is the same effect you get when using an Uppercase letter in your shortcut key (because you did Ctrl+Shift+lowercase letter). -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "beetle" wrote in message ... The following demonstrates that a macro behaves differently if the shortcut key assigned is UPPER CASE than if the shortcut key assigned is lower case. o Create four new blank workbooks: c:\temp\a.xls, c:\temp\b.xls, c:\temp\c.xls, and c:\temp\d.xls O Put an "a" in cell A1 of workbook a.xls, a "b" in cell A1 of workbook b.xls, etc. o In workbook a.xls create two macros as follows: Sub open_them() Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\b.xls" MsgBox "Opened b.xls" Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\c.xls" MsgBox "Opened c.xls" Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\d.xls" MsgBox "Opened d.xls" End Sub Sub close_them() Windows("b.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close Windows("c.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close Windows("d.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close End Sub o Assign shortcut key (Tools/Macro/Macros/Options) o (Ctrl+o) to open_them and c (Ctrl+c) to close_them in workbook a.xls. o Enter Ctrl+o in workbook a.xls. Click OK to acknowledge the MsgBox for each of b,c, and d. The three workbooks b,c, and d are opened as expected. o Enter Ctrl+c in workbook a.xls to close the auxiliary workbooks b,c, and d. O Reassign the shortcut key for open_them in workbook a.xls to O (capital letter O) (Ctrl+Shift+o) o Enter Ctrl+Shift+o in workbook a.xls. The macro opens workbook b.xls and proceeds no further. Neither the MsgBox statement for "Opened b.xls" is displayed nor are workbooks c.xls or d.xls opened. o The above sequence fails regardless of what letters are assigned. Any upper case letter assigned to open_them fails as above. The problem is easily avoided by not using upper case letters for macro shortcut keys but is rather perplexing until the cause is identified. I had recovered/repaired/reinstalled several workbooks and Excel before isolating the difficulty. -- *** |
UPPER CASE macro shortcut key anomaly
This is what MS refers to as an "issue". Holding down the shift key while you
open a workbook manually is a way to disable macros that would otherwise run after the workbook is opened. If you assign a shortcut key that requires an upper case letter, Excel erroneously (IMO) "remembers" the shift key was pressed, and behaves the way it would if you were opening it manually. You have figured out the "lesson": don't use upper case letters for shortcut keys. IIRC, this problem was elucidated in an article in the MS Knowledge Base, accessible (with undue difficulty these days) from www.support.microsoft.com On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 16:39:03 -0700, beetle wrote: The following demonstrates that a macro behaves differently if the shortcut key assigned is UPPER CASE than if the shortcut key assigned is lower case. o Create four new blank workbooks: c:\temp\a.xls, c:\temp\b.xls, c:\temp\c.xls, and c:\temp\d.xls O Put an "a" in cell A1 of workbook a.xls, a "b" in cell A1 of workbook b.xls, etc. o In workbook a.xls create two macros as follows: Sub open_them() Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\b.xls" MsgBox "Opened b.xls" Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\c.xls" MsgBox "Opened c.xls" Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\d.xls" MsgBox "Opened d.xls" End Sub Sub close_them() Windows("b.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close Windows("c.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close Windows("d.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close End Sub o Assign shortcut key (Tools/Macro/Macros/Options) o (Ctrl+o) to open_them and c (Ctrl+c) to close_them in workbook a.xls. o Enter Ctrl+o in workbook a.xls. Click OK to acknowledge the MsgBox for each of b,c, and d. The three workbooks b,c, and d are opened as expected. o Enter Ctrl+c in workbook a.xls to close the auxiliary workbooks b,c, and d. O Reassign the shortcut key for open_them in workbook a.xls to O (capital letter O) (Ctrl+Shift+o) o Enter Ctrl+Shift+o in workbook a.xls. The macro opens workbook b.xls and proceeds no further. Neither the MsgBox statement for "Opened b.xls" is displayed nor are workbooks c.xls or d.xls opened. o The above sequence fails regardless of what letters are assigned. Any upper case letter assigned to open_them fails as above. The problem is easily avoided by not using upper case letters for macro shortcut keys but is rather perplexing until the cause is identified. I had recovered/repaired/reinstalled several workbooks and Excel before isolating the difficulty. |
UPPER CASE macro shortcut key anomaly
Here is one version of it:
http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;175223 XL97: Visual Basic Procedure Halts on Workbooks.Open -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message ... This is a well know problem (documented in the Knowledge base or at least it was - haven't looked lately). If you hold down the Shift Key when you open a workbook, macros are disable. As to cause; It is assumed (by me) that this is the same effect you get when using an Uppercase letter in your shortcut key (because you did Ctrl+Shift+lowercase letter). -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "beetle" wrote in message ... The following demonstrates that a macro behaves differently if the shortcut key assigned is UPPER CASE than if the shortcut key assigned is lower case. o Create four new blank workbooks: c:\temp\a.xls, c:\temp\b.xls, c:\temp\c.xls, and c:\temp\d.xls O Put an "a" in cell A1 of workbook a.xls, a "b" in cell A1 of workbook b.xls, etc. o In workbook a.xls create two macros as follows: Sub open_them() Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\b.xls" MsgBox "Opened b.xls" Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\c.xls" MsgBox "Opened c.xls" Workbooks.Open Filename:="c:\temp\d.xls" MsgBox "Opened d.xls" End Sub Sub close_them() Windows("b.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close Windows("c.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close Windows("d.xls").Activate ActiveWindow.Close End Sub o Assign shortcut key (Tools/Macro/Macros/Options) o (Ctrl+o) to open_them and c (Ctrl+c) to close_them in workbook a.xls. o Enter Ctrl+o in workbook a.xls. Click OK to acknowledge the MsgBox for each of b,c, and d. The three workbooks b,c, and d are opened as expected. o Enter Ctrl+c in workbook a.xls to close the auxiliary workbooks b,c, and d. O Reassign the shortcut key for open_them in workbook a.xls to O (capital letter O) (Ctrl+Shift+o) o Enter Ctrl+Shift+o in workbook a.xls. The macro opens workbook b.xls and proceeds no further. Neither the MsgBox statement for "Opened b.xls" is displayed nor are workbooks c.xls or d.xls opened. o The above sequence fails regardless of what letters are assigned. Any upper case letter assigned to open_them fails as above. The problem is easily avoided by not using upper case letters for macro shortcut keys but is rather perplexing until the cause is identified. I had recovered/repaired/reinstalled several workbooks and Excel before isolating the difficulty. -- *** |
UPPER CASE macro shortcut key anomaly
Aha, bitten by a 'creature' feature...thanks for the link to the article.
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