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Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help

Jim Thomlinson[_3_]

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can pass arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help


Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error message isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know about arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can pass arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help


Myrna Larson

Argument limit on user Function?
 
it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit.


There's a difference there?

Myrna Larson

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Look up the TYPE statement in Help.

On Wed, 2 Feb 2005 17:55:07 -0800, "Peter M"
wrote:

Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error message isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know about arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can pass

arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user

defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help



Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Depends on how you look at it. It's true that the current error message,
stictly speaking, does cover hitting the argument number limit. But if you
are not aware of the limit to begin with, as in my case, you waste a lot of
time counting arguments, etc, trying to figure out what's wrong, when a
simple message saying you've hit the limit would have been infinitely more
helpful. Luckily I have enough previous programming experience that it
occured to me that there may be a limit.

"Myrna Larson" wrote:

it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit.


There's a difference there?


Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Thanks. I'll look it up.


"Myrna Larson" wrote:

Look up the TYPE statement in Help.

On Wed, 2 Feb 2005 17:55:07 -0800, "Peter M"
wrote:

Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error message isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know about arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can pass

arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user

defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help




NickHK

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Peter,
IMO if you are passing 30 arguments, you should look at your design again.
If it really require these 30 different pieces of information to return a
single answer, you may be trying to do too much in one function.
If you are passing 30 cell values to calculate say an average, just pass the
Range concerned.

NickHK

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error message

isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments

for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know about

arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can pass

arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user

defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help




Bob Phillips[_6_]

Argument limit on user Function?
 
That seems unnecessarily trite. If you know you have too many, rather than
try to get to the number one less than the max, you look at a re-design.
Pushing to the boundaries is rarely a good idea.

--

HTH

RP
(remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct)


"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Depends on how you look at it. It's true that the current error message,
stictly speaking, does cover hitting the argument number limit. But if you
are not aware of the limit to begin with, as in my case, you waste a lot

of
time counting arguments, etc, trying to figure out what's wrong, when a
simple message saying you've hit the limit would have been infinitely more
helpful. Luckily I have enough previous programming experience that it
occured to me that there may be a limit.

"Myrna Larson" wrote:

it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit.


There's a difference there?




Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
That's the whole point though. I didn't know I had too many specifically
because I had hit the limit. Therefore, when the error message said I had
too many, I was looking elsewhere for the problem (eg, do the number of
arguments being passed match the number of arguments in the function, etc).
Eventually when I checked everything out, I came to the conclusion I had
probably hit a limit, but in a roundabout way. I appreciate your comments,
but it's really neither here nor there at this point. I was simply stating
an opinion that a more definitive error message when you hit the limit would
be useful.

"Bob Phillips" wrote:

That seems unnecessarily trite. If you know you have too many, rather than
try to get to the number one less than the max, you look at a re-design.
Pushing to the boundaries is rarely a good idea.

--

HTH

RP
(remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct)


"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Depends on how you look at it. It's true that the current error message,
stictly speaking, does cover hitting the argument number limit. But if you
are not aware of the limit to begin with, as in my case, you waste a lot

of
time counting arguments, etc, trying to figure out what's wrong, when a
simple message saying you've hit the limit would have been infinitely more
helpful. Luckily I have enough previous programming experience that it
occured to me that there may be a limit.

"Myrna Larson" wrote:

it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit.

There's a difference there?





Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Nick-

Thanks for your reply. Perhaps so. My programming experience is Fortran
(which obviously dates me), and in Fortran it is not uncommon to have a long
argument list. I would be happy to redesign if I knew how. What I am doing
is passing values in cells, say B11:B39 & B8 into a function I wrote in VB
which performs Newton-Raphson iteration and returns a single value, which is
the result of the iteration. Up to now the number of arguments I passed was
under the limit of 29. I need to be able to pass more than 29 though. How
can I pass these arguments, using the example I give above, pass B11:B39 &
B8. Also, what do I need to do to the function statement (if anything) to
receive arguments passed in an array form.

Thanks,

Peter

"NickHK" wrote:

Peter,
IMO if you are passing 30 arguments, you should look at your design again.
If it really require these 30 different pieces of information to return a
single answer, you may be trying to do too much in one function.
If you are passing 30 cell values to calculate say an average, just pass the
Range concerned.

NickHK

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error message

isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments

for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know about

arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can pass

arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user

defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help





Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
yes, that is correct. i am getting the error on 30

"Tom Ogilvy" wrote:

Technically, the limit is 29 - you are getting the error on 30, Yes?

--
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error message

isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many arguments

for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know about

arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can pass

arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user

defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help





Tom Ogilvy

Argument limit on user Function?
 
=myFunction(B11:B39,B8)

is two arguments. You have 27 left.

You have to write your function to work with multiple cells in a single
argument.

--
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Nick-

Thanks for your reply. Perhaps so. My programming experience is Fortran
(which obviously dates me), and in Fortran it is not uncommon to have a

long
argument list. I would be happy to redesign if I knew how. What I am

doing
is passing values in cells, say B11:B39 & B8 into a function I wrote in VB
which performs Newton-Raphson iteration and returns a single value, which

is
the result of the iteration. Up to now the number of arguments I passed

was
under the limit of 29. I need to be able to pass more than 29 though.

How
can I pass these arguments, using the example I give above, pass B11:B39 &
B8. Also, what do I need to do to the function statement (if anything) to
receive arguments passed in an array form.

Thanks,

Peter

"NickHK" wrote:

Peter,
IMO if you are passing 30 arguments, you should look at your design

again.
If it really require these 30 different pieces of information to return

a
single answer, you may be trying to do too much in one function.
If you are passing 30 cell values to calculate say an average, just pass

the
Range concerned.

NickHK

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error message

isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many

arguments
for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know about

arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can

pass
arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user

defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help







keepITcool

Argument limit on user Function?
 

While we're finding the limits for an UDF..
I max out at 57 arguments...

at 28 normal args + 29 element paramarray. = 57 arguments

call like:
with European seps..
=ArgListig1(1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10;11;12;13;14;15;16 ;17;18;19;20;21;22;23;
24;25;26;27;28;{1\2\3\4\5\6\7\8\9\10\11\12\13\14\1 5\16\17\18\19\20\21\22
\23\24\25\26\27\28\29})

with Anglo seps..
=ArgListig1(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16 ,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,
24,25,26,27,28,{1\2\3\4\5\6\7\8\9\10\11\12\13\14\1 5\16\17\18\19\20\21\22
\23\24\25\26\27\28\29})


define like:

Function ArgListig1( _
arg01$, arg02$, arg03$, arg04$, _
arg05$, arg06$, arg07$, arg08$, arg09$, _
arg10$, arg11$, arg12$, arg13$, arg14$, _
arg15$, arg16$, arg17$, arg18$, arg19$, _
arg20$, arg21$, arg22$, arg23$, arg24$, _
arg25$, arg26$, arg27$, arg28$, ParamArray argP())
ArgListig1 = "oops"
Stop 'view locals...

End Function






--
keepITcool
| www.XLsupport.com | keepITcool chello nl | amsterdam


Tom Ogilvy wrote :

Thanks for sharing that - useful information.

However, the topic was UDF. If I put your function in xl2002 (I
can't get the extra argument in the declaration in xl2002 - just for
info) and put in a formula

=ArgListig1(0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15, 16,17,18,19,20,21,22
,23,24
,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,4 1,42,43,44,45,46,47,
48,49, 50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60)

in the worksheet, it tells me there is an error in the formula and
highlights 29 (the 30th argument, note it is zero based<g). So for
a UDF, with just straight arguments, I believe it is 29.

There actually was someone complaining about this limitation about 6
months ago and of course that is the concern of the OP.


Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Thanks Tom. But what about the statement in the function itself?

Function myFuntion(?,x)

"Tom Ogilvy" wrote:

=myFunction(B11:B39,B8)

is two arguments. You have 27 left.

You have to write your function to work with multiple cells in a single
argument.

--
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Nick-

Thanks for your reply. Perhaps so. My programming experience is Fortran
(which obviously dates me), and in Fortran it is not uncommon to have a

long
argument list. I would be happy to redesign if I knew how. What I am

doing
is passing values in cells, say B11:B39 & B8 into a function I wrote in VB
which performs Newton-Raphson iteration and returns a single value, which

is
the result of the iteration. Up to now the number of arguments I passed

was
under the limit of 29. I need to be able to pass more than 29 though.

How
can I pass these arguments, using the example I give above, pass B11:B39 &
B8. Also, what do I need to do to the function statement (if anything) to
receive arguments passed in an array form.

Thanks,

Peter

"NickHK" wrote:

Peter,
IMO if you are passing 30 arguments, you should look at your design

again.
If it really require these 30 different pieces of information to return

a
single answer, you may be trying to do too much in one function.
If you are passing 30 cell values to calculate say an average, just pass

the
Range concerned.

NickHK

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error message
isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many

arguments
for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know about
arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can

pass
arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a user
defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help







Tom Ogilvy

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Not sure what you are asking. If you mean how to handle multiple cell
arguments

Public Function NonZeroAverage(rng1 as range, rng2 as range)
Dim tot as Double, cnt as Long
tot = 0
cnt = 0
for each cell in rng1
if isnumeric(cell) then
tot = tot + cell.Value
cnt = cnt + 1
end if
Next
for each cell in rng2
if isnumeric(cell) then
tot = tot + cell.Value
cnt = cnt + 1
end if
Next
if cnt < 0 then
NonZeroAverage = tot/cnt
else
NonZeroAverage = 0
end if
End Function

This is just for illustration. You are probably using a Paramarray, but it
illustrates handling any rng argument as if it was multicell. A single cell
argument would not cause a problem.

--
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy


"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks Tom. But what about the statement in the function itself?

Function myFuntion(?,x)

"Tom Ogilvy" wrote:

=myFunction(B11:B39,B8)

is two arguments. You have 27 left.

You have to write your function to work with multiple cells in a single
argument.

--
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Nick-

Thanks for your reply. Perhaps so. My programming experience is

Fortran
(which obviously dates me), and in Fortran it is not uncommon to have

a
long
argument list. I would be happy to redesign if I knew how. What I am

doing
is passing values in cells, say B11:B39 & B8 into a function I wrote

in VB
which performs Newton-Raphson iteration and returns a single value,

which
is
the result of the iteration. Up to now the number of arguments I

passed
was
under the limit of 29. I need to be able to pass more than 29 though.

How
can I pass these arguments, using the example I give above, pass

B11:B39 &
B8. Also, what do I need to do to the function statement (if

anything) to
receive arguments passed in an array form.

Thanks,

Peter

"NickHK" wrote:

Peter,
IMO if you are passing 30 arguments, you should look at your design

again.
If it really require these 30 different pieces of information to

return
a
single answer, you may be trying to do too much in one function.
If you are passing 30 cell values to calculate say an average, just

pass
the
Range concerned.

NickHK

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error

message
isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many

arguments
for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know

about
arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can

pass
arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a

user
defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help









Peter M

Argument limit on user Function?
 
Tom-
Thanks again for your help. For clarification, this is what I'm asking...

I currently have the following, which of course breaks down once you hit the
limit of 29 arguments:

In the Worksheet:
=Newton(B11,B12,B13,B14,B15,B16,B17,B18,B19,B20,B2 1,B22,
B23,B24,B25,B26,B27,B28,B29,B30,B31,B32,B33,B34,B3 5,B36,B37,
B38,B39,B38)
In VB:
Function Newton(P, n, F, A1, m1, A2, m2, A3, m3, A4,m4, A5,m5,A6, m6,
A7, m7, A8, m8, A9, m9, A10,m10, A11, m11, A12, m12, A13, m13, iannual)

To redesign, this, then:

In the Worksheet:
=Newton(B11:B39,B8)

In VB:
Function Newton(.......?) This is where I don't know what to do. Can you
please specify the exact statements to accomplish what I need?

Thanks again,
Peter










"Tom Ogilvy" wrote:

Not sure what you are asking. If you mean how to handle multiple cell
arguments

Public Function NonZeroAverage(rng1 as range, rng2 as range)
Dim tot as Double, cnt as Long
tot = 0
cnt = 0
for each cell in rng1
if isnumeric(cell) then
tot = tot + cell.Value
cnt = cnt + 1
end if
Next
for each cell in rng2
if isnumeric(cell) then
tot = tot + cell.Value
cnt = cnt + 1
end if
Next
if cnt < 0 then
NonZeroAverage = tot/cnt
else
NonZeroAverage = 0
end if
End Function

This is just for illustration. You are probably using a Paramarray, but it
illustrates handling any rng argument as if it was multicell. A single cell
argument would not cause a problem.

--
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy


"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks Tom. But what about the statement in the function itself?

Function myFuntion(?,x)

"Tom Ogilvy" wrote:

=myFunction(B11:B39,B8)

is two arguments. You have 27 left.

You have to write your function to work with multiple cells in a single
argument.

--
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Nick-

Thanks for your reply. Perhaps so. My programming experience is

Fortran
(which obviously dates me), and in Fortran it is not uncommon to have

a
long
argument list. I would be happy to redesign if I knew how. What I am
doing
is passing values in cells, say B11:B39 & B8 into a function I wrote

in VB
which performs Newton-Raphson iteration and returns a single value,

which
is
the result of the iteration. Up to now the number of arguments I

passed
was
under the limit of 29. I need to be able to pass more than 29 though.
How
can I pass these arguments, using the example I give above, pass

B11:B39 &
B8. Also, what do I need to do to the function statement (if

anything) to
receive arguments passed in an array form.

Thanks,

Peter

"NickHK" wrote:

Peter,
IMO if you are passing 30 arguments, you should look at your design
again.
If it really require these 30 different pieces of information to

return
a
single answer, you may be trying to do too much in one function.
If you are passing 30 cell values to calculate say an average, just

pass
the
Range concerned.

NickHK

"Peter M" wrote in message
...
Thanks. It's 30, because that's what I'm hitting. The error

message
isn't
very gooog though; it just says you are trying to pass too many
arguments
for
the function, instead of you've hit the limit. Anyway, I know

about
arrays,
but what are user defined types?

"Jim Thomlinson" wrote:

Yup but I do not remember what it is. Something like 40. You can
pass
arrays
and user defined types though if you get into trouble.

"Peter M" wrote:

Is there a limit on the number of arguments you can have in a

user
defined
Function in Excel?
--
Thanks for any help











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