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Hi Frederick
If you call your ChildProc with OnTime the calling proc will complete before ChildProc starts. If I understand your question you want to initiate deletion of all VBA in a workbook from within that workbook by calling code in another book. Perhaps something like this - ' in the wb with the VBA to delete Sub DelMyVBA() Application.Run "Book3.xls!module1.Test", ThisWorkbook.Name End Sub ' in Book3.xls Dim msWBname As String Sub Test(s As String) msWBname = s Application.OnTime Now, " DeleteAllVBA " End Sub Sub DeleteAllVBA() 'http://www.cpearson.com/excel/vbe.htm ' adapted for Late Binding Dim VBComp As Object 'VBIDE.VBComponent Dim VBComps As Object 'VBIDE.VBComponents On Error Resume Next Set VBComps = Workbooks(msWBname).VBProject.VBComponents If VBComps Is Nothing Then Exit Sub On Error GoTo 0 For Each VBComp In VBComps Select Case VBComp.Type 'Case vbext_ct_StdModule, vbext_ct_MSForm, _ vbext_ct_ClassModule Case 1, 3, 2 VBComps.Remove VBComp Case Else With VBComp.CodeModule .DeleteLines 1, .CountOfLines End With End Select Next VBComp ' Workbooks(msWBname).Save End Sub I'm sure it should be possible to pass a string variable with OnTime. No problem to pass numbers, number variables or literal strings but I can't get the syntax to pass a string var, hence use the module var msWBname. You say you want to call this from the BeforeSave event so I imagine you will want to set Cancel = true. You might also want to cater for the possibility of user wanting to cancel the Save. Regards, Peter T "Frederick Chow" wrote in message ... Hi Peter, Mind elaborating on the relevance of Application.OnTime method to my problem? Thanks. Frederick Chow Hong Kong "Peter T" <peter_t@discussions wrote in message ... Hi Fredrick, Have a look at Application.OnTime Regards, Peter T "Frederick Chow" wrote in message ... Hi Niek, Glad to tell you more detail about this. ProcParent is a WorkBook_BeforeSave which will call a subroutine, ProcChild, located in another workbook, whose job is to destroy all codes in the workbook where ProcParent is located. So at the time of finishing running ProcChild, the ProcParent will never exist, and that's why I don't want control to be returned to a non-existent ProcParent. Any advise from this? Frederick Chow Hong Kong "Niek Otten" wrote in message ... Hi Frederick, Maybe you should tell us a bit more about what you're trying to achieve; there may be alternatives that are acceptable to you. Not returning to immediately after the call is generally considered (very) bad practice and is even impossible in many programming languages. -- Kind regards, Niek Otten "Frederick Chow" wrote in message ... Hi all, Suppose I have to subroutines, ProcParent and ProcChild. ProcParent calls ProcChild. For some reasons, I don't want the control to be passed back to ProcParent after Executing ProcChild. I have searched through the VBA help and I found that both END statement and STOP statement placed in the ProcChild could do the job, but they have side effects: END will reset any module-level variables, which certainly I don't want, and the STOP statement will just leave the VB editor in (undesired) break mode. Are there any other options? Please advise. Frederick Chow Hong Kong. |
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