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#1
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In row 7 of Columns G thru R (12 columns) of a worksheet called "output", I have dates for January 31st thru Dec 31st (in a given year). Based on an input cell that contains one of these 12 dates, I want to hide all columns (in that year) that are on or before that date. So, I could start with column G and hide it as well as up to 11 more columns immediately to its right. Example, if the input date were 7/31, I would want to hide the first seven columns and keep the last five. I guess column G would always be hidden with this algorithm.
Can anyone help me with the syntax of such a macro? Thank you very much! Also, somewhere on the web, I seem to recall a site with loads of examples of EXCEL macros for doing common things. Often I can figure out how to adapt one of these. Can anyone help me to rediscover it? Dean |
#2
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Assume the input date is in cell B2:
columns("G").Resize(,month(Range("B2").Value).Enti reColumn.Hidden = True -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: In row 7 of Columns G thru R (12 columns) of a worksheet called "output", I have dates for January 31st thru Dec 31st (in a given year). Based on an input cell that contains one of these 12 dates, I want to hide all columns (in that year) that are on or before that date. So, I could start with column G and hide it as well as up to 11 more columns immediately to its right. Example, if the input date were 7/31, I would want to hide the first seven columns and keep the last five. I guess column G would always be hidden with this algorithm. Can anyone help me with the syntax of such a macro? Thank you very much! Also, somewhere on the web, I seem to recall a site with loads of examples of EXCEL macros for doing common things. Often I can figure out how to adapt one of these. Can anyone help me to rediscover it? Dean |
#3
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This looks awesomely simple, Tom, but I don't remember what else I need
before or after it to actually perform the task. Can you help? Dean "Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message ... Assume the input date is in cell B2: columns("G").Resize(,month(Range("B2").Value).Enti reColumn.Hidden = True -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: In row 7 of Columns G thru R (12 columns) of a worksheet called "output", I have dates for January 31st thru Dec 31st (in a given year). Based on an input cell that contains one of these 12 dates, I want to hide all columns (in that year) that are on or before that date. So, I could start with column G and hide it as well as up to 11 more columns immediately to its right. Example, if the input date were 7/31, I would want to hide the first seven columns and keep the last five. I guess column G would always be hidden with this algorithm. Can anyone help me with the syntax of such a macro? Thank you very much! Also, somewhere on the web, I seem to recall a site with loads of examples of EXCEL macros for doing common things. Often I can figure out how to adapt one of these. Can anyone help me to rediscover it? Dean |
#4
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OK, I think I found the problem - there was a right parenthesis missing
Thanks, Tom for a very clever single - line solution. "Dean" wrote in message ... This looks awesomely simple, Tom, but I don't remember what else I need before or after it to actually perform the task. Can you help? Dean "Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message ... Assume the input date is in cell B2: columns("G").Resize(,month(Range("B2").Value).Enti reColumn.Hidden = True -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: In row 7 of Columns G thru R (12 columns) of a worksheet called "output", I have dates for January 31st thru Dec 31st (in a given year). Based on an input cell that contains one of these 12 dates, I want to hide all columns (in that year) that are on or before that date. So, I could start with column G and hide it as well as up to 11 more columns immediately to its right. Example, if the input date were 7/31, I would want to hide the first seven columns and keep the last five. I guess column G would always be hidden with this algorithm. Can anyone help me with the syntax of such a macro? Thank you very much! Also, somewhere on the web, I seem to recall a site with loads of examples of EXCEL macros for doing common things. Often I can figure out how to adapt one of these. Can anyone help me to rediscover it? Dean |
#5
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Sub ABC()
Dim i as Long ' determine the number of months to hide i = Month(Range("B2").Value) ' unhide all columns in G to R Columns("G").Resize(,12).Entirecolumn.Hidden = False ' no hide the appropriate columns columns("G").Resize(,i).EntireColumn.Hidden = True End sub Obviously change Range("B2") to the appropriate reference. -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: This looks awesomely simple, Tom, but I don't remember what else I need before or after it to actually perform the task. Can you help? Dean "Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message ... Assume the input date is in cell B2: columns("G").Resize(,month(Range("B2").Value).Enti reColumn.Hidden = True -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: In row 7 of Columns G thru R (12 columns) of a worksheet called "output", I have dates for January 31st thru Dec 31st (in a given year). Based on an input cell that contains one of these 12 dates, I want to hide all columns (in that year) that are on or before that date. So, I could start with column G and hide it as well as up to 11 more columns immediately to its right. Example, if the input date were 7/31, I would want to hide the first seven columns and keep the last five. I guess column G would always be hidden with this algorithm. Can anyone help me with the syntax of such a macro? Thank you very much! Also, somewhere on the web, I seem to recall a site with loads of examples of EXCEL macros for doing common things. Often I can figure out how to adapt one of these. Can anyone help me to rediscover it? Dean |
#6
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I guess out posts were crossing. Am I wrong or was your one line solution
enough? It seems to work fine, now. Newbie that I am, when the compiler produced a red font, I didn't think to check the obvious, a missing right paren. D "Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message ... Sub ABC() Dim i as Long ' determine the number of months to hide i = Month(Range("B2").Value) ' unhide all columns in G to R Columns("G").Resize(,12).Entirecolumn.Hidden = False ' no hide the appropriate columns columns("G").Resize(,i).EntireColumn.Hidden = True End sub Obviously change Range("B2") to the appropriate reference. -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: This looks awesomely simple, Tom, but I don't remember what else I need before or after it to actually perform the task. Can you help? Dean "Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message ... Assume the input date is in cell B2: columns("G").Resize(,month(Range("B2").Value).Enti reColumn.Hidden = True -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: In row 7 of Columns G thru R (12 columns) of a worksheet called "output", I have dates for January 31st thru Dec 31st (in a given year). Based on an input cell that contains one of these 12 dates, I want to hide all columns (in that year) that are on or before that date. So, I could start with column G and hide it as well as up to 11 more columns immediately to its right. Example, if the input date were 7/31, I would want to hide the first seven columns and keep the last five. I guess column G would always be hidden with this algorithm. Can anyone help me with the syntax of such a macro? Thank you very much! Also, somewhere on the web, I seem to recall a site with loads of examples of EXCEL macros for doing common things. Often I can figure out how to adapt one of these. Can anyone help me to rediscover it? Dean |
#7
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6 of one, half dozen of another.
I actually thought you wanted to know how to do Sub MySub() End Sub so I broke it into pieces to boot and added some comments (hard to comment a single line with multiple parts) No the original line is fine with the addition of the right paren and the correction for word wrap in the post -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: I guess out posts were crossing. Am I wrong or was your one line solution enough? It seems to work fine, now. Newbie that I am, when the compiler produced a red font, I didn't think to check the obvious, a missing right paren. D "Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message ... Sub ABC() Dim i as Long ' determine the number of months to hide i = Month(Range("B2").Value) ' unhide all columns in G to R Columns("G").Resize(,12).Entirecolumn.Hidden = False ' no hide the appropriate columns columns("G").Resize(,i).EntireColumn.Hidden = True End sub Obviously change Range("B2") to the appropriate reference. -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: This looks awesomely simple, Tom, but I don't remember what else I need before or after it to actually perform the task. Can you help? Dean "Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message ... Assume the input date is in cell B2: columns("G").Resize(,month(Range("B2").Value).Enti reColumn.Hidden = True -- Regards, Tom Ogilvy "Dean" wrote: In row 7 of Columns G thru R (12 columns) of a worksheet called "output", I have dates for January 31st thru Dec 31st (in a given year). Based on an input cell that contains one of these 12 dates, I want to hide all columns (in that year) that are on or before that date. So, I could start with column G and hide it as well as up to 11 more columns immediately to its right. Example, if the input date were 7/31, I would want to hide the first seven columns and keep the last five. I guess column G would always be hidden with this algorithm. Can anyone help me with the syntax of such a macro? Thank you very much! Also, somewhere on the web, I seem to recall a site with loads of examples of EXCEL macros for doing common things. Often I can figure out how to adapt one of these. Can anyone help me to rediscover it? Dean |
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