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Does anyone know of a good tutorial on the best way to loop through
the values of a 2-D input range in a UDF? See my reply to your later post. In short, you should pass a Range as a parameter and do your calculations based on that range. In this case, it doesn't matter which might be active when the calculation takes place -- the Range parameter will always refer to the correct worksheet. If for some reason you need to get the cell or worksheet on which the UDF function was entered, you can use Application.Caller. This will return a reference to the cell containing the formula. From that, you can get a Worksheet reference and a Workbook reference. Cordially, Chip Pearson Microsoft Most Valuable Professional Excel Product Group, 1998 - 2009 Pearson Software Consulting, LLC www.cpearson.com (email on web site) On Tue, 7 Apr 2009 21:40:00 -0700 (PDT), Greg wrote: I did some debugging and I found out that the loop "For Each Cell in Subset Range" is looping through the cells in the worksheet that is active at the time the macro is run, instead of the worksheet of the cell that contains the function. I need to find a way to loop through the values on the sheet where the function is located instead of the active sheet at the time when the subroutine is run regardless of which sheet is active when the workbook is recalculated. Does anyone know of a good tutorial on the best way to loop through the values of a 2-D input range in a UDF? |
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