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On Mar 3, 1:45*pm, Dave Peterson wrote:
Sorry, I'm confused and out of suggestions. Andrew wrote: On Mar 3, 11:43 am, Dave Peterson wrote: I don't have any more ideas. But I wouldn't rely on the current selection. *I'd specify the destination ranges: Me.Range("A1:Z1000").Copy Worksheets("SUMM").Range("A1").PasteSpecial _ * * * Paste:=xlPasteColumnWidths, Operation:=xlNone, _ * * * * SkipBlanks:=False, Transpose:=False Worksheets("COS").Range("A1:Z1000").Copy _ * Destination:=Worksheets("SUMM").Range("A1:Z1000") Me.Range("A1", Me.Cells(startrow - 1, endcol)).Copy _ * Destination:=Worksheets("SUMMARY").Cells(1, 1) I still don't know what sheet owns the code--is it COS, Summ or Summary or something else? Andrew wrote: On Mar 3, 10:54 am, Dave Peterson wrote: If the code is in the worksheet module for sheets(1), then it's copying the cells in sheets(1). Is that what you wanted to do? It's difficult to guess what you want when you sometimes use the sheet names and sometimes use the sheet indices. And if you qualified your ranges, your could would not depend on where it's located. Andrew wrote: On Mar 3, 10:13 am, Dave Peterson wrote: You didn't answer any of my questions! But this the second .copy line in this portion: Worksheets("SUMM").Range("A1:Z1000") Range(Cells(1, 1), Cells(startrow - 1, endcol)).Copy Is copying from the current worksheet (SUMM)--well, if the code is in a general module. Is that what you wanted to do? Andrew wrote: On Mar 3, 8:46 am, Dave Peterson wrote: I'd do some checking first. Maybe the cells that you're copying aren't really empty. *The values could be hidden by a custom number format, a font color that matches the fill color, or conditional formatting. And if the cells really are empty, I'd look for some sort of event (worksheet_change) macro that's "fixing" your empty cells to show what you see. And one more... Is there a chance that you're pasting using pastelink--so that you end up with a formula? *(0.00 in each cell or "0.00 0.00 0.00" in a single cell???) Andrew wrote: Hello, I'm using VBA code to copy and paste some data from one sheet to another. *On sheet 1, there are a few cells which are blank. *When they get pasted to sheet 2, the corresponding cells have the following format: 0.00 0.00 0.00 This is one cell, not three. *I have tried to clear formatting, but this is how it is getting pasted. *Any ideas on how to fix this through VBA? thanks -- Dave Peterson Here's my code for the paste. *First I paste column widths, then I paste values. Range("A1:Z1000").Copy Worksheets("SUMM").Select Selection.PasteSpecial Paste:=xlPasteColumnWidths, Operation:=xlNone, _ * * * * SkipBlanks:=False, Transpose:=False Worksheets("COS").Range("A1:Z1000").Copy Worksheets("SUMM").Range("A1:Z1000") Range(Cells(1, 1), Cells(startrow - 1, endcol)).Copy Worksheets("SUMMARY").Cells(1, 1) Now, once the values are pasted, I then sum them in columns.. *The summation is then put into a cell beneath each column. *It is in these cells where the odd formatting is showing up. *Here is what makes it more odd...some of the summation cells show a zero properly as 0.00. Others show it as 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00....continuing as wide as you can stretch the column. *Please help. -- Dave Peterson "But this the second .copy line in this portion: Worksheets("SUMM").Range("A1:Z1000") Range(Cells(1, 1), Cells(startrow - 1, endcol)).Copy Is copying from the current worksheet (SUMM)--well, if the code is in a general module." This code exists in sheet(1). *SUMM is sheet 2. *The cells which are copied are all formatted as Number with 1000 separator and 2 decimal places. *The empty cells are empty. *But the cells where this is happening are within inserted rows. *I sum each column, then insert a row, and in that row I place the calculated values. *So, these inserted cells weren't part of the original copy. *Another item worth noting is that there are 8 columns which get summed. *The non zero values all come out with normal formatting. *Of the zero values, about half of them end up with the odd formatting. *There is no apparent pattern as to which ones come out wrong. Is that what you wanted to do? -- Dave Peterson Well, you have obviously figured out that I'm not very good at programming in Excel. *My background in C, assembly and Basic, so I do everything in standard programming constructs, such as nested For loops. *I know very little about object-oriented stuff. *I have no doubt that there is an easier method of doing what I am doing. *I just don't know what that easier way is. Here's what I want to do - I have copied over the values in Rows 1 and 2 from another sheet * * * * * *Col1 * Col 2 * *Col3 * *Col4 Row1 * * 1 * * * * 3 * * * * * * * * * *4 Row2 * * 2 * * * * 4 -------------------------------------------------- Sums * *3 * * * * 7 * * * * 0 * * * * *4 The Sums row is an addition of the given column. *I have added using nested For loops. But here's what I get, or something similar. * * * * * *Col1 * Col 2 * * * Col3 * * * * *Col4 Row1 * * 1 * * * * 3 * * * * * * * * * * * * * *4 Row2 * * 2 * * * * 4 -------------------------------------------------- Sums * *3 * * * * 7 * * * * 0.00 0.00 * * *4 The cell with 0.00 0.00 seems to have an array in the cell. *All the summed cells were calculated the same way. -- Dave Peterson Well, here's where I look like a total hack... I would like to write one code on one sheet, have all the variables global, and go from there. *But what I have done is different. *The first sheet ("COS") has the code for sorting and copying data onto the second sheet ("SUMM"). *The SUMM sheet adds the columns of numbers, inserts a new row, then writes the sums into the new row. -- Dave Peterson I ran the code on another computer. It works fine. |
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