Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"BrkenRecord" wrote:
Subject: Using ActiveCell.Value Yields Circular Reference Function HelpPlease() Call GetTableValue(i) MsgBox "value is" & i End Function Sub GetTableValue(i) Sheets("TableC11").Select Range("A6").Select i = ActiveCell.Value End Sub You neglect to state the context. I presume you are call calling HelpPlease from an Excel formula, for example =HelpPlease(). See the example VBA code below. If you enter =myfunc1() into Sheet1!A1 for example, you will get a circular reference error the first time, and you will always see the zero return value. The primary problem is the Select method. You cannot use Select in the context of a function that is called from an Excel formula. Note that I say "in the context" and "called from an Excel formula". It does not matter that the Select usage is actually in a sub(routine). What matters is: the first-level VBA context is a function. In contrast, note that =myfunc2() works -- usually, specifically in Sheet1!A1. However, if you put =myfunc2() into Sheet3!C3, you will get a ciruclar reference error the first time, and you will always see the zero return value. That demonstrates a secondary problem: you cannot reference the same cell from which the function context is called directly or indirectly. Finally, try executing the "doit" macro. Note that it works fine, despite the use of Select in the function context. That demonstrates that the problem is not the use of Select in a function context so much as the context in which it is executed; that is, whether or not the function context is called directly or indirectly from an Excel formula at the time. PS: As you play with the example VBA procedures below, you might discover some other interesting anomalies of Excel. ----- Option Explicit Sub doit() Dim x Sheets("sheet1").Select ' something not Sheet3, for demo purposes x = myfunc1() MsgBox "doit" & vbNewLine & x End Sub Function myfunc1() Dim x Call mysub1(x) MsgBox "myfunc1" & vbNewLine & x myfunc1 = x End Function Function myfunc2() Dim x Call mysub2(x) MsgBox "myfunc2" & vbNewLine & x myfunc2 = x End Function Sub mysub1(x) Sheets("sheet3").Select Range("c3").Select x = ActiveCell.Address & vbNewLine & ActiveCell MsgBox "mysub1" & vbNewLine & x End Sub ' note-1: use of "r" below is for programming convenience. ' we could use Sheets("sheet3").Range("c3") directly ' a With statement instead ' ' note-2: the reference r is the same as r.Value since ' Value is the default property for a Range object Sub mysub2(x) Dim r As Range Set r = Sheets("sheet3").Range("c3") x = r.Address & vbNewLine & r MsgBox "mysub2" & vbNewLine & x End Sub |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
circular reference | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Circular Reference | Excel Programming | |||
Circular Reference? | Excel Programming | |||
HELP: circular reference | Excel Programming | |||
Circular Reference | Excel Worksheet Functions |