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#1
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I have created a function that allows me to see a change everytime there is a
change on the worksheet. A comment box will appear and continue to append the changes, unlike the "track changes function". I can not seem to figure out why my comment box will not autosize......I have attached my code. Does anyone know what I am doing wrong? Function Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target1 As Excel.range) With activecell.Offset(0, 0).range("A1") On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment newtext = oldtext & "Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf .Comment.Text newtext .Comment.Visible = True .Comment.Shape.Select True .autosize = True .Comment.Visible = True End With End Function |
#2
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"JJ" wrote in message
... I have created a function that allows me to see a change everytime there is a change on the worksheet. A comment box will appear and continue to append the changes, unlike the "track changes function". I can not seem to figure out why my comment box will not autosize......I have attached my code. Does anyone know what I am doing wrong? Function Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target1 As Excel.range) With activecell.Offset(0, 0).range("A1") On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment newtext = oldtext & "Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf .Comment.Text newtext .Comment.Visible = True .Comment.Shape.Select True .autosize = True .Comment.Visible = True End With End Function Hi, It appears from reading your code that the autosize method is being applied to the cell (range) and not the comment itself. You need to reference the shape property of the comment object to return a shape object and then re-size that something like: ActiveSheet.Range("D13").Comment.Shape.ScaleWidth 1.3, msoFalse, msoScaleFromTopLeft The 1.3 was chosen randomly. BTW, what does the .range("A1") on the end of the first line do? HTH, Alan. |
#3
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Alan,
The range("A1") is so that when I have the function cover the whole sheet (ex. =worksheet_change(1:65536), it will only add a comment to the active cell. I had previously tried your proposed solution, but when a new comment is to be appended, the box multiplies by the number, in your case 1.3, instead of resizing. I know how to have a specific width, but I would like the width of the box to vary depending on the comment length. Any other suggestions? "Alan" wrote: "JJ" wrote in message ... I have created a function that allows me to see a change everytime there is a change on the worksheet. A comment box will appear and continue to append the changes, unlike the "track changes function". I can not seem to figure out why my comment box will not autosize......I have attached my code. Does anyone know what I am doing wrong? Function Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target1 As Excel.range) With activecell.Offset(0, 0).range("A1") On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment newtext = oldtext & "Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf .Comment.Text newtext .Comment.Visible = True .Comment.Shape.Select True .autosize = True .Comment.Visible = True End With End Function Hi, It appears from reading your code that the autosize method is being applied to the cell (range) and not the comment itself. You need to reference the shape property of the comment object to return a shape object and then re-size that something like: ActiveSheet.Range("D13").Comment.Shape.ScaleWidth 1.3, msoFalse, msoScaleFromTopLeft The 1.3 was chosen randomly. BTW, what does the .range("A1") on the end of the first line do? HTH, Alan. |
#4
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The following code will add a comment to the cell that was changed:
'========================= Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Excel.Range) Dim oldtext As String Dim newtext As String With Target On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment End If On Error GoTo 0 newtext = oldtext & " Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf With .Comment .Text newtext .Visible = True .Shape.TextFrame.AutoSize = True .Visible = True End With End With End Sub '============================ JJ wrote: Alan, The range("A1") is so that when I have the function cover the whole sheet (ex. =worksheet_change(1:65536), it will only add a comment to the active cell. I had previously tried your proposed solution, but when a new comment is to be appended, the box multiplies by the number, in your case 1.3, instead of resizing. I know how to have a specific width, but I would like the width of the box to vary depending on the comment length. Any other suggestions? "Alan" wrote: "JJ" wrote in message ... I have created a function that allows me to see a change everytime there is a change on the worksheet. A comment box will appear and continue to append the changes, unlike the "track changes function". I can not seem to figure out why my comment box will not autosize......I have attached my code. Does anyone know what I am doing wrong? Function Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target1 As Excel.range) With activecell.Offset(0, 0).range("A1") On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment newtext = oldtext & "Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf .Comment.Text newtext .Comment.Visible = True .Comment.Shape.Select True .autosize = True .Comment.Visible = True End With End Function Hi, It appears from reading your code that the autosize method is being applied to the cell (range) and not the comment itself. You need to reference the shape property of the comment object to return a shape object and then re-size that something like: ActiveSheet.Range("D13").Comment.Shape.ScaleWidt h 1.3, msoFalse, msoScaleFromTopLeft The 1.3 was chosen randomly. BTW, what does the .range("A1") on the end of the first line do? HTH, Alan. -- Debra Dalgleish Excel FAQ, Tips & Book List http://www.contextures.com/tiptech.html |
#5
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Thanks! I had the hardest time with that!
"Debra Dalgleish" wrote: The following code will add a comment to the cell that was changed: '========================= Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Excel.Range) Dim oldtext As String Dim newtext As String With Target On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment End If On Error GoTo 0 newtext = oldtext & " Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf With .Comment .Text newtext .Visible = True .Shape.TextFrame.AutoSize = True .Visible = True End With End With End Sub '============================ JJ wrote: Alan, The range("A1") is so that when I have the function cover the whole sheet (ex. =worksheet_change(1:65536), it will only add a comment to the active cell. I had previously tried your proposed solution, but when a new comment is to be appended, the box multiplies by the number, in your case 1.3, instead of resizing. I know how to have a specific width, but I would like the width of the box to vary depending on the comment length. Any other suggestions? "Alan" wrote: "JJ" wrote in message ... I have created a function that allows me to see a change everytime there is a change on the worksheet. A comment box will appear and continue to append the changes, unlike the "track changes function". I can not seem to figure out why my comment box will not autosize......I have attached my code. Does anyone know what I am doing wrong? Function Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target1 As Excel.range) With activecell.Offset(0, 0).range("A1") On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment newtext = oldtext & "Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf .Comment.Text newtext .Comment.Visible = True .Comment.Shape.Select True .autosize = True .Comment.Visible = True End With End Function Hi, It appears from reading your code that the autosize method is being applied to the cell (range) and not the comment itself. You need to reference the shape property of the comment object to return a shape object and then re-size that something like: ActiveSheet.Range("D13").Comment.Shape.ScaleWidt h 1.3, msoFalse, msoScaleFromTopLeft The 1.3 was chosen randomly. BTW, what does the .range("A1") on the end of the first line do? HTH, Alan. -- Debra Dalgleish Excel FAQ, Tips & Book List http://www.contextures.com/tiptech.html |
#6
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"Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message
... The following code will add a comment to the cell that was changed: '========================= Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Excel.Range) Dim oldtext As String Dim newtext As String With Target On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment End If On Error GoTo 0 newtext = oldtext & " Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf With .Comment .Text newtext .Visible = True .Shape.TextFrame.AutoSize = True .Visible = True End With End With End Sub '============================ Hi Debra, Out of interest, is there any way to hide the cell comment marker? Obviously we can hide the comment itself, but what about the red triangle marker? Also, can we avoid the comment 'popping' up when the cell is selected with a 'hidden' comment? Both of those are user annoyance issues rather than anything more fundamental. Thanks, Alan. |
#7
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You can hide all the comment indicators:
Manually -- Choose ToolsOptions, and on the View tab, for Comments, choose None Or, programmatically, e.g.: Application.DisplayCommentIndicator = xlNoIndicator If the markers are hidden the comments won't pop up Alan wrote: "Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message ... The following code will add a comment to the cell that was changed: '========================= Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Excel.Range) Dim oldtext As String Dim newtext As String With Target On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment End If On Error GoTo 0 newtext = oldtext & " Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf With .Comment .Text newtext .Visible = True .Shape.TextFrame.AutoSize = True .Visible = True End With End With End Sub '============================ Hi Debra, Out of interest, is there any way to hide the cell comment marker? Obviously we can hide the comment itself, but what about the red triangle marker? Also, can we avoid the comment 'popping' up when the cell is selected with a 'hidden' comment? Both of those are user annoyance issues rather than anything more fundamental. Thanks, Alan. -- Debra Dalgleish Excel FAQ, Tips & Book List http://www.contextures.com/tiptech.html |
#8
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"Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message
... The following code will add a comment to the cell that was changed: '========================= Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Excel.Range) Dim oldtext As String Dim newtext As String With Target On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment End If On Error GoTo 0 newtext = oldtext & " Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf With .Comment .Text newtext .Visible = True .Shape.TextFrame.AutoSize = True .Visible = True End With End With End Sub '============================ Another comment / question: Wouldn't it be more useful to use the FORMULA property of the range (cell), rather than the TEXT property on this line: newtext = oldtext & " Changed to " & .Formula & _ Is there any downside to using the FORMULA property that I am not foreseeing? Alan. |
#9
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"Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message
... You can hide all the comment indicators: Manually -- Choose ToolsOptions, and on the View tab, for Comments, choose None Or, programmatically, e.g.: Application.DisplayCommentIndicator = xlNoIndicator If the markers are hidden the comments won't pop up Thanks Debra, You're a star! Alan. |
#10
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Using .Formula instead of .Text shouldn't create any problems.
What happened when you tried it? <g Alan wrote: "Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message ... The following code will add a comment to the cell that was changed: '========================= Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Excel.Range) Dim oldtext As String Dim newtext As String With Target On Error Resume Next oldtext = .Comment.Text If Err < 0 Then .AddComment End If On Error GoTo 0 newtext = oldtext & " Changed to " & .Text & _ " by " & Application.UserName & " at " & Now & vbLf With .Comment .Text newtext .Visible = True .Shape.TextFrame.AutoSize = True .Visible = True End With End With End Sub '============================ Another comment / question: Wouldn't it be more useful to use the FORMULA property of the range (cell), rather than the TEXT property on this line: newtext = oldtext & " Changed to " & .Formula & _ Is there any downside to using the FORMULA property that I am not foreseeing? Alan. -- Debra Dalgleish Excel FAQ, Tips & Book List http://www.contextures.com/tiptech.html |
#11
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"Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message
... Using .Formula instead of .Text shouldn't create any problems. What happened when you tried it? <g Somewhat limited testing, but it seems to be fine (XL2000), and definately better for what I want to do than TEXT. Another follow up question: I would like to use the text in a comment attached to a cell in my code. The TEXT method of the Comment object allows you to SET the text of the comment, but how do I read it (programmatically)? Am I being dim here? I tried this: Prompt = ActiveCell.Comment.Text Response = MsgBox(Prompt, vbOKOnly, "This is the cell comment") But it doesn't seem to work, presumably because TEXT is not a property of the comment object? So how do we get the text out into a variable? Apologies if I am being slow / a pain! Alan. |
#12
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That should work. What result were you getting?
Alan wrote: "Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message ... Using .Formula instead of .Text shouldn't create any problems. What happened when you tried it? <g Somewhat limited testing, but it seems to be fine (XL2000), and definately better for what I want to do than TEXT. Another follow up question: I would like to use the text in a comment attached to a cell in my code. The TEXT method of the Comment object allows you to SET the text of the comment, but how do I read it (programmatically)? Am I being dim here? I tried this: Prompt = ActiveCell.Comment.Text Response = MsgBox(Prompt, vbOKOnly, "This is the cell comment") But it doesn't seem to work, presumably because TEXT is not a property of the comment object? So how do we get the text out into a variable? Apologies if I am being slow / a pain! Alan. -- Debra Dalgleish Excel FAQ, Tips & Book List http://www.contextures.com/tiptech.html |
#13
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"Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message
... That should work. What result were you getting? Apologies - it appears that the cell did not contain a comment. Hence I was getting an 'Object variable or with block variable not set' error. Sorry. However, when I tried to debug by using this: Set myComment = Activecell.Comment and then stepped into the code, and looked in the locals window, there is no 'text' property shown for the comment (even when it does actually exist and has text in it!) Am I missing the point of the locals window? Alan. PS: I appreciate you have better things to do than 'teach' me VBA coding - tell me to go read a book or play with the buses if you like - your help today has been very much appreciated. |
#14
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Text is a Method, so it won't appear in the list of properties.
Alan wrote: "Debra Dalgleish" wrote in message ... That should work. What result were you getting? Apologies - it appears that the cell did not contain a comment. Hence I was getting an 'Object variable or with block variable not set' error. Sorry. However, when I tried to debug by using this: Set myComment = Activecell.Comment and then stepped into the code, and looked in the locals window, there is no 'text' property shown for the comment (even when it does actually exist and has text in it!) Am I missing the point of the locals window? Alan. PS: I appreciate you have better things to do than 'teach' me VBA coding - tell me to go read a book or play with the buses if you like - your help today has been very much appreciated. -- Debra Dalgleish Excel FAQ, Tips & Book List http://www.contextures.com/tiptech.html |
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