Visual Basic for Applications

Visual Basic for Applications
Visual Basic for Applications (VBA)
Visual Basic for Applications logo
Paradigm(s) Multi-paradigm
Appeared in 1993
Developer Microsoft
Stable release 7.0 (Office 2010) (2010; 11 months ago (2010))
Typing discipline Static/Dynamic Hybrid, Strong/Weak Hybrid
Influenced by QuickBASIC, Visual Basic
OS Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X
License Proprietary EULA
Wikibooks logo VBA For Business at Wikibooks

Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) is an implementation of Microsoft's event-driven programming language Visual Basic 6 and its associated integrated development environment (IDE), which are built into most Microsoft Office applications. VBA enables building user defined functions, automating processes and accessing Windows API and other low-level functionality through dynamic-link libraries (DLLs). It was also built into Office applications apart from version 2008 for Apple's Mac OS X, other Microsoft applications such as Microsoft MapPoint and Microsoft Visio; as well as being at least partially implemented in some other applications such as AutoCAD, WordPerfect and ArcGIS. It supersedes and expands on the abilities of earlier application-specific macro programming languages such as Word's WordBasic. It can be used to control many aspects of the host application, including manipulating user interface features, such as menus and toolbars, and working with custom user forms or dialog boxes. VBA can also be used to create import and export filters for various file formats, such as OpenDocument (ODF).

As its name suggests, VBA is closely related to Visual Basic and uses the Visual Basic Runtime, but can normally only run code within a host application rather than as a standalone application. It can, however, be used to control one application from another via OLE Automation. For example, it is used automatically to create a Word report from Excel data, in turn automatically collected by Excel from polled observation sensors. The VBA IDE is reached from within an Office document by pressing the key sequence Alt+F11.

VBA is functionally rich and flexible but it does have some important limitations, such as restricted support for function pointers which are used as callback functions in the Windows API. It has the ability to use (but not create) (ActiveX/COM) DLLs, and later versions add support for class modules.

Contents

Language

Code written in VBA is compiled[1] to a proprietary intermediate language called P-code (packed code), which the hosting applications (Access, Excel, Word and PowerPoint) store as a separate stream in COM Structured Storage files (e.g., .doc or .xls) independent of the document streams. The intermediate code is then executed[1] by a virtual machine (hosted by the hosting application). Despite its resemblance to many old BASIC dialects (particularly Microsoft BASIC, from which it is indirectly derived), VBA is incompatible with any of them except Visual Basic, where source-code of VBA modules and classes can be directly imported, and which shares the same library and virtual machine. Compatibility ends with Visual Basic version 6; VBA is incompatible with Visual Basic .NET (VB.NET). VBA is proprietary to Microsoft and, apart from the COM interface, is not an open standard.

Object models

To use VBA with an application such as Access, Word or Excel, terminology and language constructions are needed to interact with the application.[2][3] This portion of VBA is called the Object Model for the application. A map of the object model is online for Excel and for Word. A listing of the object model is found by opening the Macro/VBA editor in the target application and then using "View" to open the "Object Browser" (F2).

Much of the difficulty in using VBA is related to learning the object model, which uses names invented by the originators of the model that may be less than transparent to a new user. One way to learn the terms and syntax of the object model is to use the macro recorder to record the steps taken to achieve a desired result using the mouse and menus of the application.[4] Once this is done, the VBA code constructed by the recorder can be viewed in the VBA editor, and often greatly streamlined or generalized with only a modicum of understanding of VBA itself. The macro recorder does not always record everything (particularly for graphs), and some applications employing VBA do not provide a recorder at all. Use of debugging tools to discover VBA constructs for some cases where the macro recorder does not work are described by Jelen and Syrstad,[5] but some steps may remain obscure.

A more complete description of the strengths and weaknesses of the Visual Basic language is found in Visual Basic.

VBA Coding Practices

VBA is generally used to save time by automating repetitive tasks in Microsoft Office applications like Excel, Access, Word and PowerPoint. But an improper style of coding, poor logic and lack of knowledge could introduce memory issues (sometimes even memory leaks) into the system, degrading overall performance. Common VBA practices include [6] :

  1. Analyze the logic : Before optimizing the syntax, pay more attention in optimizing the logic. Without good logic, a well written VBA macro program has no value. So streamline your program logic and get the best performance of macros. Applies to Excel, Access, Word and Powerpoint.
  2. Turn off Screen Updating : The ScreenUpdating property controls most display changes on the monitor while a procedure is running. When screen updating is turned off, toolbars remain visible and Word still allows the procedure to display or retrieve information using status bar prompts, input boxes, dialog boxes and message boxes. You can increase the speed of some procedures by keeping screen updating turned off. You must set the ScreenUpdating property to True when the procedure finishes or when it stops after an error. To turn off screen updating, use the following code. Applies to Excel, Access, Word and Powerpoint.
     Application.ScreenUpdating = False
    
  3. Set Calculations in Manual Mode : Whenever content(s) of a cell or range of cells are changed, the formulas dependent on them and Volatile functions are recalculated. You can increase the speed of some procedures by keeping automatic calculations turned off. You must set the Calculation property to automatic when the procedure finishes or when it stops after an error. To turn off the automatic calculation, use the following code. Applies to Excel only.
     Application.Calculation = xlCalculationManual
    
    To turn on the automatic calculation, use the following code.
     Application.Calculation = xlCalculationAutomatic
    
  4. Disable Page breaks : When we run a Microsoft VBA macro in a later version of Microsoft Excel, the macro may take longer to complete than it does in earlier versions of Excel. For example, a macro that required several seconds to complete in an earlier version of Excel may require several minutes to complete in a later version of Excel. To hide page breaks, use the following code. Applies to Excel, Access, Word and Powerpoint.
     ActiveSheet.DisplayPageBreaks = False
    
  5. Release memory from object variables : Whenever an object is created in VBA, two things are created 1. Object 2. Pointer (called an object reference). Some people might say, "VBA does not use pointers", but it is not true. "VBA does not let you manipulate pointers" is more precise. Behind the scenes, VBA still makes extensive use of pointers. To destroy an object in VBA, you set it to Nothing. But wait a minute. If all we ever use are object pointers, how can we set the object itself to Nothing? The answer is: We can't. When we set a reference to Nothing, something called the garbage collector kicks in. This little piece of software tries to determine whether or not an object should be destroyed. There are many ways to implement a garbage collector, but VBA uses what is called the reference count method. When VB interprets the last line(where we generally sets our objects to Nothing), it will remove the existing reference. At this point, if the object has no more references, the garbage collector will destroy the object and deallocate all its resources. If any other references point to the same object, the object will not be destroyed. Applies to Excel, Access, Word and Powerpoint.

Automation

Interaction with the host application uses OLE Automation. Typically, the host application provides a type library and application programming interface (API) documentation which document how VBA programs can interact with the application. This documentation can be examined from inside the VBA development environment using its Object Browser.

VBA programs which are written to use the OLE Automation interface of one application cannot be used to automate a different application, even if that application hosts the Visual Basic runtime, because the OLE Automation interfaces will be different. For example, a VBA program written to automate Microsoft Word cannot be used with a different word processor, even if that word processor hosts VBA.

Conversely, multiple applications can be automated from the one host by creating Application objects within the VBA code. References to the different libraries must be created within the VBA client before any of the methods, objects, etc. become available to use in the application. These application objects create the OLE link to the application when they are first created. Commands to the different applications must be done explicitly through these application objects in order to work correctly.

For example: In Microsoft Access, users automatically have access to the Access library. References to the Excel, Word and Microsoft Outlook libraries can also be created. This will allow creating an application that runs a query in Access, exports the results to Excel, formats the text, then writes a mail merge document in Word that it automatically e-mails to each member of the original query through Outlook. (In this example, Microsoft Outlook contains a security feature that forces a user to allow, disallow, or cancel an e-mail being sent through an automated process with a forced 5 second wait. Information on this can be found at the Microsoft website.)

VBA programs can be attached to a menu button, a macro, a keyboard shortcut, or an OLE/COM event, such as the opening of a document in the application. The language also provides a user interface in the form of UserForms, which can host ActiveX controls for added functionality.

Security concerns

Like any common programming language, VBA macros can be created with a malicious intent. Using VBA, most of the security features lie in the hands of the user, not the author. The VBA 'host-application' options are accessible to the user. The user who runs any document containing VBA macros can preset the software with user preferences, much like those for web browsers. End-users can protect themselves from attack by disabling macros from running in an application if they do not intend to use documents containing them, or only grant permission for a document to run VBA code if they are sure the source of the document can be trusted. However, if the author is known VBA code is no more dangerous than any other

Named variables and user-defined functions

Use of named column variables x & y in Microsoft Excel; y = x*x is calculated using the formula displayed in the formula box, which is copied down the entire y-column.
Use of a user-defined function sq(x) of named variable x in Microsoft Excel. Function supplied automatically from the code in the Visual Basic for Applications editor.

A common use of VBA is to add functionality that may be missing from the standard user interface. Use of VBA is made much easier by using named variables on the spreadsheet, as shown at the left. The formula for y=x2 resembles Fortran or BASIC, and the Name Manager shows the definitions of column variables y and x.

Using VBA, the user can add their own functions and subroutines that refer to these named ranges. In the figure at the right, the function sq is created in the Visual Basic editor supplied with Excel, and x & y are named variables in the spreadsheet.

Subroutines

Subroutine in Excel calculates the square of named column variable x read from the spreadsheet, and writes it into the named column variable y.

Functions themselves cannot write into the worksheet, but simply return their evaluation. However, in Microsoft Excel, subroutines can write values or text found within the subroutine directly to the spreadsheet. The figure shows the Visual Basic code for a subroutine that reads each member of the x-column (named column variable x), calculates its square, and writes this value into the corresponding y-column (also a named column variable). The y-column contains no formula because its values are calculated in the subroutine and simply written in..

Examples

This macro provides a shortcut for entering the current date in Word:

Sub EnterCurrentDate()
    Selection.InsertDateTime DateTimeFormat:="dd-MM-yy", InsertAsField:=False, _
         DateLanguage:=wdEnglishAUS, CalendarType:=wdCalendarWestern, _
         InsertAsFullWidth:=False
End Sub

VBA is useful for automating database tasks such as traversing a table:

Sub LoopTableExample
 
    Dim db As DAO.Database
    Dim rs As DAO.Recordset
 
    Set db = CurrentDb
    Set rs = db.OpenRecordset("select columnA, columnB from tableA")
 
    Do Until rs.EOF
         MsgBox rs!columnA & " " & rs!columnB
         rs.MoveNext
    Loop
 
    rs.Close
    Set db = Nothing
End Sub

VBA is useful for automating repeated actions in rows of a spreadsheet. For example, using the following code example, the built-in iterative solver Goal Seek is applied automatically to each row in a column array, avoiding repeated use of manual menu entry. Below a column variable "C_M" determines the values of another column variable "Target" in some nonlinear fashion. The built-in nonlinear solver Goal Seek is called to find the value of "C_M" that brings "Target" to value one. The subroutine is inserted into the workbook using the VBA editor and command Insert Module. It is called directly from the VBA editor, or by using a "hot key" or keyboard shortcut. Values on the spreadsheet automatically update as the rows are scanned.

Subroutines have the power to update the contents of the workbooks; functions do not - they simply report their evaluation.

The line Option Explicit is not part of the subroutine: it sets a compiler option that forces identification of all variables that have not been specified in Dim statements, which avoids difficult to detect debugging problems caused by typos. Notation ( ' ) in the following code denotes a comment, and ( _) line continuation. The code uses 'named' variables: a form of cell reference in which cells are assigned names of user choice, rather than the standard cell designation denoting specific row and column numbers. Naming is done on the worksheet via the Excel "Name Manager", or menu Insert Name: Create.

Option Explicit
 
Sub SetTarget()
'
' SetTarget Macro
'
   Dim J As Integer
   Dim Size As Integer
'
' On the spreadsheet, array "C_M" is a NAMED column variable
'     Its members use a row index taken as J
' Built-in function COUNT determines size of array "C_M"
'
   Size = Range("C_M").Cells.Count
'
' Set initial value of all members of array
'    C_M to 1E-06; J = row index
'
       For J = 1 To Size
           Range("C_M").Cells(J) = 0.000001
       Next J
 'Or in case of constant value
       Range("C_M") = 0.000001
'
' "Target" is another NAMED array on the spreadsheet of
'      dimension "Size"; the same size as array "C_M"
'
' Each "Target" entry in each row depends in a
'      specified way upon the value of "C_M" in that row,
'      for example, by a function such as: Target = C_M*C_M
'
' GOAL SEEK is a built-in iterative solver in Excel
'
' Call GOAL SEEK to set each "Target" member to unity: for example,
'   taking J = row index, in row J the cell named "C_M" is changed
'   by GOAL SEEK until "Target" in row J is one
'
' Syntax (aside from "for-next" details) found with macro recorder;
'      underscore "_" is line continuation
'
       For J = 1 To Size
           Range("Target").Cells(J).GoalSeek Goal := 1, _
             ChangingCell := Range("C:M").Cells(J)
       Next J
End Sub

In the example below VBA is used to get an array from a cell range, manipulate the array, and then set the values back in a different range. This works many times faster than directly setting the cell values one-by-one.

Sub CalculateSquares(rinput As Range, routput As Range)
   'Variable specifications
    Dim values() As Variant
    Dim i As Integer, N As Integer
 
    'Count the rows to compute
    N = rinput.Rows.Count
 
    'Set values array from input range.
    'Expected shape of array is (1 to N, 1 to 1)
    values = rinput.Value
 
    'Iterate through rows and set values
    For i = 1 To N
        values(i, 1) = values(i, 1) ^ 2
    Next i
 
    'Export values back into the spreadsheet by setting the
    'value property of the output range.
    routput.Value = values
 
End Sub

VBA can be used to create a user defined function (UDF) for use in a Microsoft Excel workbook:

Public Function BusinessDayPrior(dt As Date) As Date
 
    Select Case Weekday(dt, vbMonday)
        Case 1
            BusinessDayPrior = dt - 3      'Monday becomes Friday
        Case 7
            BusinessDayPrior = dt - 2      'Sunday becomes Friday
        Case Else
            BusinessDayPrior = dt - 1      'All other days become previous day
    End Select
End Function

Example of how to add an external application object (the user must have the application library referenced in the application before this):

Public Sub Example()
    Dim XLApp As Excel.Application
    Dim WDApp As Word.Application
 
    Set XLApp = CreateObject("Excel.Application")
    Set WDApp = CreateObject("Word.Application")
 
    ' ...your code here...

    XLApp.Quit
    WDApp.Quit
 
    Set XLApp = Nothing
    Set WDApp = Nothing
End Sub

Future

As of July 1, 2007, Microsoft no longer offers VBA distribution licenses to new customers. Microsoft intended to add .NET-based languages to the current version of VBA ever since the release of the .NET Framework,[7] of which versions 1.0 and 1.1 included a scripting runtime technology named Script for the .NET Framework.[8] Also, Visual Studio .NET 2002 and 2003 SDK contained a separate scripting IDE called Visual Studio for Applications (VSA) that supported VB.NET.[9][10][11] One of its significant features was that the interfaces to the technology were also available via Active Scripting (VBScript and JScript), allowing even .NET-unaware applications to be scripted via .NET languages. However, VSA was deprecated in version 2.0 of the .NET Framework,[11] leaving no clear upgrade path for applications desiring Active Scripting support (although "scripts" can be created in C#, VBScript, and other .NET languages, which can be compiled and executed at run-time via libraries installed as part of the standard .NET runtime).

Support for VBA in the Mac OS X version of Microsoft Office was dropped (for one version) with the release of Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac.[12][13] The official reason given was that VBA relied heavily on machine code written for the PowerPC architecture, and that rewriting this code for dual PowerPC/Intel architectures would have added another 2 years to the development of the suite. However, the office suite can be automated via AppleScript to an extent. VBA was restored in Microsoft Office for Mac 2011. Microsoft has also clearly stated that they have no plans to remove VBA from the Windows version of Office.[14][15]

With Office 2010 Microsoft has introduced VBA7 which now contains a true pointer data type: LongPtr. This new data type allows referencing 64-bit address space. The 64-bit install of Office 2010 does not support common controls of MSComCtl (TabStrip, Toolbar, StatusBar, ProgressBar, TreeView, ListViews, ImageList, Slider, ImageComboBox) or MSComCt2 (Animation, UpDown, MonthView, DateTimePicker, FlatScrollBar) so legacy 32-bit code ported to 64-bit VBA code that depends on these common controls will not function. The 32 bit version of Office 2010 is unaffected by this issue.[16] VBA7 includes no 64-bit version of the common controls, so it leaves developers with no means to migrate VBA applications to 64-bits. Microsoft suggests contacting the software vendor for 64-bit versions of VBA controls.

Visual Studio Tools for Applications (VSTA)

With the release of Visual Studio 2005, Microsoft announced Visual Studio Tools for Applications (VSTA). Independent Software Vendors may contact Microsoft through their vstainfo email address to inquire about licensing VSTA to provide their end-users with customization facilities within their application, in a similar way to VBA. However, VSTA uses the Visual Studio 2005 or Visual Studio 2008 development environment for programming against the .NET Framework.

VSTA was included in Office 2007 particularly for adding custom program code to InfoPath forms.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b ACC: Visual/Access Basic Is Both a Compiler and an Interpreter
  2. ^ Steven Roman (2002). Writing Excel Macros with VBA. Sebastopol CA: O'Reilly. Chapter 15. ISBN 0596003595. http://books.google.com/books?id=m4_8FNfla0kC&pg=PA183&dq=%22Excel+Object+model%22#PPA183,M1. 
  3. ^ Steven Roman (1999). Writing Word Macros. Sebastopol CA: O'Reilly. Chapter 10. ISBN 1565927257. http://books.google.com/books?id=C7oZZMt9sqkC&pg=RA1-PA128&dq=%22Word+Object+model%22. 
  4. ^ Matthew MacDonald (2005). Excel: The Missing Manual. Sebastopol CA: O'Reilly. pp. 655. ISBN 0596006640. http://books.google.com/books?id=1TwjdmRI59AC&pg=PA655&dq=Excel+%22macro+recorder%22. 
  5. ^ Jelen, B., & Syrstad, T. (2008). VBA and macros for Microsoft Office Excel 2007 (business solutions) (Second edition ed.). Indianapolis, Ind: Que. Chapter 2; pp. 42–52. ISBN 0789736829. http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0789736829/ref=sib_dp_pt/104-3686210-0230303#reader-link. 
  6. ^ 17 ways to optimize VBA code for faster macros, by Ashish Jain, December 25th, 2010
  7. ^ Visual Studio for Applications
  8. ^ Introducing Visual Studio for Applications
  9. ^ Script happens .NET: MSDN
  10. ^ Microsoft Takes Wraps Off VSA Development Technology
  11. ^ a b VSA scripting in .NET
  12. ^ "WWDC: Microsoft updates Universal status of Mac apps". Macworld. 2006-08-07. http://www.macworld.com/news/2006/08/07/msuniversal/index.php. Retrieved 2007-05-25. 
  13. ^ Office 2008 without VBA
  14. ^ The Reports of VBA's Demise Have Been Greatly Exaggerated
  15. ^ Clarification on VBA Support
  16. ^ http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee691831.aspx

External links


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