VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data
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@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
I am going to examine the code on the existing project that grabs this same data by date range and a list from another spreadsheet. Will see how it stops its data collection to complete the macro.
It has a "Do Until" statement that keeps getting those job numbers until the date range is exceeded...wondering if I can DO UNTIL "null"?
It looks like it needs a loop to do a "Do Until"...this sheet is full of loops...LOL
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@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
I am going to examine the code on the existing project that grabs this same data by date range and a list from another spreadsheet. Will see how it stops its data collection to complete the macro.
It has a "Do Until" statement that keeps getting those job numbers until the date range is exceeded...wondering if I can DO UNTIL "null"?
You mean like when the cell is empty?
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@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
I am going to examine the code on the existing project that grabs this same data by date range and a list from another spreadsheet. Will see how it stops its data collection to complete the macro.
It has a "Do Until" statement that keeps getting those job numbers until the date range is exceeded...wondering if I can DO UNTIL "null"?
You mean like when the cell is empty?
Yes...Do Until cell is empty...unless I am just thinking too hard on this...
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@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
I am going to examine the code on the existing project that grabs this same data by date range and a list from another spreadsheet. Will see how it stops its data collection to complete the macro.
It has a "Do Until" statement that keeps getting those job numbers until the date range is exceeded...wondering if I can DO UNTIL "null"?
You mean like when the cell is empty?
Yes...Do Until cell is empty...unless I am just thinking too hard on this...
If ActiveCell.Value = vbNullString
ActiveCell is not very good, because you need to move the focus around which causes much CPU load. Just test for vbNullString, that's a predefined constant.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13360651/excel-how-to-check-if-a-cell-is-empty-with-vba
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@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
I am going to examine the code on the existing project that grabs this same data by date range and a list from another spreadsheet. Will see how it stops its data collection to complete the macro.
It has a "Do Until" statement that keeps getting those job numbers until the date range is exceeded...wondering if I can DO UNTIL "null"?
You mean like when the cell is empty?
Yes...Do Until cell is empty...unless I am just thinking too hard on this...
If ActiveCell.Value = vbNullString
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13360651/excel-how-to-check-if-a-cell-is-empty-with-vbaGreat...will see what happens...
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@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
I am going to examine the code on the existing project that grabs this same data by date range and a list from another spreadsheet. Will see how it stops its data collection to complete the macro.
It has a "Do Until" statement that keeps getting those job numbers until the date range is exceeded...wondering if I can DO UNTIL "null"?
You mean like when the cell is empty?
Yes...Do Until cell is empty...unless I am just thinking too hard on this...
If ActiveCell.Value = vbNullString
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13360651/excel-how-to-check-if-a-cell-is-empty-with-vbaGreat...will see what happens...
Don't blame me in case of a nuclear meltdown
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@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
I am going to examine the code on the existing project that grabs this same data by date range and a list from another spreadsheet. Will see how it stops its data collection to complete the macro.
It has a "Do Until" statement that keeps getting those job numbers until the date range is exceeded...wondering if I can DO UNTIL "null"?
You mean like when the cell is empty?
Yes...Do Until cell is empty...unless I am just thinking too hard on this...
If ActiveCell.Value = vbNullString
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13360651/excel-how-to-check-if-a-cell-is-empty-with-vbaGreat...will see what happens...
Don't blame me in case of a nuclear meltdown
Never...just jump into a lead lined Fridge before I begin...
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@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@thwr said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
I am going to examine the code on the existing project that grabs this same data by date range and a list from another spreadsheet. Will see how it stops its data collection to complete the macro.
It has a "Do Until" statement that keeps getting those job numbers until the date range is exceeded...wondering if I can DO UNTIL "null"?
You mean like when the cell is empty?
Yes...Do Until cell is empty...unless I am just thinking too hard on this...
If ActiveCell.Value = vbNullString
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13360651/excel-how-to-check-if-a-cell-is-empty-with-vbaGreat...will see what happens...
Don't blame me in case of a nuclear meltdown
Never...just jump into a lead lined Fridge before I begin...
*holds door open for every one to enter... passes out helmets to everyone as they pass by.
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Do Until would work fine, but you'd just have to remember to increment the row number each time...
cellColumn="W" cellRow=1 do rCell=Sheet1.Cell(cellColumn+cellRow) rem do other stuff here over many many lines rem keep doing stuff until it's done... cellRow=cellRow+1 until (rCell.value="" or rCell.value is null)
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Man I hate that "do... until()" syntax.
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@scottalanmiller said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
Man I hate that "do... until()" syntax.
Going from memory here, lol... it may barf errors all over his screen.
*passes a helmet to @scottalanmiller .
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@scottalanmiller said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
Man I hate that "do... until()" syntax.
Now guess how much fun this is when you poke around with a C++ pointer in C# managed memory (or the other way around)
Hint: You'll get memory corruptions, ObjectDisposedExceptions and other funny things in places you would never imagine. And it's even more fun when running on mono.
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This may be be digressing some but I've spent some time this afternoon debugging and stepping through code...
The code never goes back to this block once done:
For Each rCell In Worksheets("REPORT").Range("W2:W50")
Debug.Print rCell.Value:
sJob = rCell.ValueWhen it is done with Function FindJobDir
It returns to this line: vJobFolders = Split(FindJobDir(strpathtofile & sJob), ",")
and it takes the next job listed in column W and then fires off Function FindJobDirSo, where exactly do we want to put this Do Until or the If ActiveCell.Value = vbNullString????
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@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
This may be be digressing some but I've spent some time this afternoon debugging and stepping through code...
The code never goes back to this block once done:
For Each rCell In Worksheets("REPORT").Range("W2:W50")
Debug.Print rCell.Value:
sJob = rCell.ValueWhen it is done with Function FindJobDir
It returns to this line: vJobFolders = Split(FindJobDir(strpathtofile & sJob), ",")
and it takes the next job listed in column W and then fires off Function FindJobDirSo, where exactly do we want to put this Do Until or the If ActiveCell.Value = vbNullString????
It's
Do Until rCell.Value = vbNullString 'something Loop
in your case. Or some other construct (while, do..until, do..while, for etc).
Hard to tell without seeing the actual source and the spreadsheet. Could you upload it filled with some testdata?
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Update on this project...a block of code like this did the trick:
Dim reportSheet As Worksheet
Set reportSheet = Worksheets("REPORT")Dim lastRow As Integer
lastRow = reportSheet.Cells(reportSheet.Rows.Count, "W").End(xlUp).RowDim jobRange As Range
Set jobRange = reportSheet.Range("W2:W" & lastRow)For Each rCell In jobRange
Debug.Print rCell.Value ' colon is only needed for line breaks
sJob = rCell.Value
' ...
NextNow, of course, they are asking for this to go a step further. They want what is typed in Column W to be an exact match to what it goes to look and find at the file location path.
For example., there may be a job called 161616 and it may have several phases like A, B, C etc. So if say he is ordering for 161616 (no phase), it will bring in 161616 and also any A, B, or C phase that is out there. If he specifically types in 161616A, it will only pull that one.
Is there a way to make it look for an exact match?
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@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
Update on this project...a block of code like this did the trick:
Dim reportSheet As Worksheet
Set reportSheet = Worksheets("REPORT")Dim lastRow As Integer
lastRow = reportSheet.Cells(reportSheet.Rows.Count, "W").End(xlUp).RowDim jobRange As Range
Set jobRange = reportSheet.Range("W2:W" & lastRow)For Each rCell In jobRange
Debug.Print rCell.Value ' colon is only needed for line breaks
sJob = rCell.Value
' ...
NextNow, of course, they are asking for this to go a step further. They want what is typed in Column W to be an exact match to what it goes to look and find at the file location path.
For example., there may be a job called 161616 and it may have several phases like A, B, C etc. So if say he is ordering for 161616 (no phase), it will bring in 161616 and also any A, B, or C phase that is out there. If he specifically types in 161616A, it will only pull that one.
Is there a way to make it look for an exact match?
This isn't a case where I use the xlWhole command, is it???
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Are they Phases always Letters? ie: A,B,C...Z.... or are there numbers too?
I'm trying to think as to whether or not there's a LIKE operator in VBA... It's been so long I can't remember...
You might could modify the sJob....
sJob=rCell.value + "*"
And check that the routines that look for the paths are prepared for multiple targets... ie:
The user enters Job 161616 and it has Phases A,B, and C... each phase would need to be processed... That complicates things a bit though, depending on how you are looking at the folder names. Can you post that bit of code?
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@dafyre said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
Are they Phases always Letters? ie: A,B,C...Z.... or are there numbers too?
I'm trying to think as to whether or not there's a LIKE operator in VBA... It's been so long I can't remember...
You might could modify the sJob....
sJob=rCell.value + "*"
And check that the routines that look for the paths are prepared for multiple targets... ie:
The user enters Job 161616 and it has Phases A,B, and C... each phase would need to be processed... That complicates things a bit though, depending on how you are looking at the folder names. Can you post that bit of code?
Good timing...I just went back to sJob=rCell.value and was thinking it could be there. They can be letters or numbers and might be dashes sometimes.
The complex problem with this sheet is when he goes to order his steel (i.e. this sheet), he may only need phase A or just B...and when he enters that, it pulls in just that. But a good example right now is this...job 161343 also has a job called 161343_PORTAL. If he enters just 161343, that's all he needs for that week. But it still pulls _PORTAL. Same thing happens if he enters a job with phases but needs the one with no A, B, C, etc. It will still pull A, B, C. etc. and he doesn't need it .
So it is in this block:
For Each rCell In Worksheets("REPORT").Range("W2:W50")
If IsEmpty(rCell.Value) Then Exit Sub
Debug.Print rCell.Value:
sJob = rCell.ValueThat proceeds to this line vJobFolders = Split(FindJobDir(strpathtofile & sJob), ",")
And the FindJobDir subroutine is this:
Function FindJobDir(ByVal strPath As String) As String
Dim sResult As StringsResult = Dir(strPath & "*", vbDirectory)
FindJobDir = UCase$(sResult)
Do While sResult <> ""
sResult = Dir
If Len(sResult) > 0 Then FindJobDir = FindJobDir & "," & UCase$(sResult)
Loop
End FunctionUPDATE: Interesting...I did you recommended sJob=rCell.value + "*" ...putting in a job that has phases but with no phase needed for that week, brings up type mismatch error...if I put in a phased job, it completes successfully.
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@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@dafyre said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
Are they Phases always Letters? ie: A,B,C...Z.... or are there numbers too?
I'm trying to think as to whether or not there's a LIKE operator in VBA... It's been so long I can't remember...
You might could modify the sJob....
sJob=rCell.value + "*"
And check that the routines that look for the paths are prepared for multiple targets... ie:
The user enters Job 161616 and it has Phases A,B, and C... each phase would need to be processed... That complicates things a bit though, depending on how you are looking at the folder names. Can you post that bit of code?
Good timing...I just went back to sJob=rCell.value and was thinking it could be there. They can be letters or numbers and might be dashes sometimes.
The complex problem with this sheet is when he goes to order his steel (i.e. this sheet), he may only need phase A or just B...and when he enters that, it pulls in just that. But a good example right now is this...job 161343 also has a job called 161343_PORTAL. If he enters just 161343, that's all he needs for that week. But it still pulls _PORTAL. Same thing happens if he enters a job with phases but needs the one with no A, B, C, etc. It will still pull A, B, C. etc. and he doesn't need it .
So it is in this block:
For Each rCell In Worksheets("REPORT").Range("W2:W50")
If IsEmpty(rCell.Value) Then Exit Sub
Debug.Print rCell.Value:
sJob = rCell.ValueThat proceeds to this line vJobFolders = Split(FindJobDir(strpathtofile & sJob), ",")
And the FindJobDir subroutine is this:
Function FindJobDir(ByVal strPath As String) As String
Dim sResult As StringsResult = Dir(strPath & "*", vbDirectory)
FindJobDir = UCase$(sResult)
Do While sResult <> ""
sResult = Dir
If Len(sResult) > 0 Then FindJobDir = FindJobDir & "," & UCase$(sResult)
Loop
End FunctionUPDATE: Interesting...I did you recommended sJob=rCell.value + "*" ...putting in a job that has phases but with no phase needed for that week, brings up type mismatch error...if I put in a phased job, it completes successfully.
You could do a try...catch block or an onerror statement to catch that error... so if it bombs with the type mismatch, then you can force it to do try it for a non-phased job?
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@dafyre said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@garak0410 said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
@dafyre said in VBA Hint Needed - Change Way An Existing Project Grabs Data:
Are they Phases always Letters? ie: A,B,C...Z.... or are there numbers too?
I'm trying to think as to whether or not there's a LIKE operator in VBA... It's been so long I can't remember...
You might could modify the sJob....
sJob=rCell.value + "*"
And check that the routines that look for the paths are prepared for multiple targets... ie:
The user enters Job 161616 and it has Phases A,B, and C... each phase would need to be processed... That complicates things a bit though, depending on how you are looking at the folder names. Can you post that bit of code?
Good timing...I just went back to sJob=rCell.value and was thinking it could be there. They can be letters or numbers and might be dashes sometimes.
The complex problem with this sheet is when he goes to order his steel (i.e. this sheet), he may only need phase A or just B...and when he enters that, it pulls in just that. But a good example right now is this...job 161343 also has a job called 161343_PORTAL. If he enters just 161343, that's all he needs for that week. But it still pulls _PORTAL. Same thing happens if he enters a job with phases but needs the one with no A, B, C, etc. It will still pull A, B, C. etc. and he doesn't need it .
So it is in this block:
For Each rCell In Worksheets("REPORT").Range("W2:W50")
If IsEmpty(rCell.Value) Then Exit Sub
Debug.Print rCell.Value:
sJob = rCell.ValueThat proceeds to this line vJobFolders = Split(FindJobDir(strpathtofile & sJob), ",")
And the FindJobDir subroutine is this:
Function FindJobDir(ByVal strPath As String) As String
Dim sResult As StringsResult = Dir(strPath & "*", vbDirectory)
FindJobDir = UCase$(sResult)
Do While sResult <> ""
sResult = Dir
If Len(sResult) > 0 Then FindJobDir = FindJobDir & "," & UCase$(sResult)
Loop
End FunctionUPDATE: Interesting...I did you recommended sJob=rCell.value + "*" ...putting in a job that has phases but with no phase needed for that week, brings up type mismatch error...if I put in a phased job, it completes successfully.
You could do a try...catch block or an onerror statement to catch that error... so if it bombs with the type mismatch, then you can force it to do try it for a non-phased job?
catch block or an onerror statement's are new to me so researching them...