When you want Excel to do some work for you, you open the Visual Basic Editor and you write the instructions in a language that Excel understands VBA (Visual Basic for Application). You will develop, test and modify VBA procedures (macros) in the Excel Visual Basic Editor (VBE). It is a very user-friendly development environment. VBA Full Form: Visual Basic for Application. It's a sub component of visual basic programming language that you can use to create applications in excel. With VBA, you can still take advantage of the powerful features of excel and use them in VBA.
To organize your discovery of Excel macros, the downloadable Tutorial on Excel Macros is divided in three sections (all 3 sections part of the single download):
Section 1: Excel Macros Programming (Chapters 1 to 10)
This section is about recording, writing, modifying and testing macros in the Visual Basic Editor. You will also learn about security and discover 'events' (an event is what starts the macro).
Section 2: Excel VBA Vocabulary (Chapters 11 to 23)
Developing a macro is communicating with Excel and to do so you need to use a language called Visual Basic for Applications (VBA). In section 2 you will learn all the VBA vocabulary that is essential to work with business data (accounting, sales, production and others).
Section 3: Forms and Controls in VBA for Exce (Chapters 24 to 33)
The userform is a small or large dialog window that you create and allows the user to submit values that will be used by your macros. To these userforms you will add controls (command buttons, text boxes, list boxes and others) and program them.
Table of Contents
for the downloadable course on Excel macros
Chapter 1: Visual Basic Editor (VBE) in Excel
The Visual Basic Editor is the user friendly program that you will use to talk with Excel. In it you can create your VBA procedures (macros) and userforms. You will then be able to modify and test these components easily step by step in the VBE. Many of our clients have asked us if Excel will ever become obsolete, here are our thoughts on this.
What Programming Language Does Excel Use
Chapter 2: The Project Window in the Visual Basic Editor of Excel
The Project Window lists all your open projects with their sheets, modules and forms. In the Project Window you will add modules and create forms. When you select one of the components its properties will show in the Properties Window and the VBA code that you have created for the selected component will appear in the Code Window.
Chapter 3: The Properties Window in the Visual Basic Editor of Excel
Ubuntu virtual image. The Properties Window shows you the properties of the object that is selected in the Project Window (sheet, module) or the properties of the control (command button, text box, list box, etc..) that is selected on the forms. You will use this window often when you start developing forms (userforms).
Chapter 4: The Code Window in the Visual Basic Editor of Excel
All the action happens in the Code Window. In this large window you or the Macro Recorder will write macros. You will also test and fine tune all your macros in the Code Window.
Chapter 5: Developing Macros in the VBE
In this lesson you will learn how to create a new VBA procedure. You will organize sets of sentences to tell Excel what to do. You can key them in or copy/paste them from recorded macros, from one of your old macros or from the Internet where you will find millions of free macros.
Chapter 6: Testing Macros in the VBE
When you develop macros in Excel you spend 20% of your time analyzing the project, 15% writing your VBA procedures and 65% testing and fine tuning them. Split your screen, use the F8* key and you can see what your procedure does in Excel step by step. Back up, correct and re-test.
Chapter 7: Excel Macro Recorder
The Macro Recorder is the best teacher and it will be a great assistant (writing code for you) even when you become an expert at programming in VBA. In this lesson you will learn about the Macro Recorder and you will try it. You will also run and test the macro that you have recorded.
Chapter 8: Macros Help and Assistance
There is plenty of help and assistance available within Excel when you develop macros. As you have discovered in the previous lesson the Macro Recorder is a great teacher and assistant. In this lesson we investigate the two other sources of assistance within the Visual Basic Editor of Excel: the Help Files and the Object Browser.
Chapter 9: VBA Events
Once you have developed your macros you need to trigger them so that they start. The trigger is called an event. The most frequently used event is the click on a button. In this lesson you will learn how to add a button to your sheet and how to connect it to your macro. You will also learn how to start a macro by opening a workbook (also called spreadsheet or Excel file), by closing a workbook and even by changing the valueof a cell.
Chapter 10: VBA Security and Protection
You cannot harm your computer with macros so be bold in experimenting with macros you will learn more and faster. In this lesson you will learn how to protect you code, your sheets and your workbooks.
Chapter 11: VBA Coding Tips
Assembling VBA words into sentences is called coding. Here are interesting tips to make things easier when you start coding.
Chapter 12: Dealing withErrors
VBA tells you immediately when the code that you have written is wrong. When the logic is wrong or when the user gives a wrong answer these errors need to be handled. Diskutil partitiondisk apfs. In this lesson you will learn the necessary vocabulary to deal with errors.
Chapter 13: Working with the Application
The Application is EXCEL itself. Add 15 new VBA words to your vocabulary like Application.Quit, Application.ScreenUpdating = False, Application.CutCopyMode=False and others .
Chapter 14: Working with the Workbooks
Some people call them spreadsheets or Excel files VBA calls them workbooks. Here are other VBA words to add to your vocabulary. You will learn to work with ThisWorkbook (the workbook in which runs the macro) with many workbooks and even with all the workbooks in a directory.
Chapter 15: Working with the Worksheets
There can be 256 sheets in a single workbook. In this lesson you will discover the vocabulary to move from one to the other, to copy/paste from one to the other, to add and delete worksheets and even go from the first to the last sheet of a workbook to do something on all of them. You will also learn how to copy the sheets into another workbooks or to transform a single sheet into a workbook.
Chapter 16: Moving Around the Worksheet
In this lesson you will improve your VBA vocabulary with 40 some words to work within the worksheet. You will learn how to select a cell or a group of cells and how to count the rows and columns. You will learn how to change the value of a cell or insert a formula in it. The 5 VBA words that you will use the most moving around the sheets are Range, Select, Offset, Activecell and CurrentRegion. What you can do with these 5 words and tens of other important words is coveredin this lesson.
Chapter 17: Working with Message and Input Boxes
You will use message boxes or input boxes to communicate with the user. Through these pop-ups the user can supply bits of data or say ' Yes, No, Ok, Cancel' and other short answers during the execution of a macro.
Chapter 18: Excel VBA Vocabulary to Filter and Sort Data
Excel offers you the most powerful database tools (sorting, filtering, etc..). With VBA these tools become even more powerful. You will learn how to use them with the data that you extract from large centralized databases (SAP, Oracle, EssBase, Access, etc.), from accounting and sales programs and with financial data that you can download from the Internet.
Chapter 19: Working with Variables
The variable is the concept that will launch your creativity and allow you to develop real programs in Excel. It will empower you to develop sophisticated programs and work extremely rapidly with very large sets of data. Before learning about variables you develop macros after you develop programs.
Chapter 20: Working with Statements
They are the KILL, the IF_THEN_ELSE_END IF, the SELECT-CASE, the DO_LOOP, the FOR_NEXT..
Chapter 21: Working with Functions
There are Excel functions and VBA functions. Three topics are covered in this lesson. You can use existing Excel functions within VBA or you can create brand new Excel functions with VBA and you can use VBA functions.
Chapter 22: Working with external data and SQL
When you connect to outside sources of data (large databases, text files, other Excel workbooks, Access, etc.) the computer is using SQL (Structured Query Language) a specialized language to work with data. You can use Excel's functionalities to connect and extract data but you can also use directly the SQL language top extract data. It is the fastest way to access any external data.
Chapter 23: Working with Windows and other Microsoft Programs FROM Excel
With VBA for Excel you can develop VBA procedures (macros) to work within Excel while calling other Microsoft programs like Access, Notepad, Word, Project and even Windows.
Chapter 24: Forms (Userforms) in VBA for Excel
You have used message boxes and input boxes to communicate with the user while the macro was running. When these tools are no longer sufficient you need to develop useforms.
Chapter 25: Userforms Properties and VBA Code
In this lesson you will learn how to set the properties of the userform and you will develop code within the two important events that are ' On Activate' and ' On Close' .
Chapter 26: Properties and VBA code for Command Buttons
The command button is the control where most of the code resides and everything happens when you ' CLICK ' on it.
Chapter 27: Properties and VBA code for Labels
Labels are just labels. You use them to describe functions and to share information with the user.
Chapter 28: Properties and VBA code for Text Boxes
The user is now talking to you.There are very few userforms without text boxes. Text boxex having been created to handle text you need to discover how to use them with numbers, percentages, currencies, etc.
Lesson 29: Properties and VBA code for Combo Boxes
Excel Macro Programming Language
Affordable raid storage. The combo box is the ultimate control. It is a drop-down list and you will learn how to develop sets of combo boxes where the choices offered in the second combo box depend on the choice made in the first one. They are called cascading combo boxes.
Chapter 30: Properties and VBA code for List Boxes
Labels are just labels. You use them to describe functions and to share information with the user.
Chapter 28: Properties and VBA code for Text Boxes
The user is now talking to you.There are very few userforms without text boxes. Text boxex having been created to handle text you need to discover how to use them with numbers, percentages, currencies, etc.
Lesson 29: Properties and VBA code for Combo Boxes
Excel Macro Programming Language
Affordable raid storage. The combo box is the ultimate control. It is a drop-down list and you will learn how to develop sets of combo boxes where the choices offered in the second combo box depend on the choice made in the first one. They are called cascading combo boxes.
Chapter 30: Properties and VBA code for List Boxes
You will develop list boxes when you want to allow the user the possibility of multiple choices.
Chapter 31: Properties and VBA code for Check Boxes, Option Buttons and Frames
The ' True/False' controls to be used as a group within a frame
Chapter 32: Properties and VBA code for Spin Buttons
You can test different values increasing them step by step until you find the right one and you do it with a spin button.