vba course

Public Schedule Face-to-Face & Online Instructor-Led Training - View dates & book

Forum home » Delegate support and help forum » Microsoft Excel VBA Training and help » VBA Course

VBA Course

resolvedResolved · Medium Priority · Version 2007

Soyful has attended:
Excel VBA Intro Intermediate course

VBA Course

Carlos,

I attended the VBA Course on 31st Mar/1st Apr. We use excel 2000 in our office and subsequently i am unable to open and view the codes/workbooks we wrote at the course. Would you be able to send me the documents so that i can view in excel 2000 or copy and paste the code in Word please?

Regards
Soyful Ali

Edited on Wed 22 Apr 2009, 23:04

RE: VBA Course

Hi Soyful

I've attached the complete workbooks which contain the code I created.

As for the files you created and took home you will need to find someone with 2007 that can convert the file or go on to the Microsoft website and find the add on that allows you to read 2007 files in previous versions.

Hope this helps

Regards

Carlos

Attached files...

Courses - 2005 (Complete).xls
Sales - April 2004 (Complete + Print).xls

Wed 29 Apr 2009: Automatically marked as resolved.

 

Training courses

 

Training information:

Welcome. Please choose your application (eg. Excel) and then post your question.

Our Microsoft Qualified trainers will then respond within 24 hours (working days).

Frequently Asked Questions
What does 'Resolved' mean?

Any suggestions, questions or comments? Please post in the Improve the forum thread.


 

Excel tip:

Checking if a calculation adheres to Order of Precedence

When writing formulas you must make sure that results will be calculated as you intended.

Excel adheres to the standard order of precedence for calculations. It calculates percentages, exponents, multiplication, and division in this order before calculating addition and subtraction.

For example, =7+5*3 results in an answer of 22, not 36.

To force a calculation to be completed before another calculations, place the section in parentheses: =(7+5)*3 will result in 36.

To check how excel is evaluating a formula, click on the cell and select the 'Tools' menu, select 'Formula Auditing' and click 'Evaluate Formula'

In the dialog box click on 'Evaluate' to watch as each part of the formula is successively calculated.

View all Excel hints and tips


Server loaded in 0.07 secs.