Book Image

VBA Automation for Excel 2019 Cookbook

By : Mike Van Niekerk
Book Image

VBA Automation for Excel 2019 Cookbook

By: Mike Van Niekerk

Overview of this book

Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) is a programming language developed by Microsoft to automate tasks in MS Office applications. This book will help you to focus on the essential aspects of your role by automating mundane tasks in Excel and other Office applications. With comprehensive coverage of VBA delivered in the form of practice problems and bite-sized recipes, this book will help you to hit the ground running. Unlike most books that assume prior programming experience, this book starts with the fundamentals and gradually progresses to solving bigger problems. You’ll start by becoming familiar with VBA so that you can start recording macros right away. With this foundation in place, you’ll advance to using the full capabilities of the language as you apply loops, functions, and custom dialog boxes to design your own automation programs. You'll also get to grips with embedded macros and other advanced tools to enhance productivity and explore topics relating to app performance and security. Throughout this VBA book, you’ll cover multiple practice projects in Excel, Word, and PowerPoint while exploring tips and best practices to hone your skills. By the end of this book, you’ll have developed the skills you need to use VBA to create your own programs that control MS Office applications.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)

Using templates and bookmarks

To copy an entire Excel spreadsheet and paste it into Word doesn't make sense. You could rather have done everything in Word from the beginning, saving you the whole effort of copying from Excel and pasting in Word.

The point is, if you have an existing Word document or even a Word template, and you regularly need to export selected information from a spreadsheet in Excel to this template, this is the way to do it. The word automation acquires new meaning if you can link Excel with Word in this manner.

In this recipe, we will be pasting Excel data into a Word document at a specific bookmark.

Getting ready

Make sure that Word_Interaction.xlsm is still open, and that the VBA Editor is active.

How to do it…

We need to do the following:

  1. Open the Word document that was saved to the desktop. Delete the inserted table, (select only the entire table – no lines before or after, click the Layout contextual tab, and then...