WD97:Run Time Error 4366 Using Application.Run Command

ID: Q190235

The information in this article applies to:

SYMPTOMS

When you run a Visual Basic For Applications macro containing the "Application.Run Macroname:=" command in Microsoft Word or in another Office program to automate Word, you may receive the following error message:

   Run Time error '4366' : Unable to run the specified macro.

CAUSE

You have included a template name as part of the Macroname argument string.

RESOLUTION

Remove the template name from the Macroname argument

WORKAROUND

To avoid naming conflicts among referenced projects, give your procedures unique names, so that you can call a procedure without specifying a project or module.

STATUS

Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in the Microsoft products listed at the beginning of this article.

MORE INFORMATION

In the online help the Run method states that you can use the template name in the Macroname argument string, and then it shows the following examples as valid statements:

   Application.Run "Normal.Module1.MAIN"
   Application.Run "MyProject.MyModule.MyProcedure"
   Application.Run "'My Document.doc'!ThisModule.ThisProcedure"

Visual Basic for Applications assigns names to macros in the following order:

   project.module.procedure.

When Visual Basic for Applications accesses the Microsoft Word Object model, a project can be either a template or document with stored procedures. In Visual Basic for Applications, the Word projects are named in the following manner:

   Normal          - all modules stored in the Normal.dot

   TemplateProject - all modules store in the first file in the Startup
                     folder (if more than one template is in the startup
                     folder, Word uses the one that was copied
                     to the folder first and not by the alphabetical
                     listing order).

   Project         - additional startup templates, the template the open
                     file is based on, or an open saved document with a
                     module.

The following illustration describes how Visual Basic for Applications handles Microsoft Word macros of the same name or macros and modules of the same name in different template and document projects that are active.

In Microsoft Word, if you open a document named MyDoc.doc that is based on the template MyTemp.dot, both documents have a module called "Newmacros" and a macro called "MyMacro." At Startup, a template called "MyStart.dot" loads with the "Normal.dot" global template. Both of these templates have a module called "Newmacros", and there is a macro called "MyMacro" in the module.

With the three templates and one document active in Microsoft Word, when the "Macro" dialog box appears, you see the following lines of code:

   Normal.NewMacros.Mymacro
   Project.NewMacros.Mymacro
   Project1.NewMacros.Mymacro
   TemplateProject.NewMacros.Mymacro

Open the Visual Basic Editor by pressing ALT+F11. Then, press CTRL+R to view the following in Project Explorer:

   Normal(Normal)
   Project(MyTemp)
   Project(MyDoc)
   TemplateProject(MyStart)

If you want to run the macro in MyStart.dot, write your code as follows:

   Application.Run "TemplateProject.NewMacro.macro1"

      - or -

   Normal.NewMacros.Mymacro =  Normal.dot
   Project.NewMacros.Mymacro =  MyTemp.dot
   Project1.NewMacros.Mymacro =  MyDoc.doc

Additional query words: wordcon 8.0

Keywords          : kbdta kbwordvba word97 
Platform          : WINDOWS
Issue type        : kbbug kbprb
Solution Type     : kbpending

Last Reviewed: February 14, 1999