ID: Q191176
The information in this article applies to:
When you use a For Each loop in a Visual Basic for Applications macro, the macro may run without error, but values changed in the For Each loop may not actually change.
Values changed in a For Each loop may only appear to be changed during the running of the macro if the following conditions are true:
-and-
To work around this problem, use either of the following methods:
-or-
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To demonstrate the issue described earlier, follow these steps:
1. Save and close all open workbooks and then open a new workbook.
2. Enter the following in Sheet1:
A1: 1
A2: 2
A3: 3
3. Start the Visual Basic Editor (press OPTION+F11).
4. On the Insert menu, click Module.
5. Enter the following code in the module:
' In this macro, cellRange is an Object variable
' and cellItem is a Variant variable.
Sub LoopTest()
Set cellRange = ActiveSheet.Range("A1:A3")
' The following concatenates an "A" to the default value of each
' cell.
For Each cellItem In cellRange
cellItem = cellItem & "A"
MsgBox cellItem
Next
' The cellRange will return the default value (not value&"A"),
' even though the loop above changed the value of the object.
For Each cellItem In cellRange
MsgBox cellItem
Next
End Sub
6. Run the LoopTest macro.
The first three message boxes display the values in A1:A3 concatenated
with the letter A. However, the next three message boxes display the
original values in A1:A3, and when the macro is finished, the values in
A1:A3 are unchanged.
7. Add the following line to the macro just below the Sub LoopTest() line:
Dim cellItem As Object
8. Rerun the LoopTest macro.
The first and second set of message boxes display the values in
A1:A3 concatenated with the letter A. When the macro is finished, the
values in A1:A3 are also changed accordingly.
NOTE: To work around this issue, you can also change the line of code
cellItem = cellItem & "A"
to:
cellItem.Value = cellItem & "A"
For more information about the For Each loop, from the Visual Basic Editor, click the Office Assistant, type "for each," click Search, and then click to view "For Each...Next Statement."
NOTE: If the Assistant is hidden, click the Office Assistant button on the Standard toolbar. If the Assistant is not able to answer your query, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
ARTICLE-ID: Q176476
TITLE : OFF: Office Assistant Not Answering Visual Basic Questions
For additional information about getting help with Visual Basic for
Applications, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge
Base:
ARTICLE-ID: Q163435
TITLE : VBA: Programming Resources for Visual Basic for
Applications
Additional query words: XL98
Keywords : kbdta kbdtacode xlvbahowto xlvbainfo
Version : MACINTOSH:98
Platform : MACINTOSH
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: May 18, 1999