ID: Q111725
The information in this article applies to:
In the versions of Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications that ship with Microsoft Excel versions 5.0 and later, FOR loops behave differently than they do in the Microsoft Excel version 4.0 macro language.
The respective macro commands are as follows:
Visual Basic
------------
For counter = startValue To endValue
Next counter
Microsoft Excel Version 4.0 Macro Commands
------------------------------------------
=FOR("counter",startValue,endValue)
=NEXT()
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In Visual Basic, the number of iterations for the loop cannot be changed
by changing the value of the variable used to set the ending value for
the loop while the loop is in progress (this behavior is standard for
most programming languages that use FOR loops). However, you can change
the value of the variable in a Microsoft Excel version 4.0 style macro
using the equivalent functions, FOR() and NEXT().
In the following Excel 4.0 style macro, the loop is originally set to run ten times. However, it will only run 5 times because the ending value is modified during the loop. To test this behavior, enter the following on a Microsoft Excel 4.0 macro sheet:
A1: y=10
A2: =FOR("x",1,y)
A3: y=5
A4: =NEXT()
A5: =ALERT(x)
A6: =RETURN()
To run the macro, select cell A1, click Macro on the Tools menu, and then
click Run.
The ALERT() statement in A5 will display the value 6, which means that the loop only ran 5 times, as opposed to the 10 times that the original value of "y" was set for.
In the following Visual Basic macro, the loop is originally set to run 10 times and it will run 10 times, even though the macro changes the value of the variable that is used to set the ending value of the loop.
To test this macro:
1. Enter the following in a new Visual Basic module:
Sub MyLoop()
Dim x, y As Integer
y = 10
For x = 1 To y
y = 5
Next x
MsgBox x
End Sub
2. Position the insertion point in the line that reads "Sub MyLoop()" and
either press F5 or click Start on the Run menu.
The MsgBox statement in the above macro displays the value 11, which means
the loop ran through 10 times, even though we changed the value of the
variable used to set the ending value of the loop.
"Visual Basic User's Guide," version 5.0, pages 143-147
For more information about FOR, choose Contents from the Help menu, select Programming With Visual Basic, and then choose the Search button in Help and type the following:
For
Additional query words: 5.00 5.00a 5.00c 7.00 7.00a XL98 XL97 XL7 XL5
Keywords : kbprg kbdta kbdtacode PgmLoop KbVBA
Version : WINDOWS:5.0,5.0c,7.0,7.0a,97; MACINTOSH:5.0,5.0a,98
Platform : MACINTOSH WINDOWS
Issue type : kbhowto
Last Reviewed: May 17, 1999