ID: Q182296
The information in this article applies to:
When you run a Visual Basic for Applications macro in Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition, you may receive the following error message:
Run-time error '6':
Overflow
This problem may occur when all of the following conditions are true:
ErrNum = Err
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To work around this problem, dimension variables that will contain Err
values as type Long. For example, instead of using
Dim ErrNum As Integer
use:
Dim ErrNum As Long
This code ensures that you do not receive the overflow error message.
This behavior is by design of Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition.
In Microsoft Excel, the Err object contains information about run-time errors that occur when you run a Visual Basic macro. You can determine the value of the last run-time error that occurs by reading the value of the Err object. For example, the following line of code sets the variable (ErrNum) equal to the value of the last run-time error that occurs:
ErrNum = Err
You can use the Raise method of the Err object to generate a run-time error
with any value. For example, to generate a run-time error whose value is
50000, use the following code:
Err.Raise 50000
If you use this code and set the value of a variable equal to the value of
the Err object, as in the following code:
ErrNum = Err
you receive an overflow error if the variable (ErrNum) is dimensioned as
type Integer.
NOTE: All run-time errors generated by Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition should have a value between -32768 and 32767. Therefore, you receive an overflow error only after you use Err.Raise to change the value of the Err object to a non-Integer value.
Additional query words: XL98 vbe
Keywords : kberrmsg kbdta kbdtacode xlvbahowto OffVBA
Platform : MACINTOSH
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: June 30, 1999