ID: Q182645
The information in this article applies to:
In Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition, if you run a Visual Basic for Applications macro that attempts to disable an entire menu (the File menu, for example), the menu is not disabled and you do not receive any error messages. The same macro works correctly in Microsoft Excel version 5.0.
The same applies if a Visual Basic for Applications macro attempts to enable an entire menu.
This will occur if your macro uses code similar to the following to disable or enable an entire menu, respectively:
Application.MenuBars(xlWorksheet).Menus("File").Enabled = False
-or-
Application.MenuBars(xlWorksheet).Menus("File").Enabled = True
If a Visual Basic for Applications macro in Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition must disable or enable an entire menu, use code similar to the following in your macro, respectively:
CommandBars("File").Enabled = False
-or-
CommandBars("File").Enabled = True
This behavior is by design of Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition.
In Microsoft Excel version 5.0, menus are contained in menubars. For example, the File menu is contained by the "xlWorksheet" menubar. Because of this, the command to disable a particular menu requires that you refer not only to the menu, but also to the menubar that contains it. For example:
Application.MenuBars(xlWorksheet).Menus("File").Enabled = False
NOTE: Adding "Application." to the beginning of the line of code is usually
not required, but it is included here in order to provide a complete code
example.
In Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition, menus are not contained by menubars. Instead, they are independent entities belonging to the CommandBars collection. So, you don't have to refer to any other object when trying to disable a particular menu:
CommandBars("File").Enabled = False
This command will work correctly in Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition.
Because of the change in program design, Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition cannot properly execute the first command shown above. However, you will not receive an error message when the command is executed: Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition will merely ignore the command and continue macro execution.
Below are two macro examples that demonstrate the difference in behavior between Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition and earlier versions of Microsoft Excel. The first macro will disable the File menu in Microsoft Excel version 5.0, but will do nothing in Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition. The second macro will disable the File menu in Microsoft Excel 98 Macintosh Edition. To redisplay the File menu in any version of Microsoft Excel, set the Enabled property in either macro to True and then rerun the macro.
Sub WorksInExcel5()
Application.MenuBars(xlWorksheet).Menus("File").Enabled = False
End Sub
Sub WorksInExcel98()
CommandBars("File").Enabled = False
End Sub
Additional query words: XL98
Keywords : kbprg kbdta kbdtacode xlui xlvbahowto OffVBA xlvbmigrate
Version : MACINTOSH:98
Platform : MACINTOSH
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: June 30, 1999