1 / 44

Microsoft Excel Macros & Excel Solver ( IENG 490 )

Microsoft Excel Macros & Excel Solver ( IENG 490 ). Spring :(201 3 -201 4 ) Research Assistants: Arman Nedjati & Mahmoud Golabi. Excel Solver. Example1. Example2. Example2. Contents of Macros. Introduction to Macro Introduction to Visual Basic for Application Recording a Macro

onofre
Télécharger la présentation

Microsoft Excel Macros & Excel Solver ( IENG 490 )

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Microsoft Excel Macros&Excel Solver(IENG490) Spring:(2013-2014)Research Assistants:ArmanNedjati & Mahmoud Golabi

  2. Excel Solver

  3. Example1

  4. Example2

  5. Example2

  6. Contents of Macros • Introduction to Macro • Introduction to Visual Basic for Application • Recording a Macro • Looking at the code of Recorded Macro

  7. Introduction to Visual Basic for Application • Microsoft Excel in itself a tool which helps users to work with worksheets & workbooks with ease. • This tool is one of the ultimate timesaver, but there are numerous events when you have to do repetitive tasks which are of a very little value but consume your precious time; yet engage you in a less productive activity, which Excel may do automatically. • Microsoft Excel macro is the feature which eliminates or at-least minimize these events which take your precious time in repetitive tasks, and you will be able to capitalize this time in more productive & strategic activities.

  8. Introduction to Visual Basic for Application - cont… • Apart from automating repetitive tasks Microsoft Excel Macros may also be used to create user interfaces • User interfaces are screens where user can give inputs with ease also it enables input validations

  9. Introduction to Visual Basic for Application - cont… • What is Visual Basic?Visual Basic is a language which is inherited from a very popular language BASIC. BASIC stands for Beginners All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code. Visual Basic is called visual as you can do most of the program by click and go i.e. visually. It’s an event driven & object based language. • What is Event Driven Language?When we say event driven it means that you can write triggers which will initiate on specific events for example when user opens any document or saves any document • What is Object Based Language?Object based language is language in which we can use objects & their properties i.e. we can use the Worksheet object and its property SheetName when some one clicks on a button

  10. Introduction to Visual Basic for Application - cont… • Visual Basic for ApplicationVisual Basic for Application is called VBA as it uses Visual Basic language and is capable of using application specific objects i.e. if we talk about VBA for Excel it can use Cell Object, Range Object, Worksheet Object, Workbook Object etc.

  11. Recording your first Macro • Microsoft Excel provides you a very helpful option which enables you to record a macro and also modify and run afterwards • Microsoft Excel don’t provide you the macro recording option by default for enabling macro recording at first you need to enable the Developer Tab, next slide defines step by step procedure to enable Developer Tab

  12. Enabling the Developer Tab • Click on File • Click on Excel Options • On Customize Ribbon checkDeveloper tab 2 3 1

  13. Enabling the Developer Tab

  14. Recording your first Macro • When you record macro Microsoft Excel provides you with 2 options either you can record a macro using Absolute References or Relative References • If you go for Absolute References Excel’s behavior will be: • You record a macro in Cell A1 type “Excel is Great” format Bold Cell B1 • Whenever you play / run this macro Excel will always type “Excel is Great” in Cell A1 and format Bold Cell B1 no matter wherever your cursor is

  15. Recording your first Macro • You can refer to following tab that you can click on Use Relative References which will enable you to record a macro in relative cells, as discussed whenever a relative reference macro is executed it will run in-place

  16. Recording your first Macro • Click Developer Tab • Click on Use Relative Reference • Click on Record Macro 1 3 2

  17. Recording your first Macro • As soon as you press record macro button the following screen will appear • In the Macro name boxyou have to type the nameof macro • In Shortcut key you can typeshort cut key which invokethe Macro • Store macro (will discussedlater) • You can also provide description of the macro

  18. Recording your first Macro • As soon as you press OK in the previous dialog box two things happens first record macro button changesto Stop Recording • Secondly Excel starts lookingfor your action and will recordthe same • Please follow steps on the following slide to complete recording

  19. Recording your first Macro • Click on Cell A1 type “Excel is Great” • Select cells from A1:C1 click on Home Tab and click on Merge & Center • Press Bold & Italics • Now click on Developer Tab and click on Stop recording

  20. Playing your Macro • You can execute the macro you just recorded by either clicking on the Macro button on the Developer Tabor by pressing Alt F8, you can see the list of Recorded macros in the dialog box you can press Run buttonto execute the macro as soonas you press run you can seethat your recorded macro willexecute

  21. Behind the scenes • To see what Excel did behind the scenes you can either click on Macros button on Developer Taband select Edit or you can press Alt F11

  22. What it looks like • This is what Excel did behind the scenes, it written the code for you. You can change the code if you want. You can either closethe window or pressAlt F11 again to goback to your Excelnormal screen.

  23. Example1

  24. Example1

  25. Example1 Working with Excel while recording the macro

  26. Example1

  27. Example1

  28. Example1

  29. Looking inside the VB code of our Macro

  30. Using Form Controls

  31. Using Form Controls Using the Form Controls select a GUI element and by mouse-click place it on the frame

  32. Using Form Controls

  33. Using Form Controls Select The Cell and click on button

  34. Example2: Develop a macro to calculate the average of five cells to the left of a selected cell. Initialize a spreadsheet and fill five vertical cells with numbers. Select the cell to the right

  35. Example2 Start macro-recording and modify macro properties

  36. Example2 Input formula in cell C2 and then stop macro-recording.

  37. Example2 Test the macro by filling other five cells with numbers, then select the cell to the right and then click shortcut-key. (we had chosen [Ctrl-a] )

  38. Example2 Click [Alt-F11] to access VBA module

  39. Example3 Writing a subroutine to solve a set of linear equations while allowing the user to input cell-range. Step 1. Click [Alt-F11] to open the Visual Basic Editor. Step 2. Select [Insert][Module].

  40. Example3 Step 3. Type in the following code:

  41. Example3 Step 4. Go back to the Excel workbook by clicking [Alt-F11] once more. Then click [Alt-F8] to change the macro options and select shortcut key (plus add description if desired).

  42. Example3 Step 5. Test the macro. First prepare the spreadsheet with a matrix which will be treated as matrix A and column of cells to be treated as vector b. Then run the macro.

  43. Conclusion • Macros are used to automate tasks or you can use macros to develop user interfaces • Excel Macro use a language called VBA (Visual Basic for Applications), which is both Event Driven and Object Based • The easiest way to look at macro is by using the Excel’s record Macro Feature • You can even edit Excel’s recorded macro by yourself • Soon we will publish a presentation which will guide you on how to write your own macro

  44. FINISH

More Related