Microsoft KB Archive/165928

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Article ID: 165928

Article Last Modified on 1/19/2007



APPLIES TO

  • Microsoft Word 97 Standard Edition



This article was previously published under Q165928


SYMPTOMS

When your Visual Basic for Applications macro returns the number of characters within a range of a table cell, if that range includes the entire cell, the number of characters returned is one more than expected.

CAUSE

By design, the End of Cell Mark (ASCII character number 7) is returned as part of the text when the cell range is set to include the entire cell. Using the Range.Text property includes the paragraph mark and the end of cell mark (ASCII 13 and ASCII 7) and returns them as a pair.

WORKAROUND

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To return the number of characters within a range of a table cell, excluding the end of cell mark, use one of the following methods. NOTE: Each method includes an example of a Visual Basic for Applications macro that:

  1. Sets a range object to an existing table.
  2. Collapses the range to the start of the range (the first cell in the table).
  3. Expands the range to equal the first cell of the table and returns the number of characters within the range.

Method 1: Subtract 1 from the Return Value

You can simply subtract 1 from the returned value to exclude the end of cell mark from your character count. This method still includes any paragraph marks within the range of text:

   Sub RangeExpandCell()
      Dim oTableR As Object
      ' Set a range equal to the first table in the active document.
      Set oTableR = ActiveDocument.Tables(1).Range
      ' Collapse the range to the start of the table.
      oTableR.Collapse wdCollapseStart
      ' Return the length of text in cell A1 of the table.
      MsgBox Len(ActiveDocument.Tables(1).Cell(1, 1).Range.Text)-1
   End Sub

Method 2: Use the Expand Method

The Expand method excludes the end of cell mark but includes any paragraph marks within the range of text.

   Sub RangeExpandCell()
      Dim oTableR As Object
      ' Set a range equal to the first table in the active document.
      Set oTableR = ActiveDocument.Tables(1).Range
      ' Collapse the range to the start of the table.
      oTableR.Collapse wdCollapseStart
      MsgBox oTableR.Expand(wdCell)
   End Sub

For more information about Expand Method, from the Visual Basic Editor, click the Office Assistant, type Expand Method, click Search, and then click to view "Expand Method."

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:

176476 OFF: Office Assistant Not Answering Visual Basic Questions


MORE INFORMATION

For additional information, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

173707 OFF97: How to Run Sample Code from Knowledge Base Articles


REFERENCES

For more information about getting help with Visual Basic for Applications, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

163435 VBA: Programming Resources for Visual Basic for Applications



Additional query words: wordcon vb vba vbe mark

Keywords: kbdtacode kbmacroexample kbnofix kbprb kbprogramming kbusage KB165928