Microsoft KB Archive/181441

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Article ID: 181441

Article Last Modified on 4/14/2006



APPLIES TO

  • Microsoft Word 98 for Macintosh



This article was previously published under Q181441


SUMMARY

In Microsoft Word, you can use Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications to access the summary information in the Document Properties dialog box (on the File menu, click Properties) and then display the information in a message box, insert the information into the active document, or store the values within a variable.

MORE INFORMATION

Microsoft provides programming examples for illustration only, without warranty either expressed or implied. This includes, but is not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. This article assumes that you are familiar with the programming language that is being demonstrated and with the tools that are used to create and to debug procedures. Microsoft support engineers can help explain the functionality of a particular procedure, but they will not modify these examples to provide added functionality or construct procedures to meet your specific requirements. To retrieve or set values on the Summary tab of the Document Properties dialog box, use the following literal string arguments or property constants with either of the two methods below.

   Literal String Arguments             Property Constants
   ------------------------             ------------------
   Title                                wdPropertyTitle
   Subject                              wdPropertySubject
   Author                               wdPropertyAuthor
   Manager                              wdPropertyManager
   Company                              wdPropertyCompany
   Category                             wdPropertyCategory
   Keywords                             wdPropertyKeywords
   Comments                             wdPropertyComments
   Hyperlink base                       wdPropertyHyperlinkbase
                

Method 1: Use the BuiltInDocumentProperties Property

Use the BuiltInDocumentProperties property to set and return summary information for the active document. You can specify which value to set or retrieve by referencing the argument through a built-in constant or a literal string. The following sample code uses the wdPropertyTitle constant to retrieve the title for the active document and displays the result in a message box.

  Sub GetSetDocProps()

      If Documents.Count > 0 Then

         Dim dp As Object
         Set dp = ActiveDocument.BuiltInDocumentProperties

         ' Retrieve and display the active document's
         ' title by using the constant "wdPropertyTitle."
         MsgBox dp(wdPropertyTitle)

      End If

   End Sub
                

The following sample code uses a literal string to define the keywords for the active document:

   Sub SetDocProps()

      If Documents.Count > 0 Then

         Dim dp As Object
         Set dp = ActiveDocument.BuiltInDocumentProperties

         ' Set KeyWords for the active document by
         ' using a literal string.
         dp("KeyWords") = "Summary Information Example Macro"
         ActiveDocument.Save

      End If

   End Sub
                

Method 2: Use the Dialogs Collection to Set and Return Values

Use the Dialogs collection to set and return values for the active document's summary information.

Before you return or change a built-in dialog box setting, you need to identify the individual dialog box. To do this, use the Dialogs collection and a WdWordDialog constant that identifies the dialog box. The following Visual Basic statement returns the Dialog object that refers to the Summary tab of the Document Properties dialog box.

   Set myDialog = Dialogs(wdDialogFileSummaryInfo)
                

You can set or retrieve the following literal string arguments without displaying the Summary tab when a document is open.

Title
Subject
Author
Manager
Company
Category
Keywords
Comments
Hyperlinkbase


The following sample macro retrieves the current value of the Title string, places this value in a variable string, and sets a new value without displaying the Properties dialog box.

  Sub SetSummaryInfo()

      If Documents.Count > 0 Then

         Dim dp As Object
         Set dp = Dialogs(wdDialogFileSummaryInfo)

         ' Retrieve value of Title and store in a variable.
         a$ = dp.Title

         ' Set Title to a new value.
         dp.Title = "My Title"

         ' Set the value without showing the dialog box.
         dp.Execute

         ' Save the changes.
         ActiveDocument.Save

      End If

   End Sub
                

The following sample macro sets a new value for Title and displays the Properties dialog box.

     Sub SetSummaryInfo()

      If Documents.Count > 0 Then

         Dim dp As Object
         Set dp = Dialogs(wdDialogFileSummaryInfo)

         ' Set Title to a new value.
         dp.Title = "My Title"

         ' Set the value.
         dp.Execute

         ' Save the changes.
         ActiveDocument.Save

         ' Display the dialog box.
         ' Note: Using the Display method will not keep changes
         ' manually entered into the dialog box. To keep changes
         ' manually entered in the dialog box, use the Show method.
         dp.Display

      End If

   End Sub
                

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 displaying, setting, or retrieving values in Word dialog boxes, click Office Assistant while in the Visual Basic Editor, type "Displaying dialog boxes" (without the quotation marks), click Search, and then click Displaying built-in Word dialog boxes.

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

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