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Paperback Excel 2000 VBA Programmer's Reference Book

ISBN: 1861002548

ISBN13: 9781861002549

Excel 2000 VBA Programmer's Reference

What is this book about? Excel 2000 is an important part of the Office 2000 program suite, and will be available in the Premium, Professional, Standard and Small Business editions of Office 2000.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$5.09
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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent Read for anyone who uses Excel

By far my favorite programming book, and here's my explanation:I'm not sure if some of the people reviewing this book were supposed to be reading John Green's "Excel 2000 VBA : Programmers Reference" in the first place. If you have never used Excel, or never written your own script or program before, THIS BOOK IS NOT FOR YOU. This book was written for those who are either knowledgeable in Excel, wishing to learn programming, or vice versa, and its BY FAR THE BEST way to get there.To give this book anything less than four stars (and I personally give it five) shows a complete lack of basic Excel and/or programming comprehension.Excel 2000 VBA: Programmer's Reference starts with the basic concepts of functions (Subs), variables, loops, if statements, etc. But just like any other book from any other programming languange, don't expect to be fluent after reading the first 2 chapters.Take time each day to read as much as you can, and run the examples in the VB editor. I have done 90% of the examples in the book, adapting many of them for my own use. Studying this text cover to cover is the best way to read it, as it is structured much like any college math course, where each chapter builds upon the chapter that precedes it. So avoid reading this book like an encyclopædia, as it will leave holes in your knowledge of the Excel Object Model.The in-depth explanations of advanced concepts such as dynamic arrays, object referencing, names, API calls, and many more untapped resources of Excel are what make this book head and shoulders above the rest.The index can be problematic for those not experienced in Object-Oriented programming, as it is organized by object types, and not alphabetically by each object. This thinking follows much more along that of a native programmer, so to proggers goes the advantage, but at the same time, press F2 within the Excel VBA editor, and you can read definitions for any object alphabetically. I believe John Green organized the index as it is intentionally, knowing that those not familiar with Excel could fall back on the Object reference in the VBA editor (via F2 on keyboard).I think it is a shame that this book received several bads reviews, because in reading their posts, it seemed that not one of them should have been reading this book in the first place. It is a "Programmer Reference" as the name suggests. To those who didn't understand the most basic programming concepts and still decided to purchase the book, that is simply your fault for not reading the title, and is not the fault of John Green, whose masterpiece is a credit to the programming world at large, and another triumph WRT Excel.Bravo, John... Bravo...

A great resource for a developing Excel programmer.

Those with no programming backround may find this a little advanced. I first read Walkenbach's Power Programming for Excel 2000 which was very good and then followed with this book so I had some familiarity of the subject matter. I found this book very helpful in teaching me some useful techniques dealing with range names, custom menus, error routines and the Excel 2000 Object Model. Most of the chapters require a solid effort in reading the material and experimenting to really understand it. They also have a website (Wrox.com) that allows you to download code so you don't have to key it in (although I found keying it in helpful toward learning).Overall, it's not a book to be read casually but requires time, patience and focus. The best approach if you're trying to teach yourself is to read a couple of pages per day AND even if you are an experienced VBA programmer to start with Chapter 1, History of Spreadsheets followed by Chapter 2, Primer for Excel VBA. There's usually a trick or technique that you can pick up that you didn't know prior. Then continue with each chapter after that. Also it is helpful to go back and read the early chapters again as your skill level improves. I found this approach to be a good self teaching tool.The index falls a little short so the idea of using it as a reference without reading it first will probably not work too well. I think it is better suited as a teaching book that flows logically so you have to be willing to devote the time necessary to each chapter. I usually put a check mark in the margin indicating that I read the material which was helpful if I was away from it for a few days.I would highly recommend this book to those who are serious about improving their skill as an Excel VBA programer.

Wow!

I bought this book a week ago and it has already greatly improved my macros!I am an old hand at macros, right back to the Lotus 1-2-3 keystroke macros, and have been programming Excel for years. Nothing too complicated, just the sort of macros that save time on repetitive tasks, and tidy up text files from other systems.What I now know is that I am effectively programming in the older macro languages, updated where needed - a very inefficient technique.I have already been able to clean up my code, massively increasing the speed of my macros, and have discovered simple pieces of code that can replace the big workarounds that I had programmed.....and I have only read 20% of the book!An easy five stars!

Answer all your basic needs when writing a VBA program

I recently changed from Lotus (in which I developed applications in macros) to Excel 97.This book allows me to answer almost all my questions when writing macros in Excel. The examples gave me a leap in the time to develop an application.If I have to buy only one book to help me write Excel VBA macros, this is the book to buy.The only items to be improved is the index, which should be expanded and the font, which for me is too small.The authors John Green, Stephen Bullen and Felipe Martins are excellent.

Excellent Programmer's reference for professionals

As a professional VBA programmer, I found this book to be an excellent reference. Although I use Excel 97, many of the programming concepts are the same as for Excel 2000. Each chapter maps well onto real-world issues that are likely to come up in an intensive programming environment. A good example of this is the chapter on International issues: I have recently been involved in developing a system installed in several countries across Europe, where the users previously had to switch to UK settings in order for the system to work. The book is not intended as a 'learn to program' guide, a genre which is too heavily catered for already, rather as a programmer's reference laid out in such a way as to find solutions to real-world problems quickly.
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