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Excel 2003 Power Programming with VBA

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"Today, no accomplished Excel programmer can afford to be without John's book. The value of Excel 2003 Power Programming with VBA is double most other books-simultaneously the premier reference and best learning tool for Excel VBA."
--Loren Abdulezer, Author of Excel Best Practices for Business

Everything you need to know about:
* Creating stellar UserForms and custom dialog box alternatives
* Working with VBA subprocedures and function procedures
* Incorporating event-handling and interactions with other applications
* Building user-friendly toolbars, menus, and help systems
* Manipulating files and Visual Basic components
* Understanding class modules
* Managing compatibility issues


Feel the power of VBA and Excel

No one can uncover Excel's hidden capabilities like "Mr. Spreadsheet" himself. John Walkenbach begins this power user's guide with a conceptual overview, an analysis of Excel application development, and a complete introduction to VBA. Then, he shows you how to customize Excel UserForms, develop new utilities, use VBA with charts and pivot tables, create event-handling applications, and much more. If you're fairly new to Excel programming, here's the foundation you need. If you're already a VBA veteran, you can start mining a rich lode of programming ideas right away.

CD-ROM Includes
* Trial version of the author's award-winning Power Utility Pak
* Over one hundred example Excel workbooks from the book


System Requirements: PC running Windows 2000 SP3 or later, or Windows XP(TM) or later. Microsoft Excel 2003. See the "What's on the CD" Appendix for details and complete system requirements.

1056 pages, Paperback

First published June 30, 2004

2 people are currently reading
34 people want to read

About the author

John Walkenbach

141 books39 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
22 reviews1 follower
Currently reading
April 22, 2008
As long as I'm stuck in a cell, I might as well learn how to rock it.
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211 reviews24 followers
July 20, 2010
You'll be hard-pressed to find a better and more authoritative guide to VBA. Although it's for Excel 2003, much of the guidance still applies.
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Author 1 book80 followers
to-keep-reference
May 31, 2017
Walkenbach siempre termina con los modulos de clase, como si evitara meterse con la programación VB.
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