1: How to Select a Cell on the Active Worksheet
To select cell D5 on the
active worksheet, you can use either of the following examples:
ActiveSheet.Cells(5,
4).Select
-or-
ActiveSheet.Range("D5").Select
2: How to Select a Cell on Another Worksheet in
the Same Workbook
To select cell E6 on
another worksheet in the same workbook, you can use either of the following
examples:
Application.Goto
ActiveWorkbook.Sheets("Sheet2").Cells(6, 5)
-or-
Application.Goto
(ActiveWorkbook.Sheets("Sheet2").Range("E6"))
Or, you can activate the
worksheet, and then use method 1 above to select the cell:
Sheets("Sheet2").Activate
ActiveSheet.Cells(6,
5).Select
3: How to Select a Cell on a Worksheet in a
Different Workbook
To select cell F7 on a
worksheet in a different workbook, you can use either of the following
examples:
Application.Goto
Workbooks("BOOK2.XLS").Sheets("Sheet1").Cells(7, 6)
-or-
Application.Goto
Workbooks("BOOK2.XLS").Sheets("Sheet1").Range("F7")
Or, you can activate the
worksheet, and then use method 1 above to select the cell:
Workbooks("BOOK2.XLS").Sheets("Sheet1").Activate
ActiveSheet.Cells(7,
6).Select
4: How to Select a Range of Cells on the Active
Worksheet
To select the range
C2:D10 on the active worksheet, you can use any of the following examples:
ActiveSheet.Range(Cells(2,
3), Cells(10, 4)).Select
ActiveSheet.Range("C2:D10").Select
ActiveSheet.Range("C2",
"D10").Select
5: How to Select a Range of Cells on Another
Worksheet in the Same Workbook
To select the range
D3:E11 on another worksheet in the same workbook, you can use either of the
following examples:
Application.Goto
ActiveWorkbook.Sheets("Sheet3").Range("D3:E11")
Application.Goto
ActiveWorkbook.Sheets("Sheet3").Range("D3",
"E11")
Or, you can activate the
worksheet, and then use method 4 above to select the range:
Sheets("Sheet3").Activate
ActiveSheet.Range(Cells(3,
4), Cells(11, 5)).Select
6: How to Select a Range of Cells on a Worksheet
in a Different Workbook
To select the range
E4:F12 on a worksheet in a different workbook, you can use either of the
following examples:
Application.Goto
Workbooks("BOOK2.XLS").Sheets("Sheet1").Range("E4:F12")
Application.Goto _
Workbooks("BOOK2.XLS").Sheets("Sheet1").Range("E4",
"F12")
Or, you can activate the
worksheet, and then use method 4 above to select the range:
Workbooks("BOOK2.XLS").Sheets("Sheet1").Activate
ActiveSheet.Range(Cells(4, 5), Cells(12,
6)).Select
7: How to Select a Named Range on the Active
Worksheet
To select the named
range "Test" on the active worksheet, you can use either of the
following examples:
Range("Test").Select
Application.Goto
"Test"
8: How to Select a Named Range on Another
Worksheet in the Same Workbook
To select the named
range "Test" on another worksheet in the same workbook, you can use
the following example:
Application.Goto
Sheets("Sheet1").Range("Test")
Or, you can activate the
worksheet, and then use method 7 above to select the named range:
Sheets("Sheet1").Activate
Range("Test").Select
9: How to Select a Named Range on a Worksheet in
a Different Workbook
To select the named
range "Test" on a worksheet in a different workbook, you can use the
following example:
Application.Goto _
Workbooks("BOOK2.XLS").Sheets("Sheet2").Range("Test")
Or, you can activate the
worksheet, and then use method 7 above to select the named range:
Workbooks("BOOK2.XLS").Sheets("Sheet2").Activate
Range("Test").Select
10: How to Select a Cell Relative to the Active
Cell
To select a cell that is
five rows below and four columns to the left of the active cell, you can use
the following example:
ActiveCell.Offset(5,
-4).Select
To select a cell that is
two rows above and three columns to the right of the active cell, you can use
the following example:
ActiveCell.Offset(-2,
3).Select
Note An error will occur
if you try to select a cell that is "off the worksheet." The first
example shown above will return an error if the active cell is in columns A
through D, since moving four columns to the left would take the active cell to
an invalid cell address.
11: How to Select a Cell Relative to Another
(Not the Active) Cell
To select a cell that is
five rows below and four columns to the right of cell C7, you can use either of
the following examples:
ActiveSheet.Cells(7,
3).Offset(5, 4).Select
ActiveSheet.Range("C7").Offset(5,
4).Select
12: How to Select a Range of Cells Offset from a
Specified Range
To select a range of
cells that is the same size as the named range "Test" but that is
shifted four rows down and three columns to the right, you can use the
following example:
ActiveSheet.Range("Test").Offset(4,
3).Select
If the named range is on
another (not the active) worksheet, activate that worksheet first, and then
select the range using the following example:
Sheets("Sheet3").Activate
ActiveSheet.Range("Test").Offset(4,
3).Select
13: How to Select a Specified Range and Resize
the Selection
To select the named
range "Database" and then extend the selection by five rows, you can
use the following example:
Range("Database").Select
Selection.Resize(Selection.Rows.Count
+ 5, _
Selection.Columns.Count).Select
14: How to Select a Specified Range, Offset It,
and Then Resize It
To select a range four
rows below and three columns to the right of the named range
"Database" and include two rows and one column more than the named
range, you can use the following example:
Range("Database").Select
Selection.Offset(4,
3).Resize(Selection.Rows.Count + 2, _
Selection.Columns.Count + 1).Select
15: How to Select the Union of Two or More
Specified Ranges
To select the union
(that is, the combined area) of the two named ranges "Test" and
"Sample," you can use the following example:
Application.Union(Range("Test"),
Range("Sample")).Select
Note that both ranges
must be on the same worksheet for this example to work. Note also that the
Union method does not work across sheets. For example, this line works fine
Set y =
Application.Union(Range("Sheet1!A1:B2"),
Range("Sheet1!C3:D4"))
but this line
Set y =
Application.Union(Range("Sheet1!A1:B2"),
Range("Sheet2!C3:D4"))
returns the error
message:
Union method of
application class failed
16: How to Select the Intersection of Two or
More Specified Ranges
To select the
intersection of the two named ranges "Test" and "Sample,"
you can use the following example:
Application.Intersect(Range("Test"),
Range("Sample")).Select
Note that both ranges
must be on the same worksheet for this example to work.
Examples 17-21 in this article refer to the following sample set of data. Each
example states the range of cells in the sample data that would be selected.
A1: Name
B1: Sales C1: Quantity
A2: a
B2: $10 C2: 5
A3: b
B3: C3: 10
A4: c
B4: $10 C4: 5
A5:
B5: C5:
A6: Total
B6: $20 C6: 20
17: How to Select the Last Cell of a Column of
Contiguous Data
To select the last cell
in a contiguous column, use the following example:
ActiveSheet.Range("a1").End(xlDown).Select
When this code is used
with the sample table, cell A4 will be selected.
18: How to Select the Blank Cell at Bottom of a
Column of Contiguous Data
To select the cell below
a range of contiguous cells, use the following example:
ActiveSheet.Range("a1").End(xlDown).Offset(1,0).Select
When this code is used
with the sample table, cell A5 will be selected.
19: How to Select an Entire Range of Contiguous
Cells in a Column
To select a range of
contiguous cells in a column, use one of the following examples:
ActiveSheet.Range("a1",
ActiveSheet.Range("a1").End(xlDown)).Select
-or-
ActiveSheet.Range("a1:"
& ActiveSheet.Range("a1"). _
End(xlDown).Address).Select
When this code is used
with the sample table, cells A1 through A4 will be selected.
20: How to Select an Entire Range of
Non-Contiguous Cells in a Column
To select a range of
cells that are non-contiguous, use one of the following examples:
ActiveSheet.Range("a1",ActiveSheet.Range("a65536").End(xlUp)).Select
-or-
ActiveSheet.Range("a1:"
& ActiveSheet.Range("a65536"). _
End(xlUp).Address).Select
When this code is used
with the sample table, it will select cells A1 through A6.
21: How to Select a Rectangular Range of Cells
In order to select a
rectangular range of cells around a cell, use the CurrentRegion method. The
range selected by the CurrentRegion method is an area bounded by any
combination of blank rows and blank columns. The following is an example of how
to use the CurrentRegion method:
ActiveSheet.Range("a1").CurrentRegion.Select
This code will select
cells A1 through C4. Other examples to select the same range of cells are
listed below:
ActiveSheet.Range("a1",
_
ActiveSheet.Range("a1").End(xlDown).End(xlToRight)).Select
-or-
ActiveSheet.Range("a1:"
& _
ActiveSheet.Range("a1").End(xlDown).End(xlToRight).Address).Select
In some instances, you
may want to select cells A1 through C6. In this example, the CurrentRegion
method will not work because of the blank line on Row 5. The following examples
will select all of the cells:
lastCol =
ActiveSheet.Range("a1").End(xlToRight).Column
lastRow =
ActiveSheet.Cells(65536, lastCol).End(xlUp).Row
ActiveSheet.Range("a1",
ActiveSheet.Cells(lastRow, lastCol)).Select
-or-
lastCol = ActiveSheet.Range("a1").End(xlToRight).Column
lastRow =
ActiveSheet.Cells(65536, lastCol).End(xlUp).Row
ActiveSheet.Range("a1:"
& _
ActiveSheet.Cells(lastRow,
lastCol).Address).Select
22. How to Select Multiple Non-Contiguous
Columns of Varying Length
To select multiple
non-contiguous columns of varying length, use the following sample table and
macro example:
A1: 1
B1: 1 C1: 1 D1: 1
A2: 2
B2: 2 C2: 2 D2: 2
A3: 3
B3: 3 C3: 3 D3: 3
A4:
B4: 4 C4: 4 D4: 4
A5:
B5: 5 C5: 5 D5:
A6: B6: C6: 6
D6:
StartRange =
"A1"
EndRange =
"C1"
Set a =
Range(StartRange, Range(StartRange).End(xlDown))
Set b = Range(EndRange,
Range(EndRange).End(xlDown))
Union(a,b).Select
When this code is used
with the sample table, cells A1:A3 and C1:C6 will be selected.
1: How to Select a Cell on the Active Worksheet
Examples 17-21 in this article refer to the following sample set of data. Each example states the range of cells in the sample data that would be selected.
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