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Automation (formerly OLE Automation) is a
feature that programs use to expose their objects to development tools, macro
languages, and other programs that support Automation. For example, a
spreadsheet program may expose a worksheet, chart, cell, or range of cells,
each as a different type of object. A word processor might expose objects such
as an application, a document, a paragraph, a sentence, a bookmark, or a
selection.
When a program supports Automation, you can use Visual
Basic for Applications to access the objects it exposes. You manipulate these
objects in Visual Basic by invoking methods on the object or by getting and
setting the object's properties.
You can use the code samples in
this article to control Microsoft Word from Microsoft Access 97, Microsoft
Excel 97, Microsoft PowerPoint 97, Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications, or
any other client that supports Automation to control Word.
Getting Started
There are four main steps to automate Word for Windows.
- Add a reference to the Microsoft Word 8.0 Object library.
- Declare a variable as a Word object type.
- Assign the object returned by the CreateObject function to the object variable you declared in step 2.
- Use the properties and methods of the object variable to
automate Word.
Step 1: Adding a Reference to the Word 8.0 Object Library
To add a reference to the Microsoft Word 8.0 Object Library using
Microsoft Access 97, Microsoft PowerPoint 97, or Microsoft Excel 97, follow
these steps:
- In Microsoft Access, PowerPoint, or Excel, on the Tools menu, point to Macros, and then click Visual Basic Editor.
- In the Visual Basic Editor, on the Tools menu, click References.
- In the list of Available References, click to select (check) the Microsoft Word 8.0 Object Library check box.
NOTE: To add the reference using Microsoft Visual Basic 5.0, click
References on the
Project menu.
Adding the Microsoft Word 8.0 Object Library
reference allows your program to access Microsoft Word Online Help and the
Microsoft Word Visual Basic for Applications constants, properties, and
methods. Note that the Word 8.0 Object Library reference is required to
automate the Word object types directly.
Adding a reference to the
Word 8.0 Object Library is called early binding.
For more
information about early binding, please see the following article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base:
138138 INFO: Late, ID, Early Binding Types Possible in VB for Apps
Step 2: Declaring the Object Variable
To declare an object variable, you dimension the variable just as
you dimension any variable, except that you specify the type when declaring the
object. For example,
Word.Application,
Document, and
Paragraph are separate Word Objects.
The following sample
command line declares the variable
objWD as an object of type
Word.Application:
Dim objWD as Word.Application
Step 3: Setting the Variable
There are two Visual Basic functions you can use to "bind" the
already declared object variable to Word:
CreateObject and
GetObject. The primary differences are that the
CreateObject function creates a new instance of Word, while the
GetObject function uses an existing, or already running instance of Word.
You can also use
GetObject to bind your object variable to a specific Word document.
The following sample command lines bind the objWD variable to Word
using the
CreateObject function:
Dim objWD as Word.Application
Set objWD = CreateObject("Word.Application")
The following sample command lines bind the objWdDoc variable to a
specific Word document:
Dim objWdDoc As Word.Document
Set objWdDoc = GetObject("c:\my documents\doc1.doc")
NOTE: It is recommended to use only the
CreateObject function to automate Word for Windows. The
GetObject function can cause unpredictable behavior if WordMail is running
or if a Word document is embedded inside of another program.
For
more information about getting help with Visual Basic for Applications, please
see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
185232 WD97: Error Message Using WordMail: 'This method or property is not available'
Step 4: Use Properties and Methods to Automate Word
When you complete steps 1-3, you can use the object variable to
automate Word.
The following sample macro uses automation to create
a Word object, create a new document, add some text, and save the document.
Sub AutomateWord()
' Declare the variable.
Dim objWD As Word.Application
' Set the variable (runs new instance of Word.)
Set objWD = CreateObject("Word.Application")
' Add a new document.
objWD.Documents.Add
' Add some text.
objWD.Selection.TypeText "This is some text."
' Save the document.
objWD.ActiveDocument.SaveAs filename:="mydoc.doc"
' Quit Word.
objWD.Quit
' Clear the variable from memory.
Set objWD = Nothing
End Sub
NOTE: The following sample macro duplicates the process described in
the AutomateWord macro and runs directly in Word:
Sub WordMacro()
Documents.Add
Selection.TypeText "This is some text"
ActiveDocument.SaveAs filename:="mydoc.doc"
Quit
End Sub
References
For more information specific to automating Word using Visual
Basic for Applications, please see the following resources.
Microsoft Office Developer Web Site
Microsoft Office 97/Visual Basic Programmer's Guide
Using Automation in the Microsoft Word Objects chapter of the
Microsoft Office 97/Visual Basic Programmer's Guide (ISBN: 1-57231-340-4).
-or-
View the guide online at:
Newsgroups
The following peer-to-peer newsgroups are available to help you
interact with other users of Visual Basic for Applications:
microsoft.public.word.vba.addins
microsoft.public.word.vba.beginners
microsoft.public.word.vba.customization
microsoft.public.vb.ole.automation
Knowledge Base
For more information about getting help with Visual Basic for
Applications, please see the following articles in the Microsoft Knowledge
Base:
163435 VBA: Programming Resources for Visual Basic for Applications
173707 OFF97: How to Run Sample Code from Knowledge Base Articles
163425 WD97: Macro Programming Resources
Office Assistant
For more information about Automation, in the Visual Basic
Editor, click the Office Assistant, type "
Automation", click
Search, and then click to view "Communicating with other applications."
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