I am interested to get some opinions/input on where one might obtain Excel training/classes, etc. Our local college infrequently offers classes and when they do, the class is most always entry level which I have already taken. Online or correspondence would be acceptable.
My boss is making me teach an Intermediate Execl class that will last about 55 min to a wide skilled class. Does anyone have any suggestions on what to show the group. I was think of 4 topics but not sure.
I'd like to create a number of classes in a VB.NET DLL and then use them from VBA in Excel 2003+. Is this possible? I wouldn't actually expose any of .NET. These would be simply be classes defined by me (which may wrap elements of .NET but never require VBA to have knowledge of .NET or access to .NET assemblies).
If this is not possible, would it be possible to create a DLL in VB.NET that exports functions and subroutines that can then be linked into VBA by importing them (the same way you would with Win32 API routines)?
User# User_Christian User_Surname Role 1 bob smith operator 1 bob smith supervisor 1 bob smith warehouseman 2 john stone operator 2 john stone gunman 5 george brown Foreman
What Im after is:- a matrix with unique Role list across the top Unique ID & Name down the side (I can do all the above using recorded macro's) but the clever bit I cant even start to work out is how do I get matrix populated from the list?
I am trying to create a shared database that tracks training for about 100 people. I've built a workable sheet, but the only way I have to share it over e-mail (there is no office NAS set up, and we're on a military base so we can't establish wifi).
Is there a way to set up a workbook that can be updated on one computer and instantly reflect that information in the cloud?
My goal is to have each team responsible for updating their own form and then have that information update my master tracker.
I have a spreadsheet with ~350 people tracking 24 dates for classes each. On a seperate tab I have a macro that copies and pastes a pre-defined macro to display the due dates. My question is, can I have a macro run the calculation and put the result in the cell rather than have around 8,400 calculations on a sheet?
I manage a number if individuals in the Army and as such, track their annual training requirements. Some requirements are semi-annual, annual, quadrennial, etc...
I have a spreadsheet to track the dates that the requirement was last completed (attached). I would like to use conditional formatting to turn dates that are within 30 days of being due (or blank) RED and dates that are between 31 days and 60 days of being due YELLOW.
A lot of people seem to have been having troubles with the fact that if you try to use controls in a class with the "withevents" keyword, some events (like Enter & Exit) are not included in the tracked events. I have been having some troubles with this myself & have not yet seen any particularly satisfying workarounds to this problem.
So here is an idea I just had, I have not made any attempt yet to implement it & so have no idea how complicated doing so would be, but I thought I would just put it out here & get some feedback on the idea before I spend any real time working on it.
The idea is to create a blank, transparent label that covers the entire form, monitor the Click event of this label, & pass it back to the normal controls on the form as necessary. Does this sound doable, or do you all think it would be merely an exercise in futility? If anyone has any better suggestions for how to work around this lack of events,
=ROUND(SUMIF($C$26:$C$106,D126, $F$26:$F$106)/COUNTIF($C$26:$C$106, D126), 0). the formula is from a sheet which is used as like a questioning/ skills matrix.
The reference of d126 is a category eg: complaint handling and there might be 4 questions on complaint handling each of the answers being displayed as a number between the cells f26-106. If any of these individual cell results are equal to 0 or 1 then i want the overall answer for the formula to default to "training required" rather than the value it would give.