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I've written a word vba macro for someone. I've saved the file both as a .dotm and .docm file. When I open the file on his computer I see there are a bunch of macros in there that I didn't write!

Even sometimes when I open one of my own word macros on my own computer a see a bunch of code I didn't write, normally under the "normal" tab: enter image description here

The problem is sometimes the previous code inside the word document can cause errors for the new code.

This doesn't occur for other types of projects. VBA for Excel, powerpoint, access, ....

Question1: Why is that code there?

Question2: How can I send a word macro file to someone without having to worry about the previous code getting in the way?

2 Answers 2

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Question1: Why is that code there?

Normal.dotm is the standard document template.

https://support.office.com/en-ie/article/Change-the-Normal-template-Normaldotm--06de294b-d216-47f6-ab77-ccb5166f98ea?ui=en-US&rs=en-IE&ad=IE

The Normal.dotm template opens whenever you start Microsoft Office Word 2007, and it includes default styles and customizations that determine the basic look of a document.

When you open a blank document, I think by default Word will use this template and so any macros in that Normal.dotm file will persist in the "new" document, and further the Normal.dotm will appear in the VBE. (This actually can be similar to Excel if you have a Personal.xlsb file, although this is not present by default in Excel)

Question2: How can I send a word macro file to someone without having to worry about the previous code getting in the way?

You can always manually remove any unwanted/unneeded modules from the file, before you send to another.

Alternatively, the better way of distributing macros would be in a document template or an Add-in file.

Alternatively, you can export the module code as a text file and the other user can import it.

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  • Great answer :) might be worth mentioning the global nature of Normal as compared to how document templates are fired?
    – miradulo
    Mar 26, 2015 at 15:04
  • @DonkeyKong feel free to revise/update my answer with that information, I do not do very much development in Word so I'm not as familiar with that as I am with PPT or XLS. Mar 26, 2015 at 15:08
  • Thank for the answer. But its not the extra code on my side that's causing the problem, but rather the code on the receivers side. Even when he opens a blank word file there is already a bunch code there.
    – behnam
    Mar 26, 2015 at 15:09
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    @behnam One moment, I can explain.
    – miradulo
    Mar 26, 2015 at 15:09
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David Zemens has supplied you with a solid answer, however to add a bit of additional information to explain this behavior: The Normal template fires upon the opening/closing/alteration of any document (global behavior). As a result, if you add some macro code to the Normal template, you can expect it to happen even when you open a blank Word document.

To avoid this, either don't place code in Normal that you don't want to happen globally, or follow one of the alternatives in David's answer. My guess is you want macros that only link to certain documents, in which case you should place them outside of Normal, as to not get conflicting behavior. I personally like AddIns better for global behavior if that is in fact what you are looking for, as they will not produce any strange behavior with existing code in Normal.

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