15

I have a macro that I call via a tab/group/button added by the Custom UI Editor -

<customUI xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/office/2006/01/customui">
    <ribbon startFromScratch="false">
        <tabs>
            <tab id="tabCustomActions" label="Custom ActionsXXX" insertAfterMso="TabDeveloper">
                <group id="GroupTLA" label="TLA Actions">
                    <button id="buttonFormatTLA" label="Format as TLA" image="TLALogo" size="large" onAction="start_tla" />
                </group>
            </tab>
        </tabs>
    </ribbon>
</customUI>

The button shows up just fine, with my custom logo, but when ever I click the button I get the follow error -

VBA Error

VBA is not opened following this error, as it usually is, and no code within VBA is indicated as the problem if I open the developer console and then try and click the button.

Strangely though, if I try and run the macro manually, it works fine with no errors. Does anybody have any ideas how to solve this?

Here is my full code in a Pastebin, should you wish to view it. Thanks.

2
  • The VBA IDE doesn't open because you're not running VBA, this is a macro, right? What code is running in VBA when you 'run it manually'?
    – Brad
    Mar 14, 2013 at 12:49
  • 2
    Brad: in Excel and the other office products, VBA = macro. Same thing. Mar 14, 2013 at 14:38

2 Answers 2

17

You have the wrong call signature for the start_tla callback in your VBA code.

If you open up your file in Custom UI Editor, there is a button called Generate Callbacks to the right in the menu. If you press it, it will give you the correct callbacks for your VBA code to match the ribbon xml in your file:

'Callback for buttonFormatTLA onAction
Sub start_tla(control As IRibbonControl)
    'Your code goes here
End Sub

According to the Pastebin link, your sub looks like this, without the control As IRibbonControl parameter:

Public Sub start_tla()
2
  • Perfect, thanks for that. I actually created a generic on_customUI_action callback function and then checked which button was pressed. That way the macro works if I run it manually also. Thanks.
    – David Gard
    Mar 14, 2013 at 12:56
  • 1
    In my case, I had the same module name in another Add-In that was open. This error has gone after I gave unique name to the module.
    – Dhay
    Aug 4, 2017 at 11:24
0

It is old thread, but maybe it will help someone. If you make 'control' argument optional, you can run either from Ribbon button or directly from VBA or Form button.

Sub start_tla(Optional control As IRibbonControl)
    'Your code goes here
End Sub

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