12

For the love of all that is good, I cannot seem to get this to work. I keep getting the error mentioned above.

I have this table, and I'm trying to find out whether the code matches it's own sub-code somewhere within the other column, however it's erroring out. Your help is greatly appreciated.

enter image description here

Sub testing()

    Dim m1 As long
    Dim myrange As Range

    Set myrange = Worksheets("Sheet1").Range("B2:B23")

    For e = 2 To 23
        m1= Application.WorksheetFunction.Match(Cells(e, 1).Value, myrange, 0)

        If m1 > 0 Then
            Cells(e, 3).Value = "Yes"
        Else
            Cells(e, 3).Value = "No"
        End If
    Next e

MsgBox "Complete!"

End Sub
2
  • David's answer is correct, but why not just put the formula in column C? Jul 19, 2013 at 17:01
  • Hi Doug, I will need to use this in conjunction with other functions that I'd like to do later on, which I can only be done optimally via VBA code.
    – Humble Val
    Jul 19, 2013 at 17:19

2 Answers 2

28

Use the Application.Match function which allows for better ability to trap errors. When using the WorksheetFunction.Match, when a match is not found, it returns an error, which is what you're experiencing.

If Not IsError(Application.Match(Cells(e, 1).Value, myrange, 0)) Then
    'Do stuff when the match is found
    Cells(e, 3).Value = "Yes"
Else:
    Cells(e, 3).Value = "No"
End If

You could also potentially use the CountIf function:

If Application.WorksheetFunction.CountIf(myRange, Cells(e,1).Value) > 0 Then
    Cells(e,3).Value = "Yes"
Else:
    Cells(e,3).Value = "No"
End If

Neither of these approaches requires you to use the m1 variable, you can assign this variable within the True part of the If/Then statement, if you need to identify where the match is found.

2
  • Quick question though: What if you wanted to "match" part of the value within the cell, what function would you use?
    – Humble Val
    Jul 24, 2013 at 3:36
  • 1
    It depends how complicated of a partial match. It might be something simple, for example to count the occurences of any cell beginning with "steve", the second argument in the CountIf function would be like "steve*", or if you were looking for any cell that contains the word "steve", you could use "*steve*", etc. More complicated, and you might want to look in to using Regular Expressions. Jul 24, 2013 at 13:55
3

Just as another option, this can also be done by putting the formula below in cell C2, and dragging it down to C23.

=IF(COUNTIF($A$2:$A$23,B2)>=1,"YES","NO")
2
  • +1, this is the way to go, unless there's some compelling reason for VBA. Jul 19, 2013 at 17:12
  • 1
    Attempting to find a match to use in part with another set of codes.
    – Humble Val
    Jul 24, 2013 at 3:44

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