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I have an Excel workbook with dependencies on code in other other Excel workbooks (these dependent .xls's are VB-level references, i.e. via the Tools->References dialog box in the VBA editor), and some dependencies on dll's such as: Microsoft Scripting Runtime Microsoft Forms 2.0 Object Library

This sheet has worked for about 2 years on around 20 machines running Windows XP and Office XP. Recently we have taken delivery of 3 new machines (same OS, same office version) which refuse to run this sheet. When the sheet opens, it throws a 'Compile Error', and the session hangs.

If I open the sheet on a 'bad' machine, hold down the left shift key to stop macro's from running, and then go to VBA Editor->Debug->Complie VBAProject, it compiles fine. I am then able to save the sheet and open it normally on a 'bad' machine. However this new version of the sheet refuses to run on a 'good' machine!!

I think there must be some sort of version mismatch between certain dll's on the 'good' and 'bad' machines. How do I establish what is causing the issue? Are there any tools available for comparing versions of com components?

2 Answers 2

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Two suggestions

1) First open the file with macros disabled. And then check VBA Editor | Tools | References. Check for any missing references and then let us know what are they. We will take it from there.

2) For references like "Microsoft Scripting Runtime Object Library" I never use Early Binding. Early Binding is the major cause for these kind of errors. Just FYI: Early Binding is creating references beforehand via VBA Editor | Tools | References. I would recommend changing your code to Late Binding. Here are 2 examples of the same code using "Microsoft Scripting Runtime Object Library" with Early Binding and Late Binding

EARLY BINDING EXAMPLE

'~~> Set Reference to "Microsoft Scripting Runtime Object Library"

Sub EBExample()
    Dim FSO As Scripting.FileSystemObject
    Dim SourceFolder As Scripting.Folder
    Dim FileItem As Scripting.File

    Set FSO = New Scripting.FileSystemObject
    Set SourceFolder = FSO.GetFolder(SourceFolderName)

    For Each FileItem In SourceFolder.Files
        '~~> You code
    Next FileItem
End Sub

LATE BINDING EXAMPLE

'~~> This doesn't need a reference
Sub LBExample()
    Dim FSO As Object, SourceFolder As Object, FileItem As Object

    Set FSO = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
    Set SourceFolder = FSO.GetFolder(SourceFolderName)

    For Each FileItem In SourceFolder.Files
        '~~> You code
    Next FileItem
End Sub

As for me I use early binding to take advantage of Intellisense but then convert it to late binding to avoid version-specific code before distributing the code. That ways the code always works. :)

IMP NOTE: Late Binding fails in scenarios where the destination machine doesn't have the relevant dll registered.

RECOMMENDED LINK:

Topic: Using early binding and late binding in Automation

Link: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/245115

Hope this helps

Sid

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    +1 Interesting strategy. It should be noted that it differs from Microsoft's. Quoting from the link: "The advantages given to early binding make it the best choice whenever possible. [...] Early binding is the preferred method. [..] Microsoft recommends early binding in almost all cases." Though maybe not in this paticular case. Mar 9, 2012 at 8:48
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    @Jean-François Corbett: Thanks :) I believe (and I could be wrong) but MS recommends it based on 2 main reasons. 1) The Intellisense appeal for masses. 2) EB is way much faster than LB. But like I mentioned earlier that I could be wrong. :) Mar 9, 2012 at 8:53
  • LB is slow as it goes through dispatch rather than raw interface.
    – DanH
    Mar 9, 2012 at 9:05
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    +1 I typically using late binding especially with automating other Office software but the Microsoft Scripting Runtime Object Library is the one I have used early binding with - it improved runtime on my Dupe Master addin by 25-30%
    – brettdj
    Mar 9, 2012 at 9:31
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    LB has also been much more effective for me when the powers that be decided to upgrade SOME users to 2010 from 2003.
    – Gaffi
    Mar 9, 2012 at 17:37
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The easiest way I've found to compare references on two different machines is to run a little macro on each pc to show me all the details.

Make sure Excel is set to trust access to the VBA project object model and run the below code on the two versions of your macro.

Sub GetReferences()
   Dim r As Object
   For Each r In ActiveWorkbook.VBProject.References
      Debug.Print r.Name, r.Description, r.FullPath
   Next r
End Sub
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  • Hi I ran that code on a good and bad machine and got identical output. I.e. all the references stored within the workbook vba project are identical.
    – nickos556
    Mar 12, 2012 at 7:53
  • @nickos556, very strange. If you use late binding like the other person suggested, does the problem go away?
    – mischab1
    Mar 13, 2012 at 4:04

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