I've approached this slightly differently and am using the date suffix on the filename to determine which is the 'latest' file:
Public Function MostRecentCompanyFile(ByRef strCompany As String, _
ByRef strDirectory As String) As String
Dim strDir As String
Dim datDateSuffix As Date
Dim strLatest As String
Dim datLatest As Date
strDir = Dir(strDirectory & "\" & strCompany & "*")
Do Until Len(strDir) = 0
datDateSuffix = StripDate(strDir)
If Len(strLatest) = 0 Then
'the first iteration
strLatest = strDir
datLatest = datDateSuffix
ElseIf datDateSuffix > datLatest Then
'this file has a later date suffix so this is now the latest
strLatest = strDir
datLatest = datDateSuffix
End If
'get the next file
strDir = Dir
Loop
MostRecentCompanyFile = strLatest
End Function
Private Function StripDate(ByRef strFileName As String) As Date
Dim intPos As Integer
Dim strDate As String
Dim datDate As Date
'assume the date suffix occurs after the underscore in the file name and is in the format yyyymmdd
intPos = InStr(1, strFileName, "_")
strDate = Mid$(strFileName, intPos + 1, 8)
datDate = DateSerial(Left$(strDate, 4), Mid$(strDate, 5, 2), Right$(strDate, 2))
StripDate = datDate
End Function
Here, we are:
- Looping through all the files in the given
strDirectory
.
- Stripping off the date suffix (using the
StripDate
method).
- Comparing this date to all others for the given
strCompany
.