The purpose of calling Err.Clear
to explicitly clear the Err
object after you have trapped and handled an error. MSDN suggests that this is especially useful when you are using deferred error handling with On Error Resume Next
. This suggests that you really should be calling Err.Clear
after you have handled the error that was detected, whatever that means for your particular application.
You didn't really provide enough of your code to suggest the kind of error handing routines that you're using. For example, if you have On Error Resume Next
in your code above the block that you posted, and/or what you're doing with strErr
to actually handle the error. Does your script end at the end of the posted section? If so, you're probably in the clear removing the second Err.Clear
, since it'll be impossible for another error be raised anyway during the script's course of execution.
Regardless, I'm going to take the easy way out and suggest that you do the same: there is absolutely no reason to "optimize" this code by removing any Err.Clear
statements. I promise that statement is not bottlenecking the execution speed of your script. Unless you are experiencing problems with your error handling routines (like trapping the same error twice or failing to trap an error because it has been cleared prematurely), there's little reason to worry about "extra" Err.Clear
statements.