VBA as it is, does not support something like this. It is only possible with a range.
Theoretically....
You can do stuff like this using Evaluate
in a verly limited way. To show some examples which change only one row/column or specific values of an 2d-array:
Dim MyArray() As Variant
Public Function MyArrayOut() As Variant
MyArrayOut = MyArray
End Function
Sub testing()
'we are using a 5x4 (4 columns / 5 rows) array
ReDim MyArray(0 To 4, 0 To 3) As Variant 'also 1 to 5 and 1 to 4 are possible.... doesn't matter
Dim i As Long, j As Long 'input some numbers
For i = 0 To 4
For j = 0 To 3
MyArray(i, j) = i + 5 * j + 1
Next
Next
[A1:D5].Value2 = MyArray
Stop ' check the sheet -> should be 1 to 20
'lets add 11 to the second row
MyArray = Evaluate("=IF({0;1;0;0;0},MyArrayOut()+11,MyArrayOut())")
[A1:D5].Value2 = MyArray
Stop ' check again. row 2 should be 13, 18, 23, 28
'set only 1,1 ; 2,2 ; 4,2 and 5,4 to 0. just keep in mind that using math will fail if ANY value is not numeric (or empty)
MyArray = Evaluate("=MyArrayOut()*{0,1,1,1;1,0,1,1;1,1,1,1;1,0,1,1;1,1,1,0}")
[A1:D5].Value2 = MyArray
Stop 'A1, B2, B4, D5 all should be 0
'set column 3 to "abc"
MyArray = Evaluate("=IF({0,0,1,0},""abc"",MyArrayOut())")
[A1:D5].Value2 = MyArray
Stop ' check again. column C should be just abc
End Sub
Using a valid IF
-statement allows to do a lot, but you need to either hardcode it, or a pretty complex algorithm which "kills" as good as allways the idea of "not looping".
Also this will take more resources and be as good as always slower than doing it directly. Also you need an extra function to bring the array inside the evaluate.
Still there is one case where it is useable to my eye: Extracting one row/column via INDEX
. Keep in mind, that the output is still a 2d-array which can be nulified via the Application.Transpose
-Trick. The reason for it being useable is just the fact, that there is no need to know the size of the array. This way you can directly extract via extrVar = Evaluate("=INDEX(MyArrayOut(),2,)")
. While the 2 could be set via a different varianble. This way you do not need to ReDim
the new variable (extrVar
in this case). It just needs to be variant. That said, with Application.Index
you also could achive this without the use of Evaluate
. (Which also uses less resources and is faster)
I hope you got an idea of the way you could use evaluate to do the job.
Still, VBA itself doesn't offer any way to manipulate multiple contents of an array in one step by the syntax itself. (At least not in a way you could use for this case)
EDIT
I almost forgot: to set ALL values in a variable to the same value, something like MyArray = Evaluate("=IF(MyArrayOut()="""",5,5)")
will do set everything to 5 or MyArray = Evaluate("=IF(MyArrayOut()="""",""abc"",""abc"")")
to only contain "abc". To empty it out, you could use MyArray = Evaluate("=IF(MyArrayOut()="""","""","""")")
but a simple ReDim
without Preserve
also could do it in one line.
EDIT 2
for your Range("A1:C3") = MyArray: Range("A1,B2,C1,B3") = 11: MyArray = Range("A1:C3")
example, you could use it as a base for a own function like:
Public Sub multiSetSame(ByRef arr As Variant, ByVal val As Variant, ParamArray str() As Variant)
Dim runner As Variant
For Each runner In str
arr(Split(runner, ",")(0), Split(runner, ",")(1)) = val
Next
End Sub
Sub test()
Dim MyArray(1 To 3, 1 To 4) As Long
multiSetSame MyArray, 11, "1,1", "2,2", "1,3", "3,2"
[A1:D3].Value2 = MyArray
End Sub
But also for this example, while I dont know how it is evaluated which values to change, it either should be better to directly change it as they are evaluated, or if they are always the same, just write a sub which does the job for all the values. Any "workaround" will just slow down the whole process.
If you still have any questions, just ask ;)