1

Without using VBA (I can do it in VBA, but just want to try whether a macro can do it as well, but I haven't figured it out yet),

I have two sheets. Sheet A includes a column of names such as its cell like:

Wright

Sheet B includes a column of names well, but with more letters like title in one cell such as:

Mr. Wright

Sheet A to B is in a relationship of one-to-many (Wright in Sheet A might have multiple rows with Mr.Wright in Sheet B).

If in Sheet B, how to write a macro with some function to achieve: to check whether 'Mr.Wright' has a substring in a cell in Sheet A.

(I think about it might be easier to start from Sheet A: might with regex, find all matches in Sheet B with INDEX or MATCH first. It's much better if it can be done from Sheet B in one shot)

1
  • Sorry for the question. Don't bother. I think the most proper way is to use VBA.
    – Yang
    Oct 15, 2016 at 12:24

2 Answers 2

1

Create a macro called sub_in_name.

Option Explicit

Sub sub_in_name()

Dim x, i As Long

Dim endofcells1, endofcellsmany As Long

endofcells1 = WorksheetFunction.CountA(Range("A:A"))
endofcellsmany = WorksheetFunction.CountA(Range("B:B"))

For x = 1 To endofcells1
    For i = 1 To endofcellsmany


If (InStr(1, Cells(i, 2), Cells(x, 1), vbTextCompare)) Then
Cells(i, 2 + x).Value = "True"
Else
Cells(i, 2 + x).Value = "False"
End If

    Next i
Next x


End Sub

Intr(start, SearchStr, SearchInStr, vbaoption) is the main function to make this work. Cells(i, 2 + x) is indexed based off the number of non-empty cells in column "A"

Make sure to clear the cells content for each trial; after column "B".

For example put in Column "A" & Column "B" and you will get columns "C:D"

 Column "A"       Column "B"        Column "C"    Column "D"

 Wright           Mr. Wright        True          False

 Roger            Wright Jr.        True          False

                  Wright the Ivth.  True          False

                  Sally             False         False
0
0

Roughly similar logic. Originally I wanted to use existing macro functions to do it. Finally it ended up like making a customized function like below:

Inspired by another thread in stack overflow. I made a code to do full checking like user3553260's. But I think a function is not a bad choice as well, considering if the efficiency is not the top one concern here.

Function LookupName(lookupValue As Variant, lookupRange As Range) As String

Dim r As Long   
Dim c As Long   

Dim s As String 

s = "No"

For r = 1 To lookupRange.Rows.Count
    For c = 1 To lookupRange.Columns.Count

        If Not IsEmpty(lookupRange.Cells(r, c).Value) Then

          If InStr(LCase(lookupValue), LCase(lookupRange.Cells(r, c).Value)) Then

            s = "Yes"
            Exit For

          End If

        End If

    Next
Next

LookupName = s

End Function

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.