7

I have the following (on the surface of it, simple) task:

Copy the values from a number of columns on a spreadsheet into a 2D array using VBA.

To make life more interesting, the columns are not adjacent, but they are all of the same length. Obviously one could do this by looping over every element in turn, but that seems very inelegant. I am hoping there is a more compact solution - but I struggle to find it.

Here are some attempts of what I would consider "a simple approach" - for simplicity, I am putting the range as A1:A5, D1:D5 - a total of 10 cells in two ranges.

Private Sub testIt()
  Dim r1, r2, ra, rd, rad
  Dim valString, valUnion, valBlock
  Set r1 = Range("A1:A5")
  Set r2 = Range("D1:D5")
  valString = Range("A1:A5,D1:D5").Value
  valUnion = Union(r1, r2).Value
  valBlock = Range("A1:D5").Value
End Sub

When I look at each of these variables, the first two have dimension (1 To 5, 1 To 1) while the last one has (1 To 5, 1 To 4). I was expecting to get (1 To 5, 1 To 2) for the first two, but that was not the case.

I would be happy if I could loop over the data one column at the time, and assign all the values in one column to one column in the array - but I could not figure out how to do that either. Something like

cNames = Array("A", "D")
ci = 1
For Each c in columnNames
  vals( , ci) = Range(c & "1:" & c & "5").Value
  ci = ci + 1
Next c  

But that's not the right syntax. The result I want to get would be achieved with

cNames = Array("A", "D")
ci = 1
For Each c in columnNames
  For ri = 1 To 5
    vals(ri , ci) = Range(c & "1").offset(ri-1,0).Value
  Next ri
  ci = ci + 1
Next c  

But that's pretty ugly. So here is my question:

Is it possible to get the values of a "composite range" (multiple non-contiguous blocks) into an array - either all at once, or a columns at a time? If so, how do I do it?

For extra bonus points - can anyone explain why the arrays returned in testIt() are dimensioned Base 1, whereas my VBA is set to Option Base 0? In other words - why are they not (0 To 4, 0 To 0)? Is this just one more inconsistency on the part of Microsoft?

3 Answers 3

16

Provided each area in rng has the same number of rows then this should work.

Function ToArray(rng) As Variant()
    Dim arr() As Variant, r As Long, nr As Long
    Dim ar As Range, c As Range, cnum As Long, rnum As Long
    Dim col As Range

    nr = rng.Areas(1).Rows.Count
    ReDim arr(1 To nr, 1 To rng.Cells.Count / nr)
    cnum = 0
    For Each ar In rng.Areas
        For Each col In ar.Columns
        cnum = cnum + 1
        rnum = 1
        For Each c In col.Cells
            arr(rnum, cnum) = c.Value
            rnum = rnum + 1 'EDIT: added missing line...
        Next c
        Next col
    Next ar

    ToArray = arr
End Function

Usage:

Dim arr
arr = ToArray(Activesheet.Range("A1:A5,D1:D5"))
Debug.Print UBound(arr,1), UBound(arr,2)

As for why array from rng.Value are 1-based instead of zero-based, I'd guess it's because that maps more readily to actual row/column numbers on the worksheet than if it were zero-based. The Option Base x setting is ignored

4
  • This is in effect the same thing as my last snippet of code - except that you use a For Each where I indexed the cells explicitly; and your code works if an area has more than one adjacent column. It's a solution - and thank you for posting it - but not the one I am hoping for. But it may turn out to be the best one can hope for?...
    – Floris
    Sep 25, 2013 at 1:15
  • 1
    I'm not aware of any one-shot method of doing what you want. Sep 25, 2013 at 1:47
  • There is a line missing in your code: right after arr(rnum, cnum) = c.Value you need a rnum = rnum + 1... I have taken the liberty of incorporating the corrected code into another answer, with reference to this answer. Thanks again - I am beginning to think there is indeed no "faster" way to do this, so I will accept this as the "right" answer (after you confirm that the code change I propose is correct).
    – Floris
    Sep 25, 2013 at 19:43
  • 1
    Thanks @Floris - added the missing line Sep 25, 2013 at 19:52
2

It is possible to accomplish what you want if you're willing to add a hidden worksheet. I used Excel 2010 and created two worksheets (Sheet1 / Sheet2) to test my findings. Below is the code:

Private Sub TestIt()

    ' Src = source
    ' Dst = destination
    ' WS  = worksheet

    Dim Data    As Variant
    Dim SrcWS   As Excel.Worksheet
    Dim DstWS   As Excel.Worksheet

    ' Get a reference to the worksheet containing the
    ' source data
    Set SrcWS = ThisWorkbook.Worksheets("Sheet1")

    ' Get a reference to a hidden worksheet.
    Set DstWS = ThisWorkbook.Worksheets("Sheet2")

    ' Delete any data found on the hidden worksheet
    DstWS.UsedRange.Columns.EntireColumn.Delete

    ' Copy the non-contiguous range into the hidden
    ' worksheet.
    SrcWS.Range("A1:A5,D1:D5").Copy DstWS.Range("A1")

    ' Now all of the data can be stored in a variable
    ' as a 2D array because it will be contiguous on
    ' the hidden worksheet.
    Data = DstWS.UsedRange.Value

End Sub
2
  • Thanks for taking the time to answer this. I accept that this works - but it doesn't really meet the "simplest possible way" criterion that I was looking for. Making a phantom copy of the array feels wrong.
    – Floris
    Oct 2, 2017 at 20:47
  • 1
    @Floris I understand where you're coming from regarding my caching approach. My main focus was trying to address the 'all at once' portion of your question and the '(no loops)' portion of your subject line. Like you, I too was hoping for a simple command to accomplish it but the best I could come up with was some sleight of hand with the range object. I appreciate your feedback and you're welcome for the answer.
    – Chris D
    Oct 2, 2017 at 20:59
0

Tim,

Thanks for your sample code. I had some problems with it and had to rewrite some portions of it. It wasn't counting through the rows and columns correctly. I have test this and it is working 100%

Function ToArray(rng As Range) As Variant()
Dim arr() As Variant, r As Long, nr As Long
Dim ar As Range, c As Range, cnum As Long, rnum As Long
Dim col As Range
Dim lastrow As Integer
Dim saverow() As Integer
Dim lastcolumn As Integer
Dim templastcolumn As Integer
For i = 1 To rng.Areas.Count
    templastcolumn = (rng.Areas(i).Column + rng.Areas(i).CountLarge) - 1
    If lastrow <> rng.Areas(i).Row Then
        nr = nr + rng.Areas(i).Rows.Count
        lastrow = rng.Areas(i).Row
    End If
    If lastcolumn < templastcolumn Then lastcolumn = templastcolumn
Next i
ReDim arr(1 To nr, 1 To lastcolumn)
ReDim saverow(1 To lastrow)
cnum = 0
rnum = 0
lastrow = 0
For Each ar In rng.Areas
    If lastrow <> ar.Row Then
        lastrow = ar.Row
        cnum = 0
    End If
    For Each col In ar.Columns
        cnum = cnum + 1
        For Each c In col.Cells
            If saverow(c.Row) = 0 Then
                rnum = rnum + 1
                saverow(c.Row) = rnum
            End If
            arr(saverow(c.Row), cnum) = c.value
        Next c
    Next col
Next ar
ToArray = arr
End Function

Sub TestCopyArray()
Dim arr As Variant

arr = ToArray(ThisWorkbook.Sheets("MSS").Range("B1:D2,G1:J2,B4:D4,B6:D6"))
ThisWorkbook.Sheets("Sheet1").Range("A1").Resize(UBound(arr, 1), UBound(arr, 2)) = arr
End Sub

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