0

I have an Excel userform with textboxes to put various information (first name, last name, gender, height, etc.). For some of the textboxes, I want to apply a sort of validation.

For the gender field, for example, the only values that are acceptable are "M" or "F." I have this bit of code. If you type "M" or "F" and tab out of the field, it goes to the next textbox. But if it's anything else, the MsgBox will pop up like it should, but after you click OK, the focus is not set to the textbox.

What am I doing wrong? Shouldn't this work?

Private Sub txtGender_Exit(ByVal Cancel As MSForms.ReturnBoolean)
If txtGender.Value <> "M" And txtGender.Value <> "F" Then
MsgBox ("Invalid gender.")
txtGender.SetFocus
End If
End Sub
1
  • When you have a finite set of possible values, UI conventions call for using either radio buttons (for 2-3 values) or a combobox (for more). Using an unrestricted textbox is just wrong for this. Also this is 2017, consider which option a hermaphrodite or transgender person is going to select. That said, the parentheses around the MsgBox argument(s) should be dropped. All they're doing is making VBA evaluate the string literal as a value expression, force-passing it ByVal to the MsgBox function, and potentially causing compile errors when you start adding more parameters, e.g. title/icon. Sep 11, 2017 at 16:29

1 Answer 1

1

You can cancel the Exit event within your If statement.

Private Sub txtGender_Exit(ByVal Cancel As MSForms.ReturnBoolean)
If txtGender.Value <> "M" And txtGender.Value <> "F" Then
  MsgBox ("Invalid gender.")
  Cancel = True
End If
End Sub
2

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.