Excel VBA Range.Find Date That is a Formula

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南方客
南方客 2020-11-28 15:59

I receive a workbook twice a month that contains information about the processing volumes of a call center team. I have no way of modifying the format or layout of the workb

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  •  温柔的废话
    2020-11-28 16:45

    Dates are tricky to find with the Range.Find method. One of the issues is that in VBA, dates are of the Date data type, but the worksheet does not have that data type. Rather the data type is a number that is formatted to look like a date.

    One solution, if you can be certain of the format of the date on the worksheet, is to search for the string equivalent. Given your example, something like this will work:

    Option Explicit
    Sub GetDates()
        Const findDate As Date = #5/11/2017#
        Dim findStr As String
    
    Dim R As Range, WS As Worksheet
    Set WS = Worksheets("Sheet1")
    
    findStr = Format(findDate, "dd-mmm")
    
    With WS
        Set R = .Cells.Find(what:=findStr, LookIn:=xlValues, lookat:=xlWhole)
        If Not R Is Nothing Then MsgBox findDate & " found in " & R.Address
    End With
    
    End Sub
    

    but it is not very robust since, in many cases, the user can change the format.

    Another method that is more robust, would be to loop through the existing cells, looking for the numeric representation of the date (using the Value2 property):

    Sub GetDates2()
        Const findDate As Date = #5/11/2017#
        Dim R As Range, C As Range, WS As Worksheet
    
    Set WS = Worksheets("sheet1")
    Set R = WS.UsedRange
    
    For Each C In R
        If C.Value2 = CDbl(findDate) Then MsgBox findDate & " found in " & C.Address
    Next C
    End Sub
    

    If you have a large range to search, this can be sped up by a factor of ten by reading the range into a VBA array and looping through the array.

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