I have an Excel document that copies a template sheet into a new sheet on the first time it runs. Any more sheets that follow this template are appended to the newly created
Solution #1: Your statement
.Range(Cells(RangeStartRow, RangeStartColumn), Cells(RangeEndRow, RangeEndColumn)).PasteSpecial xlValues
does not refer to a proper Range to act upon. Instead,
.Range(.Cells(RangeStartRow, RangeStartColumn), .Cells(RangeEndRow, RangeEndColumn)).PasteSpecial xlValues
does (and similarly in some other cases).
Solution #2:
Activate Worksheets("Cable Cards") prior to using its cells.
Explanation:
Cells(RangeStartRow, RangeStartColumn) (e.g.) gives you a Range, that would be ok, and that is why you often see Cells used in this way. But since it is not applied to a specific object, it applies to the ActiveSheet. Thus, your code attempts using .Range(rng1, rng2), where .Range is a method of one Worksheet object and rng1 and rng2 are in a different Worksheet.
There are two checks that you can do to make this quite evident:
Activate your Worksheets("Cable Cards") prior to executing your Sub and it will start working (now you have well-formed references to Ranges). For the code you posted, adding .Activate right after With... would indeed be a solution, although you might have a similar problem somewhere else in your code when referring to a Range in another Worksheet.
With a sheet other than Worksheets("Cable Cards") active, set a breakpoint at the line throwing the error, start your Sub, and when execution breaks, write at the immediate window
Debug.Print Cells(RangeStartRow, RangeStartColumn).Address(external:=True)
Debug.Print .Cells(RangeStartRow, RangeStartColumn).Address(external:=True)
and see the different outcomes.
Conclusion:
Using Cells or Range without a specified object (e.g., Worksheet, or Range) might be dangerous, especially when working with more than one Sheet, unless one is quite sure about what Sheet is active.