Application.Run Method
Word Developer Reference |
Runs a Visual Basic macro.
Syntax
expression.Run(MacroName, varg1, varg2, varg3, varg4, varg5, varg6, varg7, varg8, varg9, varg10, varg11, varg12, varg13, varg14, varg15, varg16, varg17, varg18, varg19, varg20, varg21, varg22, varg23, varg24, varg25, varg26, varg27, varg28, varg29, varg30)
expression Required. A variable that represents an Application object.
Parameters
Name | Required/Optional | Data Type | Description |
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MacroName | Required | String | The name of the macro. |
varg1...varg30 | Optional | Variant | Macro parameter values. You can pass up to 30 parameter values to the specified macro. |
Remarks
The MacroName parameter can be any combination of template, module, and macro name. For example, the following statements are all valid.
Visual Basic for Applications |
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If you specify the document name, your code can only run macros in documents related to the current context — not just any macro in any document.
Although Visual Basic code can call a macro directly (without using the Run method), this method is useful when the macro name is stored in a variable. (For more information, see the example for this topic). The following three statements are functionally equivalent. The first two statements require a reference to Normal.dot, the project in which the called macro resides; the third statement, which uses the Run method, does not require a reference to the Normal.dot project.
Visual Basic for Applications |
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Example
This example prompts the user to enter a template name, module name, macro name, and parameter value, and then it runs that macro.
Visual Basic for Applications |
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See Also