Pregunta

Hi and welcome to the Evaluate() mystery


The MSDN Office Developer Reference (2013) Documentation says:

Using square brackets (for example, "[A1:C5]") is identical to calling the Evaluate method with a string argument.


So, I have ran a very simple code to see how accurate the Microsoft's Documentation of the Evaluate() method is.
Not surprisingly, I am getting a strange albeit consistent result.
note: execute each of the 4 commands in the Immediate Window CTRL+G. See the difference in each of the calls. Notice the built-in bug which shows each MsgBox twice. Just keep that in mind and do not get confused...
Stick this code in a module

Private Sub SleepESub()
    Application.Wait Now + TimeValue("0:00:20")
    MsgBox "w8'd "
End Sub

then execute these 4 commands ( 1 at a time ) in the Immediate Window

? Evaluate ("SleepESub()")
? [SleepESub()]
? [SleepESub]
? SleepESub

The first 2 execute the code right away; means to me they have evaluated the code. The third one (according to the documentation) should be Evaluating but it doesn't act the same way as it does in a module's body. The Immediate Window is giving an Error 2023 however the same call from within a module's body executes it as if you were calling a sub.It waits the 20 seconds like if it was a normal Call SleepESub() which is the number 4 call.

Can anyone explain what I am missing here? Is the line number 3 not a proper Evaluation call? or does it evaluate the call to sub itself (if that makes sense)


Update:
I think some people are misunderstanding what I am evaluating here - don't worry it is an advanced topic and I am not a book writer and you are not mind readers. (forgive me...)
To get a better idea you can compare results from the immediate window vs. module's body. Try this code:

' Run each of the calls separately
' in a module's body and compare it with 
' the previous calls from the Immediate Window
    Sub ModuleBody()
        Evaluate ("SleepESub()")
        '[SleepESub()]
        '[SleepESub]
        'SleepESub
    End Sub
¿Fue útil?

Solución

It would appear to me that what differs in the different ways of executing the code would be the thread that it runs on - the UI thread or a background thread, and the parser. Evaluate executed functions would be handled differently to explicitly defined functions, and functions called from the Immediate window would be handled slightly differently also.

In:

Sub ModuleBody()
    Evaluate ("SleepESub()")
    [SleepESub()]
    [SleepESub]
    SleepESub
End Sub

Evaluate ("SleepESub()") and [SleepESub()] appear to be expecting a formula, and Private Sub SleepESub() is not being executed at all.

Depending on how the parser handles the procedure, each command may be executed in sequence in a single thread, resulting in the delay from the Application.Wait, or the Application.Wait may be considered to be valid only on the UI thread, and skipped when run on a background thread.

This can be confirmed by the following code, executed by ?[SleepESub()] or ?Evaluate("SleepESub()") in the Immediate window:

Private Declare PtrSafe Sub sapiSleep Lib "kernel32" Alias "Sleep" (ByVal dwMilliseconds As Long)
Private Sub SleepESub()
    'Application.Wait Now + TimeValue("0:00:05")
    sapiSleep 5000
    MsgBox "w8'd "
End Sub

When using the sapiSleep 5000 API call, the wait occurs (twice! - that bug that was mentioned), but when using Application.Wait Now + TimeValue("0:00:05"), no delay occurs.

Otros consejos

I think that it is wrong to state that the 3rd call is not evaluating : it does indeed evaluate the provided object, and return its value (as documented).

I have slightly modified the Sub to illustrate:

Private Function SleepESub()
    Debug.Print Application.Wait(Now + TimeValue("0:00:02"))
    MsgBox "w8'd "
    SleepESub = 42
End Function

Each of the 4 evaluation calls will indeed return 42 as expected.

What is different is:

  • the application context (in one case the call to Application.Wait succeeds, in the other it fails - notice the debug output which returns either true or false)
  • the number of calls to the routine (one or two calls)

I have no explanation for either of these differences, though.

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