Quick Search


Tibetan singing bowl music,sound healing, remove negative energy.

528hz solfreggio music -  Attract Wealth and Abundance, Manifest Money and Increase Luck



 
Your forum announcement here!

  Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Board | Post Free Ads Forum | Free Advertising Forums Directory | Best Free Advertising Methods | Advertising Forums > Post Your Free Ads Here in English for Advertising .Adult and gambling websites NOT accepted. > Small Business Opportunities:

Small Business Opportunities: This section is for posting your free classified ads about different work at home and home based business opportunities. NO PORN ALLOWED!

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 04-16-2011, 07:34 PM   #1
tianxa23
 
Posts: n/a
Default Microsoft Office 2007 Pro Case-Sensitive string co

Today’s guest blogger is Michael Groh, co-author of the popular Access 2007 Bible. The VBA language is not,Office 2010 Pro Plus, by default, case-sensitive. A statement such as   CBool("XYZ" = "xyz") will always return True. You might come across this issue in cases such as the following: If strOne = strTwo Then   ' Perform some operation here End If Consider what happens if it's important to know that the strings differ only by case. By default,Cheap Office 2010, VBA will never report a difference in the strings based only on the case applied to the string variables. One easy fix is to use the InStrB ("in string byte") function, which considers the strings based on byte value (where "x" is different than "X"). By contrast,Microsoft Office 2007 Pro, the InStr function considers just character value ("x" is the same as "X"). The transformed If statement becomes:   If CBool(InStrB(strOne,Microsoft Office 2010 Home And Stude/nt, strTwo)) Then... This statement takes the output of InStrB() and converting it to a Boolean (True or False) expression. When InStrB returns 0 (no match found), CBool converts the expression's value to False. If InStrB finds the strings match (by case and by character) the expression evaluates to True. You'll find that using the InStrB() function is much faster and easier than writing a VBA function that parses each string and does a binary or ASCII comparison on each character in both strings. Get your favorite Power Tip on the blog,Microsoft Office Home And Stude/nt 2010! Send it to Mike and Chris at accpower@microsoft.com. <div
  Reply With Quote

Sponsored Links
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


All times are GMT. The time now is 03:01 PM.

 

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Message Boards | Post Free Ads Forum