With the help of Excel forum, I have created a user login form where I have 5 users. Each user can have access to the sheets assigned to him/her only. This is working fine. But now I have protected the "workbook structure" so as to avoid users' adding/deleting sheets. Then I login again, and instead of displaying the login form, the error message pops up in Excel VBA:
Error-1004 Unable to set the visible property of the worksheet class
When I debug the error is highlighted in the following codes where the visible property of the worksheet is set as "True", "False" or "xlSheetVeryHidden".
Private Sub Workbook_Open()
Dim wsSht As Worksheet
Worksheets("Splash").Visible = True
Worksheets("Users").Visible = False
For Each wsSht In Worksheets
If Not wsSht.Name = "Splash" Then wsSht.Visible = xlSheetVeryHidden
Next wsSht
With Worksheets("Splash")
.Visible = True
.Activate
End With
frmLogin.Show
bBkIsClose = False
End Sub
Is there a way to correct this so as I can acc开发者_如何学Cess the login form as I did prior to password protecting the "workbook structure"?
Here is another concern about this.
You can NOT hide ALL of the worksheets in a workbook. As such if you know you are going to have at least 1 sheet that will ALWAYS be visible, exclude it from the hiding process.
Did you have another Excel Workbook opened at the same time when testing it? There's no explicit reference to the book you're looking for, so in case you run this code having a workbook where the "Splash" sheet is not available, the macro will try to set all sheets to hidden, which may raise this error.
To simulate it, open a new Excel session and run this macro:
Sub test()
Dim oSheet As Excel.Worksheet
For Each oSheet In Worksheets
oSheet.Visible = xlSheetVeryHidden
Next oSheet
End Sub
If I'm not barking to the wrong tree, you'll get the same error.
To solve it, simply add the workbook name into your loop, and it would be like this (obviously, you must ensure that there's a "Splash" sheet, or the error will arise):
For Each wsSht In Workbooks("Mybook.xlsm").Worksheets
If Not wsSht.Name = "Splash" Then wsSht.Visible = xlSheetVeryHidden
Next wsSht
Rgds
You'll have to unprotect and reprotect in code. The downside is that your password will be in the code.
Private Sub Workbook_Open()
Dim wsSht As Worksheet
Me.Unprotect "password"
Me.Worksheets("Splash").Visible = True
Me.Worksheets("Users").Visible = False
For Each wsSht In Me.Worksheets
If Not wsSht.Name = "Splash" Then wsSht.Visible = xlSheetVeryHidden
Next wsSht
With Me.Worksheets("Splash")
.Visible = True
.Activate
End With
frmLogin.Show
bBkIsClose = False
Me.Protect "password", True, False
End Sub
I'm not sure if this is relevant, but I found this question when I was searching for how to hide the last (and only) worksheet. The reason for wanting to do this is because the file is a startup file that contains company-wide macros that should not be edited by the user. I discovered that while the Worksheet needs to be kept open, the Window displaying it does not.
Here's an example:
Sub spork()
Dim x As Workbook
x.Windows.Item(1).Visible = False
End Sub
Now, Excel opens the file with no worksheet visible.
Sometimes there is a "glitch" (a.k.a. "feature" or "bug"), simply returning this error due to no visible reason. Not the worksheet protection, neither the fact that this is the last worksheet visible. To fix the "feature" this worked for me:
Public Sub UnhideAll()
Dim wks As Worksheet
For Each wks In ThisWorkbook.Worksheets
wks.Visible = xlSheetVisible
Next
End Sub
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