WorksheetBase.Range Property
Gets a Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Range object that represents a cell or a range of cells.
Namespace: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel
Assembly: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.v4.0.Utilities (in Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.v4.0.Utilities.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
Public ReadOnly Property Range As Worksheet_RangeType
public Worksheet_RangeType Range { get; }
Property Value
Type: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.Worksheet_RangeType
A Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Range that represents a cell or a range of cells.
Remarks
The Range property is intended to be used with the following parameters.
Parameter |
Description |
---|---|
Cell1 |
The name of the range in A1-style notation in the language of the application. It can include the range operator (a colon), the intersection operator (a space), or the union operator (a comma). It can also include dollar signs, but they are ignored. You can use a local defined name in any part of the range. If you use a name, the name is assumed to be in the language of the application. This parameter is required. |
Cell2 |
The cell in the lower-right corner of the range. Can be a Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Range that contains a single cell, an entire column, an entire row, or it can be a string that names a single cell in the language of the application. This parameter is optional in Visual Basic. |
If you attempt to use Range without specifying any parameters, Range will get a _RangeType object that is part of the Visual Studio infrastructure and is not intended to be used directly from your code.
Optional Parameters
For information on optional parameters, see Optional Parameters in Office Solutions.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates different ways to use the Range property to access a single cell or multiple cells.
This example is for a document-level customization.
Private Sub CompareRangeUsage()
' The following line of code specifies a single cell.
Me.Range("A1").Value2 = "Range 1"
' The following line of code specifies multiple cells.
Me.Range("A3", "B4").Value2 = "Range 2"
' The following line of code uses an Excel.Range for
' the second parameter of the Range property.
Dim range1 As Excel.Range = Me.Range("C8")
Me.Range("A6", range1).Value2 = "Range 3"
End Sub
private void CompareRangeUsage()
{
// The following line of code specifies a single cell.
this.Range["A1"].Value2 = "Range 1";
// The following line of code specifies multiple cells.
this.Range["A3", "B4"].Value2 = "Range 2";
// The following line of code uses an Excel.Range for
// the second parameter of the Range property.
Excel.Range range1 = this.Range["C8"];
this.Range["A6", range1].Value2 = "Range 3";
}
.NET Framework Security
- Full trust for the immediate caller. This member cannot be used by partially trusted code. For more information, see Using Libraries from Partially Trusted Code.