NamedRange.FindPrevious(Object) Method
Definition
Important
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Continues a search that was begun with the Find(Object, Object, Object, Object, Object, XlSearchDirection, Object, Object, Object) method.
public Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Range FindPrevious (object After);
abstract member FindPrevious : obj -> Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Range
Public Function FindPrevious (Optional After As Object) As Range
Parameters
- After
- Object
The cell before which you want to search. This corresponds to the position of the active cell when a search is done from the user interface. Note that After
must be a single cell in the NamedRange control. Remember that the search begins before this cell; the specified cell is not searched until the method wraps back around to this cell. If this argument is not specified, the search starts before the upper-left cell in the NamedRange control.
Returns
A Range object that represents a cell containing the specified information.
Examples
The following code example uses the Find method to find the first cell with the value Seashell
in a NamedRange control. The example then uses the FindNext and FindPrevious methods to find the next cell with the value Seashell
and then return to the original cell. Finally, the example uses the Cut method to cut the contents of the first cell with the value Seashell
and paste it into cell B1.
This example is for a document-level customization.
private void FindValue()
{
this.Range["A1"].Value2 = "Barnacle";
this.Range["A2"].Value2 = "Seashell";
this.Range["A3"].Value2 = "Star Fish";
this.Range["A4"].Value2 = "Seashell";
this.Range["A5"].Value2 = "Clam Shell";
Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange namedRange1 =
this.Controls.AddNamedRange(this.Range["A1", "A5"],
"namedRange1");
// Find the first occurrence of "Seashell".
Excel.Range Range1 = namedRange1.Find("Seashell",
Excel.XlLookAt.xlWhole, Excel.XlSearchOrder.xlByColumns,
Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.XlSearchDirection.xlNext,
false);
// Find the next occurrence of "Seashell".
Range1 = namedRange1.FindNext(Range1);
// Return to the first occurrence of "Seashell".
Range1 = namedRange1.FindPrevious(Range1);
// Cut the range with the first "Seashell" and copy it to cell B1.
Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange namedRange2 =
this.Controls.AddNamedRange(Range1, "namedRange2");
namedRange2.Cut(this.Range["B1"]);
}
Private Sub FindValue()
Me.Range("A1").Value2 = "Barnacle"
Me.Range("A2").Value2 = "Seashell"
Me.Range("A3").Value2 = "Star Fish"
Me.Range("A4").Value2 = "Seashell"
Me.Range("A5").Value2 = "Clam Shell"
Dim namedRange1 As Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange _
= Me.Controls.AddNamedRange(Me.Range("A1", "A5"), _
"namedRange1")
' Find the first occurrence of "Seashell".
Dim Range1 As Excel.Range = namedRange1.Find("Seashell", , , _
Excel.XlLookAt.xlWhole, Excel.XlSearchOrder.xlByColumns, _
Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.XlSearchDirection.xlNext, _
False, False, )
' Find the next occurrence of "Seashell".
Range1 = namedRange1.FindNext(Range1)
' Return to the first occurrence of "Seashell".
Range1 = namedRange1.FindPrevious(Range1)
' Cut the range with the first "Seashell" and copy it to cell B1.
Dim namedRange2 As Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange _
= Me.Controls.AddNamedRange(Range1, "namedRange2")
namedRange2.Cut(Me.Range("B1"))
End Sub
Remarks
Finds the previous cell that matches the same conditions as the Find method.
This method does not affect the selection or the active cell.
When the search reaches the beginning of the specified search range, it wraps around to the end of the range. To stop a search when this wraparound occurs, save the address of the first found cell, and then test each successive found-cell address against this saved address.
Optional Parameters
For information on optional parameters, see Optional Parameters in Office Solutions.