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Range.Find Method

Definition

Finds specific information in a range and returns a Range object that represents the first cell where that information is found.

public Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Range Find (object What, object After, object LookIn, object LookAt, object SearchOrder, Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.XlSearchDirection SearchDirection = Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.XlSearchDirection.xlNext, object MatchCase, object MatchByte, object SearchFormat);
Public Function Find (What As Object, Optional After As Object, Optional LookIn As Object, Optional LookAt As Object, Optional SearchOrder As Object, Optional SearchDirection As XlSearchDirection = Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.XlSearchDirection.xlNext, Optional MatchCase As Object, Optional MatchByte As Object, Optional SearchFormat As Object) As Range

Parameters

What
Object

Required Object. The data to search for. Can be a string or any Microsoft Excel data type.

After
Object

Optional Object. The cell after which you want the search to begin. 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 range. Remember that the search begins after this cell; the specified cell isn’t searched until the method wraps back around to this cell. If you don’t specify this argument, the search starts after the cell in the upper-left corner of the range.

LookIn
Object

Optional Object. The type of information.

LookAt
Object

Optional Object. Can be one of the following XlLookAt constants: xlWhole or xlPart.

SearchOrder
Object

Optional Object. Can be one of the following XlSearchOrder constants: xlByRows or xlByColumns.

SearchDirection
XlSearchDirection

Optional XlSearchDirection. The search direction. Can be one of these XlSearchDirection constants:xlNextdefaultxlPrevious

MatchCase
Object

Optional Object. True to make the search case sensitive. The default value is False.

MatchByte
Object

Optional Object. Used only if you’ve selected or installed double-byte language support. True to have double-byte characters match only double-byte characters; False to have double-byte characters match their single-byte equivalents.

SearchFormat
Object

Optional Object. The search format.

Returns

Remarks

This method returns Nothing if no match is found.

This method doesn’t affect the selection or the active cell.

The settings for LookIn, LookAt, SearchOrder, and MatchByte are saved each time you use this method. If you don’t specify values for these arguments the next time you call the method, the saved values are used. Setting these arguments changes the settings in the Find dialog box, and changing the settings in the Find dialog box changes the saved values that are used if you omit the arguments. To avoid problems, set these arguments explicitly each time you use this method.

You can use the FindNext(Object) and FindPrevious(Object) methods to repeat the search.

When the search reaches the end of the specified search range, it wraps around to the beginning 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.

To find cells that match more complicated patterns, use a For Each...Next statement with the Like operator.

Applies to