VarType
Using the VARTYPE Function
In this tutorial you will learn how to use the VarType Function.
The VarType function returns an Integer indicating the subtype of a variable.
=VarType( varname )
varname is a Variant containing any variable except a variable of a user defined type
If we wanted to check the Type of a value we can pass it to the following, say it was the String "Alex"
The result is 8.
The return values are:
Constant | Value | Description |
vbEmpty | 0 | Empty (uninitialized) |
vbNull | 1 | Null (no valid data) |
vbInteger | 2 | Integer |
vbLong | 3 | Long integer |
vbSingle | 4 | Single-precision floating-point number |
vbDouble | 5 | Double-precision floating-point number |
vbCurrency | 6 | Currency value |
vbDate | 7 | Date value |
vbString | 8 | String |
vbObject | 9 | Object |
vbError | 10 | Error value |
vbBoolean | 11 | Boolean value |
vbVariant | 12 | Variant (used only with arrays of variants) |
vbDataObject | 13 | A data access object |
vbDecimal | 14 | Decimal value |
vbByte | 17 | Byte value |
vbUserDefinedType | 36 | Variants that contain user-defined types |
vbArray | 8192 | Array |
Query
The results using a Query would be
SELECT VarType("Alex");
FORM
In a Form you could set the Default Value of a Textbox to
=VarType("Alex")
VBA
In a Form add a TEXTBOX control and rename it "txtVarType", then you could add the following in the Load Event.
Private Sub Form_Load()
txtVarType = VarType("Alex")
End Sub
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By: Alex Hedley
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