Excel (and Word, Outlook, etc.) has hundreds of built-in constants that represent numeric values. When reviewing code written in Visual Basic, you may see these constants passed when calling methods or setting property values:
mychart.ChartType = xlColumnClustered
But the above line of code won't work on its own in Ruby, as xlColumnClustered won't be recognized as a constant. So, when translating this code to Ruby, how do you get it to work?
Do-It-Yourself
In my code examples here, I usually either provide the actual value...
mychart.ChartType = 51
...or explicitly assign the value to a constant or variable myself:
xlColumnClustered = 51
mychart.ChartType = xlColumnClustered
In Ruby, constants must begin with an upper-case letter, so 'xlColumnClustered' is really a variable in the last example above. To make it a constant, I should actually name it something like 'XlColumnClustered', with an upper-case X.
How did I know that the Excel constant xlColumnClustered equals 51? Well, I simply googled 'Const xlColumnClustered' and quickly found examples where the constant was being explicitly declared in VB/VBA code ("Const xlColumnClustered = 51"). Googling for 'Excel Constants' will return numerous pages that list all the the Excel constants and their corresponding values. Microsoft provides their own listing here.
Loading the Win32OLE Constants
But you don't have to do it yourself. Ruby's win32ole library allows you to load an object's built-in constants into a class or module. To do so, first create an empty class or module:
class ExcelConst
end
Then call the WIN32OLE.const_load method. Pass this method your previously-defined Excel application object and your new ExcelConst class:
WIN32OLE.const_load(excel, ExcelConst)
This loads the Excel application object's built-in constants into your ExcelConst class, but each constant will now begin with an upper-case letter, as required in Ruby. Now you can call Excel's built-in constants from your new ExcelConst class. So our original example...
mychart.ChartType = xlColumnClustered
...works with only a slight modification, inserting the name of our ExcelConst class and capitalizing the first letter of the constant:
mychart.ChartType = ExcelConst::XlColumnClustered
There you have it. This same method works for loading constants from other win32 application objects, such as Word or Outlook.
By the way, you can review the docs for the WIN32OLE library, including the const_load method, here.
I hope you found this useful. Feel free to post a comment here or email me if you have questions, comments, or suggestions for future articles (or the book).
Thanks for stopping by!