Элемент управления пользовательской формы ListBox для выбора и ввода информации в VBA Excel. Свойства списка, его заполнение, извлечение данных, примеры кода.
UserForm.ListBox – это элемент управления пользовательской формы, предназначенный для передачи в код VBA информации, выбранной пользователем из одностолбцового или многостолбцового списка.
Список используется в тех случаях, когда необходимо добавить в форму информацию, которая заранее известна, а ее отдельные позиции можно сгруппировать в список. Элемент управления ListBox оправдывает себя при небольших списках, так как большой список будет занимать много места на форме.
Использование полос прокрутки уменьшает преимущество ListBox перед элементом управления ComboBox, которое заключается в том, что при открытии формы все позиции для выбора на виду без дополнительных действий со стороны пользователя. При выборе информации из большого списка удобнее использовать ComboBox.
Элемент управления ListBox позволяет выбрать несколько позиций из списка, но эта возможность не имеет практического смысла. Ввести информацию в ListBox с помощью клавиатуры или вставить из буфера обмена невозможно.
Свойства списка
Свойство | Описание |
---|---|
ColumnCount | Указывает количество столбцов в списке. Значение по умолчанию = 1. |
ColumnHeads | Добавляет строку заголовков в ListBox. True – заголовки столбцов включены, False – заголовки столбцов выключены. Значение по умолчанию = False. |
ColumnWidths | Ширина столбцов. Значения для нескольких столбцов указываются в одну строку через точку с запятой (;). |
ControlSource | Ссылка на ячейку для ее привязки к элементу управления ListBox. |
ControlTipText | Текст всплывающей подсказки при наведении курсора на ListBox. |
Enabled | Возможность выбора элементов списка. True – выбор включен, False – выключен*. Значение по умолчанию = True. |
Font | Шрифт, начертание и размер текста в списке. |
Height | Высота элемента управления ListBox. |
Left | Расстояние от левого края внутренней границы пользовательской формы до левого края элемента управления ListBox. |
List | Позволяет заполнить список данными из одномерного или двухмерного массива, а также обращаться к отдельным элементам списка по индексам для записи и чтения. |
ListIndex | Номер выбранной пользователем строки. Нумерация начинается с нуля. Если ничего не выбрано, ListIndex = -1. |
Locked | Запрет возможности выбора элементов списка. True – выбор запрещен**, False – выбор разрешен. Значение по умолчанию = False. |
MultiSelect*** | Определяет возможность однострочного или многострочного выбора. 0 (fmMultiSelectSingle) – однострочный выбор, 1 (fmMultiSelectMulti) и 2 (fmMultiSelectExtended) – многострочный выбор. |
RowSource | Источник строк для элемента управления ListBox (адрес диапазона на рабочем листе Excel). |
TabIndex | Целое число, определяющее позицию элемента управления в очереди на получение фокуса при табуляции. Отсчет начинается с 0. |
Text | Текстовое содержимое выбранной строки списка (из первого столбца при ColumnCount > 1). Тип данных String, значение по умолчанию = пустая строка. |
TextAlign | Выравнивание текста: 1 (fmTextAlignLeft) – по левому краю, 2 (fmTextAlignCenter) – по центру, 3 (fmTextAlignRight) – по правому краю. |
Top | Расстояние от верхнего края внутренней границы пользовательской формы до верхнего края элемента управления ListBox. |
Value | Значение выбранной строки списка (из первого столбца при ColumnCount > 1). Value – свойство списка по умолчанию. Тип данных Variant, значение по умолчанию = Null. |
Visible | Видимость списка. True – ListBox отображается на пользовательской форме, False – ListBox скрыт. |
Width | Ширина элемента управления. |
* При Enabled в значении False возможен только вывод информации в список для просмотра.
** Для элемента управления ListBox действие свойства Locked в значении True аналогично действию свойства Enabled в значении False.
*** Если включен многострочный выбор, свойства Text и Value всегда возвращают значения по умолчанию (пустая строка и Null).
В таблице перечислены только основные, часто используемые свойства списка. Еще больше доступных свойств отображено в окне Properties элемента управления ListBox, а все методы, события и свойства – в окне Object Browser.
Вызывается Object Browser нажатием клавиши «F2». Слева выберите объект ListBox, а справа смотрите его методы, события и свойства.
Свойства BackColor, BorderColor, BorderStyle отвечают за внешнее оформление списка и его границ. Попробуйте выбирать доступные значения этих свойств в окне Properties, наблюдая за изменениями внешнего вида элемента управления ListBox на проекте пользовательской формы.
Способы заполнения ListBox
Используйте метод AddItem для загрузки элементов в список по одному:
With UserForm1.ListBox1 .AddItem «Значение 1» .AddItem «Значение 2» .AddItem «Значение 3» End With |
Используйте свойство List, чтобы скопировать одномерный массив значений в элемент управления ListBox.
UserForm1.ListBox1.List = Array(«Текст 1», _ «Текст 2», «Текст 3», «Текст 4», «Текст 5») |
Вместо функции Array можно использовать переменные одномерных и двухмерных массивов. При загрузке значений из двухмерного массива, требуется предварительно указать количество столбцов в списке.
Используйте свойство RowSource, чтобы загрузить в список значения из диапазона ячеек рабочего листа:
UserForm1.ListBox1.RowSource = «Лист1!A1:A6» |
При загрузке данных из диапазона, содержащего более одного столбца, требуется предварительно указать количество столбцов в списке:
With UserForm1.ListBox1 ‘Указываем количество столбцов .ColumnCount = 5 .RowSource = «‘Лист со списком’!A1:E10» End With |
В качестве имени листа используется имя ярлыка. Если имя листа содержит пробелы, оно заключается в одинарные кавычки.
Подробнее о заполнении элемента управления ListBox вы можете ознакомиться в отдельной статье с наглядными примерами.
Привязка списка к ячейке
Для привязки списка к ячейке на рабочем листе используется свойство ControlSource. Суть привязки заключается в том, что при выборе строки в элементе управления, значение свойства Value копируется в привязанную ячейку.
Если привязанная к списку ячейка содержит значение одной из строк элемента управления ListBox, то при запуске пользовательской формы список откроется с выделенной строкой, содержащей это значение. Если привязанная ячейка при загрузке формы пустая, то список откроется без выделения какой-либо строки.
В случае, когда при открытии формы в привязанной к списку ячейке содержится значение, которого нет ни в одной из строк элемента управления ListBox, будет сгенерирована ошибка.
Привязать ячейку к списку можно, указав адрес ячейки в поле свойства ControlSource в окне Properties элемента управления ListBox. Или присвоить адрес ячейки свойству ControlSource в коде VBA Excel:
UserForm1.ListBox1.ControlSource = «Лист1!A2» |
Теперь значение выбранной строки в списке автоматически копируется в ячейку «A2» на листе «Лист1»:
В окне Properties адрес указывается без двойных кавычек. Если имя листа содержит пробелы, оно заключается в одинарные кавычки.
Извлечение информации из списка
Первоначально элемент управления ListBox открывается со строками, ни одна из которых не выбрана. При выборе (выделении) строки, ее значение записывается в свойства Value и Text.
Из этих свойств мы с помощью кода VBA Excel извлекаем информацию, выбранную в списке пользователем:
Dim myVar as Variant, myTxt As String myVar = UserForm1.ListBox1.Value ‘или myTxt = UserForm1.ListBox1.Text |
Вторую строку кода можно записать myVar = UserForm1.ListBox1
, так как Value является свойством списка по умолчанию.
Если ни одна позиция в списке не выбрана, свойство Value возвращает значение Null, а свойство Text – пустую строку. Если выбрана строка в многостолбцовом списке, в свойства Value и Text будет записана информация из первого столбца.
Что делать, если понадобятся данные из других столбцов многостолбцового списка, кроме первого?
Для получения данных из любого столбца элемента управления ListBox используется свойство List, а для определения выбранной пользователем строки – ListIndex.
Для тестирования приведенного ниже кода скопируйте таблицу и вставьте ее в диапазон «A1:D4» на листе с ярлыком «Лист1»:
Звери | Лев | Тапир | Вивера |
Птицы | Грач | Сорока | Филин |
Рыбы | Карась | Налим | Парусник |
Насекомые | Оса | Жук | Муравей |
Создайте в редакторе VBA Excel пользовательскую форму и добавьте на нее список с именем ListBox1. Откройте модуль формы и вставьте в него следующие процедуры:
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize() With Me.ListBox1 ‘Указываем, что у нас 4 столбца .ColumnCount = 4 ‘Задаем размеры столбцов .ColumnWidths = «50;50;50;50» ‘Импортируем данные .RowSource = «Лист1!A1:D4» ‘Привязываем список к ячейке «F1» .ControlSource = «F1» End With End Sub Private Sub UserForm_Click() MsgBox Me.ListBox1.List(Me.ListBox1.ListIndex, 2) End Sub |
В процедуре UserForm_Initialize() присваиваем значения некоторым свойствам элемента управления ListBox1 перед открытием пользовательской формы. Процедура UserForm_Click() при однократном клике по форме выводит в MsgBox значение из третьего столбца выделенной пользователем строки.
Теперь при выборе строки в списке, значение свойства Value будет записываться в ячейку «F1», а при клике по форме функция MsgBox выведет значение третьего столбца выделенной строки.
Обратите внимание, что при первом запуске формы, когда ячейка «F1» пуста и ни одна строка в ListBox не выбрана, клик по форме приведет к ошибке. Это произойдет из-за того, что свойство ListIndex возвратит значение -1, а это недопустимый номер строки для свойства List.
Если для списка разрешен многострочный выбор (MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectMulti или MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectExtended), тогда, независимо от количества выбранных строк, свойство Value будет возвращать значение Null, а свойство Text – пустую строку. Свойство ListIndex будет возвращать номер строки, которую кликнули последней, независимо от того, что это было – выбор или отмена выбора.
Иногда перед загрузкой в ListBox требуется отобрать уникальные элементы из имеющегося списка. Смотрите, как это сделать с помощью объектов Collection и Dictionary.
The VBA ListBox is a very useful control. If you are creating any kind of UserForm application you will most likely use it.
In this post, I’m going to show you everything you need to know about the VBA ListBox so you can avoid the common pitfalls and get up and running quickly and easily.
What is the VBA ListBox used for?
The ListBox is used to display a list of items to the user so that the user can then select one or more. The ListBox can have multiple columns and so it is useful for tasks like displaying records.
VBA ListBox versus the VBA ComboBox
The ListBox is very similar to the ComboBox which also allows the user to select an item from a list of items. The main differences are:
- The Listbox allows multiple selections. The Combobox only allows one selection.
- Items in the ListBox are always visible. The Combobox items are only visible when you click on the “down” icon.
- The ComboBox has the ability to filter the contents when you type.
The VBA ListBox Properties Quick Guide
Function | Operation | Example |
---|---|---|
AddItem | Add an item | listbox.AddItem «Spain» |
Clear | Remove all Items | listbox.Clear |
ColumnCount | Set the number of visible columns | ComboBox1.ColumnCount = 2 |
ColumnHeads | Make the column row visible | ComboBox1.ColumnHeads = True |
List | Range to Listbox ListBox to Range |
Listbox.List = Range(«A1:A4»).Value Range(«A1:A4»).Value = Listbox.List |
List | Update a column value | Listbox.List(1,2) = «New value» |
ListCount | Get the number of items | cnt = listbox.ListCount |
ListIndex | Get/set selected item | Idx = listbox.ListIndex combo.ListIndex = 0 |
RemoveItem | Remove an item | listbox.Remove 1 |
RowSource | Add a range of values from a worksheet | ComboBox1.RowSource = Sheet1.Range(«A2:B3»).Address |
Value | Get the value of selected Item | Dim sCountry As String sCountry = listbox.Value |
How to Add Items to the ListBox
There are 3 ways to add items to the VBA Listbox:
- One at a time using the AddItem property.
- Adding an array/range using the List property.
- Adding a Range using the RowSource property.
The List and RowSource properties are the most commonly used. The table below provides a quick comparison of these properties:
Task | RowSource | List |
---|---|---|
Column Headers | Yes | No |
Update values in ListBox | No | Yes |
Add new items | No | Yes |
Data type | Range | Array(including Range.Value) |
If source data changes | Listbox is automatically updated. | ListBox is not updated. |
VBA ListBox List Property
The List property allows you to add to contents of an array to a ListBox. As Range.Value is an array you can copy the contents of any range to the Listbox.
Here are some examples of using the List property:
' Add the contents of an array ListBox1.List = Array("Apple", "Orange", "Banana") ' Add the contents of a Range ListBox1.List = Range("A1:E5").Value
You can also use the List property to write from the ListBox to an array or range:
Range("A1:B3").Value = ListBox1.List
Important Note: If there is only one item in a range then VBA doesn’t covert it to an array. Instead, it converts the range to a string/double/date etc.
Sheet1.Range("A1:A2").Value ' Array Sheet1.Range("A1").Value ' Single value variable
In this case, you need to use AddItem to add the value to the ListBox:
If myRange.Count = 1 Then ListBox1.AddItem myRange Else ListBox1.List = myRange.Value End If
The List Property and Column Headers
The ListBox only displays column headers if you use RowSource. Otherwise, they are not available. The best way to add column headers(and it’s not a great way) is to add Labels above the ListBox columns. One advantage is that you can use the click event of the Label if you want to implement something like sorting.
Updating Items using the List Property
You can update individual items in the ListBox using the List Property.
Imagine we have a ListBox with data like this:
If we want to change Nelson in row 3, column 2 we do it like this:
ListBox1.List(2, 1) = "SMITH"
The result we get is:
The List property rows and columns are zero-based so this means row 1 is 0, row 2 is 1, row 3 is 2 and so on:
VBA ListBox RowSource
The RowSource property allows us to add a range to the ListBox. This is different from the List Property in that the Range is linked to the ListBox. If data in the Range changes then the data in the ListBox will update automatically.
When we use RowSource the data in the ListBox is read-only. We can change the RowSource range but we cannot change the values in the ListBox.
How to use RowSource
We add the RowSource range as a string like this:
ListBox1.RowSource = "Sheet1!A1:A5"
If you don’t specify the sheet the VBA will use the active sheet
ListBox1.RowSource = "A1:A5"
If you are using the Address of a range object with RowSource then it is important to use the External parameter. This will ensure that RowSource will read from the sheet of the range rather than the active sheet:
' Get the range Dim rg As Range Set rg = Sheet1.Range("A1:A5") ' Address will be $A$1:$A$5 which will use the active sheet ListBox1.RowSource = rg.Address Debug.Print ListBox1.RowSource ' Address will be [Book2]Sheet1!$A$1:$A$5 which will use Sheet1 ListBox1.RowSource = rg.Address(External:=True) Debug.Print ListBox1.RowSource
RowSource Column Headers
Column headers are automatically added to the ListBox when you use the RowSource property. The ColumnHeads property must be set to True or the headers will not appear. You can set this property in the code or in the properties window of the ListBox.
ListBox1.ColumnHeads = True
The column headers are taken from the row above the range used for the RowSource. For example, if your range is A2 to C5 then the column header will use the range A1 to C1:
Here is an example: We want to add the data below to our ListBox and we want A1 to C1 to be the header.
We set the RowSource property to A2:C5 and set the ColumnHeads property to true:
With ListBox1 .RowSource = "sheet1!A2:C5" .ColumnHeads = True .ColumnWidths = "80;80;80" End With
The result will look like this:
VBA ListBox AddItem
It is very rare that you would use the AddItem property to fill the ListBox. List and RowSource are much more efficient. AddItem is normally used when the Listbox already has items and you want to add a new item.
The AddItem property is simple to use. You provide the item you want to add as a parameter. The ListBox will automatically add it as the last item:
With ListBox .AddItem "Apple" .AddItem "Orange" End With
If you want to Insert the item at a certain position you can use the second parameter. Keep in mind that this is a zero-based position, so if you want the item in position one then the value is 0, position 2 the value is 1, and so on.
With ListBox1 .AddItem "Apple" .AddItem "Orange" ' Add "Banana" to position 1(Index 0) .AddItem "Banana", 0 End With
The order will be:
Banana
Apple
Orange
If you want to add multiple columns with AddItem then you need to use the List property after you use AddItem:
With listboxFruit .List = myRange.Value .AddItem "Banana" ' Add to the second column of 'Banana' row .List(2, 1) = "$2.99" End With
One reason for using AddItem is if you are adding from data that isn’t sequential so you cannot use the List or RowSource properties:
Dim cell As Range ' Fill items with first letter is A For Each cell In Sheet1.Range("A1:A50") If Left(cell.Value, 1) = "A" Then comboBoxFruit.AddItem cell.Value End If Next
Important Note: If you fill a ListBox with RowSource then you cannot use AddItem to add a new item. If you try you will get a “Runtime Error 70 – Permission Denied”.
VBA ListBox Selected Items
If only one item is selected then you can use ListIndex to get the selected row. Remember that it is zero-based so row 1 in the ListBox is at ListIndex 0, row 2 at ListIndex 1 and so on.
MsgBox "The selected item is " & ListBox1.ListIndex
If the ListBox has multiple columns then you can use the ListIndex and List properties together to return a value in the selected row:
' Display the value from the second column of the selected row
MsgBox ListBox1.List(ListBox1.ListIndex, 2)
If multiple items are selected then you can use the GetSelectedRows function which returns a collection of selected rows:
Sub Example() ' Store the row numbers of selected items to a collection Dim selectedRows As Collection Set selectedRows = GetSelectedRows() ' Print the selected rows numbers to the Immediate Window Dim row As Long For Each row In selectedRows ' Print to the Immediate Window Ctrl + G Debug.Print row Next row End Sub ' Returns a collection of all the selected items Function GetSelectedRows() As Collection ' Create the collection Dim coll As New Collection ' Read through each item in the listbox Dim i As Long For i = 0 To listboxFruit.ListCount - 1 ' Check if item at position i is selected If listboxFruit.Selected(i) Then coll.Add i End If Next i Set GetSelectedRows = coll End Function
Reading Data from the VBA Listbox
To read data from the ListBox we can use the ListBox.Value property. This only works when the ListBox is set to only select one item i.e. MultiSelect is set to frmMultiSelectSingle(see the section VBA ListBox MultiSelect below for more about this).
Single selection only with one column
When only one item is selected we can use the Value property to get the currently selected item:
Dim fruit As String fruit = ListBox1.Value
Keep in mind that if there are multiple columns, Value will only return the value in the first column.
Single selection only with multiple columns
If the ListBox has Multiple columns you can use the Value property to get the value in the first column. You need to read through the List property to get the values in the other column(s). The List property is essentially an array so you can treat it like one.
In the example below we read through the columns of row 1(the index of row 1 is 0):
With ListBox1 For j = LBound(.List, 2) To UBound(.List, 2) ' Print the columns of the first row to the Immediate Window Debug.Print .List(0, j) Next j End With
Normally you want to print the values in the selected row. You can use the ListIndex property to get the selected item(Note that ListIndex returns the last selected items so it won’t work where there are multiple items selected):
' ExcelMacroMastery.com
Sub ReadValuesFromSelectedRow()
' Write contents of the row to the Immediate Window(Ctrl G)
With ListBox1
For j = LBound(.List, 2) To UBound(.List, 2)
' Print the columns of the selected row to the Immediate Window
Debug.Print .List(.ListIndex, j) Next j
End With
End Sub
Multiple selections
If the ListBox has multiple selections and you want to get all the data from each then you can use the GetSelectedRows() sub from the section VBA ListBox Selected Items. This will get a collection of all selected rows. You can use this to print the data from the selected rows:
Sub PrintMultiSelectedRows() ' Get all the selected rows Dim selectedRows As Collection Set selectedRows = GetSelectedRows(Me.ListBox1) Dim i As Long, j As Long, currentRow As Long ' Read through the selected rows For i = 1 To selectedRows.Count With ListBox1 ' Get the current row currentRow = selectedRows(i) ' Print row header Debug.Print vbNewLine & "Row : " & currentRow ' Read items in the current row For j = LBound(.List, 2) To UBound(ListBox1.List, 2) ' Print the columns of the first row to the Immediate Window Debug.Print .List(currentRow, j) Next j End With Next i End Sub Function GetSelectedRows(currentListbox As MSForms.ListBox) As Collection ' Create the collection Dim coll As New Collection ' Read through each item in the listbox Dim i As Long For i = 0 To currentListbox.ListCount - 1 ' Check if item at position i is selected If currentListbox.Selected(i) Then coll.Add i End If Next i Set GetSelectedRows = coll End Function
VBA ListBox MultiSelect
We can use the MultiSelect property of the ListBox to allow the user to select either a single item or multiple items:
There are 3 selections:
- 0 = frmMultiSelectSingle – [Default]Multiple selection isn’t allowed.
- 1 = frmMultiSelectMulti – Multiple items are selected or deselected by choosing them with the mouse or by pressing the Spacebar.
- 2 = frmMultiSelectExtended – Multiple items are selected by holding down Shift and choosing them with the mouse, or by holding down Shift and pressing an arrow key to extend the selection from the previously selected item to the current item. You can also select items by dragging with the mouse. Holding down Ctrl and choosing an item selects or deselects that item.
VBA ListBox Columns
You can have multiple columns in a ListBox. For example, you can load a Range or two-dimensional array to a ListBox using List or RowSource.
Often when you load data with multiple columns only one column appears. This can be very confusing when you are using the Listbox. To get the columns to appear you have to set the ColumnCount property to the number of Columns.
You should also make sure that the ColumnWidths property is correct or one of the columns may not appear.
You can do it like this:
With listboxFruit .RowSource = "Sheet1!A2:B4" .ColumnCount = 2 .ColumnWidths = "100,100" End With
In a real-world application, you could set the RowSource and ColumnCount properties like this:
With listboxFruit .RowSource = myRange.Address(External:=True) .ColumnCount = myRange.Columns.Count End With
See the AddItem section for how to add data to the other columns when you are using the AddItem property.
VBA ListBox Column Headers
Column Headers are another confusing element of the ListBox. If you use the RowSource property to add data to the ListBox then the line above the Range will be automatically used as the header.
For the Column headers to appear the ColumnHeads property must be set to true. You can do this in the properties window of the ListBox or in the code list this:
ListBox1.ColumnHeads = True
If you use the List or AddItem property to fill the ListBox then the column headers are not available. The best solution, albeit a frustrating one, is to use labels above the ListBox. I know it sounds crazy but that unfortunately is the reality. The one advantage is that you can use the Label click event which is useful if you plan to sort the data by a column.
Creating a ListBox Dynamically
Controls are normally created at design time but you can also create them dynamically at run time:
Dim myListbox As MSForms.ListBox
Set myListbox = Controls.Add("Forms.ListBox.1")
If you want to add an event to a dynamic control you can do it like this:
- First of all create a Class like this:
Public WithEvents myListBox As MSForms.ListBox Private Sub myListBox_Change() MsgBox "Selection changed" End Sub
- Name the class clsListBoxEvents. Create a variable of this class object in the UserForm like this:
Private listBoxEvents As New clsListBoxEvents
- Attach the events to the ListBox:
Sub CreateDynamicListBox() ' Create the ListBox Dim newListBox As MSForms.ListBox Set newListBox = Controls.Add("Forms.ListBox.1") ' Add some items newListBox.List = Array("Apple", "Orange", "Pear") ' Connect the ListBox to the ListBox events class Set listBoxEvents.myListBox = newListBox End Sub
Note that you can attach events to any ListBox. It doesn’t have to be created dynamically to do this.
Loop through ListBoxes
If you want to loop through all the ListBoxes on a UserForm you can do it like this:
Dim ctrl As Variant For Each ctrl In Me.Controls If TypeName(ctrl) = "ListBox" Then Debug.Print ctrl.Name End If Next ctrl
YouTube Video
Check out this video where I use the ListBox. The source code for the video is available from here
What’s Next?
Free VBA Tutorial If you are new to VBA or you want to sharpen your existing VBA skills then why not try out this Free VBA Tutorial.
Related Training: Get full access to the Excel VBA training webinars and all the tutorials.
(NOTE: Planning to build or manage a VBA Application? Learn how to build 10 Excel VBA applications from scratch.)
UserForm Controls — ComboBox and ListBox
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Contents:
Difference between ListBox and ComboBox
Key Properties of ComboBox and ListBox
Add Items/Data to (Populate) a ListBox or ComboBox
Extract ListBox & ComboBox Items, with VBA
Delete ListBox rows using the RemoveItem Method
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UserForm acts as a container in which you add multiple ActiveX controls, each of which has a specific use and associated properties. By itself, a UserForm will not be of much use unless ActiveX controls are added to it which are the actual user-interactive objects. Using ActiveX Controls on a Worksheet have been illustrated in detail, in the separate section of «Excel VBA: ActiveX Controls, Form Controls & AutoShapes on a Worksheet».
An Excel VBA ListBox or ComboBox is a list of items from which a user can select. They facilitate in accepting data from users and making entries in an Excel worksheet.
Difference between ListBox and ComboBox:
1. The ComboBox is a drop-down list (the user-entered item or the list-selected item is visible in the text area, whereas list values are visible by using the drop-down), while a ListBox shows a certain number of values with or without a scroll bar. In a ComboBox, only one row of items is visible at a given time (without using the drop-down) whereas in a ListBox one or more can be visible at a time.
2. In a ComboBox you can select ony one option from the list, while in a ListBox you can select multiple options from the list.
3. The user can enter his own item (in text area) in a ComboBox if it is not included in the list, which is not possible to do in a ListBox. In this sense, ComboBox is a combination of TextBox and ListBox.
4. CheckBox can be used within ListBox, but not within ComboBox. ListBox allows you to display a check box next to each item in the list, to enable user to select items (this might be easier for the user than using the multiple selection methods). To use CheckBoxes in a ListBox, set ListStyle property (in Properties Window) to fmListStyleOption (vba code: ListBox1.ListStyle = fmListStyleOption). This setting is best used with a multiselect ListBox.
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Key Properties of ComboBox and ListBox
Note1: All properties and methods given below are common to both ListBox and ComboBox, unless mentioned otherwise. Also refer «2. UserForm and Controls — Properties.» for properties common to the UserForm and most Controls.
Note 2: In below given examples, vba codes are required to be entered in the Code Module of the UserForm, unless specified otherwise.
AddItem Method:
Adds an item to the list, in a single-column ListBox or ComboBox. Adds a row to the list (ie. an item for each row), in a multi-column ListBox or ComboBox. Syntax: Control.AddItem(Item, Index). Item specifies the item or row to add. Index is an Integer which specifies the position where the new item or row is placed within the list, and if omitted, the item or row is added at the end. The item or row numbers begin with zero, and the first item or row is numbered 0, and so on. The value of Index cannot be greater than the total number of rows (ie. value of ListCount property). AddItem method will not work if ComboBox or ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource data should be cleared before use. AddItem method can only be used with a macro or vba code. Note: AddItem method adds an item to the first column in a multi-column ListBox or ComboBox, and to add an item further to the first column, use the List or Column property specifying the item’s row and column number. More than one row can also be added at a time to a ListBox or ComboBox by using the List or Column properties (AddItem adds one row at a time). This means that you can copy a two-dimensional array of values to a ListBox or ComboBox, using List or Column properties rather than adding each individual element using the AddItem method. Note: Using the Column property to copy a two-dimensional array of values to a ListBox or ComboBox, transposes the array contents and equates myArray(iRow, iColumn) to ListBox1.Column(iCol, iRow). List property copies an array without transposing it and myArray(iRow, iColumn) equates to ListBox1.List(iRow, iColumn). Refer Image 13 for example.
BoundColumn Property:
Specifies the column from which value is to be stored in a multicolumn ComboBox or ListBox, when a row is selected by the user. First column has a BoundColumn value of 1, second column has a value of 2, and so on. Setting the BoundColumn value to 1 will assign the value from column 1 to the ComboBox or ListBox, and so on. BoundColumn property lets the user to store a different set of values per specified column while TextColumn property displays one set of values, viz. use the Text property to return the value from the first column (specified in the TextColumn property) containing the names and the BoundColumn property can specify another column containing height wherein on selecting a particular person’s name in the ListBox, his height will get returned or stored (refer Image 10). The ColumnWidths property of a column can be set to zero to not display it in the ListBox. Setting the BoundColumn value to 0 assigns the value of the ListIndex property (which is the number of the selected row) as the value of the control (ComboBox or ListBox). This setting is useful if you want to determine the row of the selected item in a ComboBox or ListBox. BoundColumn Property can be set in the Properties window and can also be used with a macro or vba code. Note: Where the ControlSource mentions =Sheet3!D2 (vba code: .ControlSource = «=Sheet3!D2»), the value in the BoundColumn of the selected row will get stored in cell D2, Sheet3.
Example 1: Setting the BoundColumn value to 0 assigns the value of the ListIndex property (which is the number of the selected row) as the value of the control (in a Single Selection ListBox) — refer Image 7
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnHeads = True
.ColumnCount = 2
‘ColumnWidths property of the second column is set to zero to not display it in the ListBox.
.ColumnWidths = «50;0»
.RowSource = «=Sheet3!A2:B6»
.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectSingle
.BoundColumn = 0
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘BoundColumn value is set as 0 which assigns the value of the ListIndex property (which is the number of the selected row) as the value of the control. Note: MultiSelect Property is set to fmMultiSelectSingle which allows only single selection.
If ListBox1.Value <> «» Then
TextBox1.Value = ListBox1.Value + 2
End If
End Sub
Clear Method:
Removes all items in a ComboBox or ListBox. Syntax: Control.Clear. Clear method will not work if ComboBox or ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource data should be cleared before use. Clear method can only be used with a macro or vba code.
Column Property:
Refers to a specific column, or column and row combination, in a multiple-column ComboBox or ListBox. Syntax: Control.Column(iColumn, iRow). Column property can only be used with a macro or vba code and is not available at design time. iColumn specifies the column number wherein iColumn = 0 means the first column in the List. iRow specifies the row number wherein iRow = 0 means the first row in the List. Both iColumn and iRow are integer values ranging from 0 to number of columns and rows (respectively) in the list minus 1. Specifying both column and row numbers will refer to a specific item, and specifying only the column number will refer to a specific column in the current row viz. ListBox1.Column(1) refers the second column. You can copy a two-dimensional array of values to a ListBox or ComboBox, using Column (or List) property rather than adding each individual element using the AddItem method. Column property can be used to assign the contents of a ComboBox or ListBox to another control, viz. TextBox (refer Image 8). Note: Using the Column property to copy a two-dimensional array of values to a ListBox or ComboBox, transposes the array contents and equates myArray(iRow, iColumn) to ListBox1.Column(iCol, iRow). List property copies an array without transposing it and myArray(iRow, iColumn) equates to ListBox1.List(iRow, iColumn). Refer Image 13 for example.
Example 2: Load ListBox using AddItem method and List & Column properties; and use Column property to assign the contents of ListBox to TextBox — refer Image 8
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = False
.RowSource = «=Sheet2!A2:B6»
.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectMulti
End With
‘clearing the TextBox if it is not empty
TextBox1 = «»
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘Add items in ListBox using AddItem method to add new rows; use List & Column properties to add items in columns beyond the first column; and use Column property to assign the contents of ListBox to TextBox
‘AddItem method will not work if ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource is cleared if it had been set
ListBox1.RowSource = «»
‘Create a new row with AddItem
ListBox1.AddItem «banana»
‘add item in second column of this first row, using List property
ListBox1.List(0, 1) = «tuesday»
‘adding items in the 3 columns of the first row — this will become the second row in the end
ListBox1.List(0, 2) = «day 2»
ListBox1.AddItem «orange»
‘add item in second column of this second row, using Column property
ListBox1.Column(1, 1) = «wednesday»
‘adding items in the 3 columns of the second row — this will become the third row in the end
ListBox1.Column(2, 1) = «day 3»
‘Create a new row with AddItem and position as row number 1
ListBox1.AddItem «apple», 0
ListBox1.List(0, 1) = «monday»
‘adding items in the 3 columns and positioning this row as the first row — this will push down the above two rows
ListBox1.List(0, 2) = «day 1»
‘item in column number 3 and row number 2 of ListBox
TextBox1.Value = ListBox1.Column(2, 1)
End Sub
ColumnCount Property:
Specifies the number of columns to be displayed in a ComboBox or ListBox. A ColumnCount value of 0 does not display any column and a setting of -1 displays all columns. ColumnCount property can be set in the Properties window and can also be used with a macro or vba code.
ColumnHeads Property:
A Boolean value (True/False) which determines display of column headings (in a single row) for ComboBox or ListBox. ColumnHeads property can be set in the Properties window and can also be used with a macro or vba code. Column Headings can be displayed only if ColumnHeads is set to True in Properties window (VBA code: ListBox1.ColumnHeads = True) and if you bind the ListBox to a range (ie. set RowSource to a range that includes headings). Note: AddItem method will not work if ListBox or ComboBox is bound to data, hence RowSource property should be cleared for using AddItem.
List Property:
List Property is used in conjunction with the ListCount and ListIndex properties to return items in a ListBox or ComboBox control. Syntax -> Control.List(iRow,iCol). Each item in a list has a row number and a column number, wherein row and column numbers start with zero. iRow specifies the row number wherein iRow = 2 means the third row in the List. iColumn specifies the column number wherein iColumn = 0 means the first column in the List. Omitting to specify the iColumn will retrieve the first column. Specify iColumn only for a multi-column ListBox or ComboBox. List Property can only be used with a macro or vba code and is not available at design time. Note: To copy a two-dimensional array of values to a ListBox or ComboBox, use List or Column properties. To add a one-dimensional array or to add an individual element, use the AddItem method. Items can be removed from a List using the RemoveItem method. List property is available only by using a macro or VBA.
Example 3: Use Selected & List properties to display multiple-selected ListBox items (choose any column to display) in TextBox, and link a worksheet cell with TextBox using ControlSource property — refer Image 9.
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnHeads = True
.ColumnCount = 2
‘ColumnWidths property of the second column is set to zero to not display it in the ListBox.
.ColumnWidths = «50;0»
.RowSource = «=Sheet3!A2:B6»
.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectMulti
.TextColumn = 1
End With
With TextBox1
.MultiLine = True
‘the text or value in the TextBox will get stored in the worksheet cell — Sheet3!F2
.ControlSource = «=Sheet3!F2»
‘if the cell Sheet3!F2 contains any text, this will not appear in the TextBox on initialization of UserForm
.Value = «»
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘Use Selected & List properties to display multiple-selected ListBox items (choose any column to display) in TextBox, and link a worksheet cell with TextBox using ControlSource property
TextBox1.Value = «»
‘check all items in a ListBox
For n = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
‘if a ListBox item is selected, it will display in TextBox
If ListBox1.Selected(n) = True Then
If TextBox1.Value = «» Then
‘ListBox1.List(n, 0) or ListBox1.List(n)displays the first column in TextBox, ListBox1.List(n, 1) displays the second column and so on
‘alternate code which displays the second column in TextBox: TextBox1.Value = Range(ListBox1.RowSource).Offset(n, 1).Resize(1, 1).Value
TextBox1.Value = ListBox1.List(n, 1)
Else
‘alternate code which displays the second column in TextBox: TextBox1.Value = TextBox1.Value & vbCrLf & Range(ListBox1.RowSource).Offset(n, 1).Resize(1, 1).Value
TextBox1.Value = TextBox1.Value & vbCrLf & ListBox1.List(n, 1)
End If
End If
Next n
End Sub
ListCount Property:
Determines the total number of rows in a ListBox or ComboBox. This property can only be used with a macro or vba code and is not available at design time. Note: The column headings row is also counted, if ColumnHeads are displayed. The ListCount property can be used with the ListRows property to specify the number of rows to display in a ComboBox.
ListIndex Property:
Determines which item is selected in a ComboBox or ListBox. The first item in a list has a ListIndex value of 0, the second item has a value of 1, and so on. Hence, it is an integer value ranging from 0 to the total number of items in a ComboBox or ListBox minus 1. ListIndex returns -1 when no rows are selected. This property can only be used with a macro or vba code and is not available at design time. Note: In a Multiple Selection enabled ListBox, ListIndex returns the index of the row that has focus, irrespective of whether that row is selected or not. Hence the Selected property of the ListBox (and not the ListIndex property) shoud be used here to return and set a selection. In a Single Selection enabled ListBox (viz. MultiSelect property setting of fmMultiSelectSingle), ListIndex returns the index of the selected item and hence ListIndex property should be used here to return and set a selection.
ListRows Property:
Specifies the maximum number of rows which will display in the list box portion of a ComboBox. The default value is 8. Note: If the actual number of list items exceed this maximum value of the ListRows property, a vertical scroll bar will appear in the list box portion of the ComboBox (and the excess list items can be viewed by scrolling down). The ListCount property can be used with the ListRows property to specify the number of rows to display in a ComboBox. ListRows property can be set in the Properties window and can also be used with a macro or vba code. ListRows Property is valid for ComboBox and not for ListBox.
Example 4: Using the ListCount property with the ListRows property, to set number of rows to display in ComboBox
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘this macro sets the ListRow value, on initialization of the UserForm
With ComboBox1
If .ListCount > 5 Then
.ListRows = 5
Else
.ListRows = .ListCount
End If
End With
End Sub
MultiSelect Property:
Specifies whether multiple selections are allowed. There are 3 settings: (i) fmMultiSelectSingle (value 0), the default setting, wherein only a single item can be selected; (ii) fmMultiSelectMulti (value 1) which allows multiple selections wherein an item can be selected or deselected by clicking mouse or pressing SPACEBAR; and (iii) fmMultiSelectExtended (value 2) which allows multiple selections, wherein by pressing SHIFT and simultaneously moving the up or down arrows (or pressing SHIFT and clicking mouse) continues selection from the previously selected item to the current selection (ie. a continuous selection); this option also allows to select or deselect an item by pressing CTRL and clicking mouse. MultiSelect property can be set in the Properties window and can also be used with a macro or vba code. Note: MultiSelect Property is valid for ListBox and not for ComboBox. When multiple selections are made (viz. fmMultiSelectMulti or fmMultiSelectExtended), the selected items can be determined only by using the Selected property (Selected property is available by using macro) of the ListBox. The Selected property will have values ranging from 0 to ListCount minus 1 and will be True if the item is selected and False if not selected. The Selected property determines the items you chose, and the List property returns the items.
Example 5: Determining selected item in a Single Selection ListBox, in VBA:
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘determine and display selected item in a ListBox which allows only a single selection (viz. MultiSelect Property is set to fmMultiSelectSingle)
‘you can also determine selected item in a ListBox which allows only a single selection, by using the Selected Property (as used in a Multiple Selection enabled ListBox)
‘alternatively: If ListBox1.ListIndex >= 0 Then
If ListBox1.Value <> «» Then
MsgBox ListBox1.Value
End If
End Sub
RemoveItem Method:
A specified row is removed from the list in a ComboBox or ListBox. Syntax: Control.RemoveItem(Row_Index). Row_Index is the row number which is specified to be removed, wherein the first row is numbered 0, and so on. RemoveItem method will not work if ComboBox or ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource data should be cleared before use. RemoveItem method can only be used with a macro or vba code.
RowSource Property:
Specifies the source of a list (which could be a worksheet range in Excel), for a ComboBox or ListBox. RowSource property can be set in the Properties window and can also be used with a macro or vba code. To set RowSource property in Properties window, enter without inverted commas: «=Sheet2!A2:A6» which populates ComboBox or ListBox with values in cells A2:A6 in Sheet2. VBA code for this is: ListBox1.RowSource = «=Sheet2!A2:A6». It is not necessary to use the equal mark in «=Sheet2!A2:A6» while setting the property and ListBox1.RowSource = «Sheet2!A2:A6» will have the same effect.
Selected Property:
Specifies whether an item is selected in a ListBox control. Syntax: Control.Selected(Item_Index). Returns True/False if the item is Selected/NotSelected; Set to True/False to select the item or remove selection [viz. Control.Selected(ItemIndex) = True/False]. Item_Index is an integer value ranging from 0 to number of items in the list minus 1, indicating its relative position in the list, viz. ListBox.Selected(2) = True selects the third item in the list. Selected property is particularly useful when working with multiple selections. Selected Property can only be used with a macro or vba code and is not available at design time. Note1: In a Multiple Selection enabled ListBox, ListIndex returns the index of the row that has focus, irrespective of whether that row is selected or not. Hence the Selected property of the ListBox (and not the ListIndex property) shoud be used here to return and set a selection. In a Single Selection enabled ListBox (viz. MultiSelect property setting of fmMultiSelectSingle), ListIndex returns the index of the selected item and hence ListIndex property should be used here to return and set a selection. Note2: Selected Property is valid for ListBox and not for ComboBox.
Example 6: Determining selected items in a multiple-selection enabled ListBox using Selected & List properties:
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘display all selected items in a ListBox using the Selected property (valid for a ListBox with MultiSelect Property setting of either single-selection or multiple-selection)
‘check all items in a ListBox
For n = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
‘if a ListBox item is selected, it will display in MsgBox
If ListBox1.Selected(n) = True Then
‘display a selected item
MsgBox ListBox1.List(n)
End If
Next n
End Sub
Style Property:
Valid for ComboBox only, not for ListBox. This property determines choosing or setting the value of ComboBox. There are 2 settings: (i) fmStyleDropDownCombo (value 0). The user has both options of typing a custom value in the text area or select from the drop-down list. This is the default value.; (ii) fmStyleDropDownList (value 2). The user can only select from the drop-down list, like in ListBox. Style Property can be set in the Properties window and can also be used with a macro or vba code.
TextColumn Property:
Specifies the column of data in a ListBox that supplies data for its Text property — the TextColumn property determines the column whose value the Text property will return whereas the BoundColumn property determines the column whose value the Value property returns. The Text property returns the same as Value property if the TextColumn property is not set. First column has a TextColumn value of 1, second column has a value of 2, and so on. Setting the TextColumn value to -1 indicates that the first column with a ColumnWidths value greater than 0 will be displayed. TextColumn property enables display of one set of values to the user but store a different set of values (per column specified in the BoundColumn property) viz. use the Text property to return the value from the first column (specified in the TextColumn property) containing the names and the BoundColumn property can specify another column containing height wherein on selecting a particular person’s name in the ListBox, his name & height will be returned. The ColumnWidths property of any column can be set to zero to not display it in the ListBox. Setting the TextColumn value to 0 displays the ListIndex value (which is the number of the selected row) in TextColumn Property — this setting is useful if you want to determine the row of the selected item. TextColumn property can be set in the Properties window and can also be used with a macro or vba code. Note: In a ComboBox, when a user selects an item, the column specified in the TextColumn property will be displayed in the ComboBox’s text box portion.
Example 7: Display first column in the List and use the TextColumn & BoundColumn Properties to return values from first & third columns (in a Single Selection ListBox) — refer Image 10
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnHeads = True
.ColumnCount = 3
‘set the ColumnWidths property of second & third columns to zero to not display them in the ListBox
.ColumnWidths = «40;0:0»
.RowSource = «=Sheet2!A2:C6»
.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectSingle
‘specifies the column of data in a ListBox that supplies data for its Text property
.TextColumn = 1
.BoundColumn = 3
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘TextColumn value is set as 1 and BoundColumn value is set as 3.
‘works only if MultiSelect Property of ListBox is set to fmMultiSelectSingle which allows single selection.
If ListBox1.Value <> «» Then
‘use the ListBox Text property to return the value from the column specified in the TextColumn column, whereas the ListBox Value property returns the value from the column specified in the BoundColumn property
TextBox1.Value = ListBox1.Text & » — » & ListBox1.Value & » cms»
End If
End Sub
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Add Items/Data to (Populate) a ListBox or ComboBox
1. Setting the RowSource property of a ListBox or ComboBox in a UserForm
VBA code — if the list is static:
Me.ListBox1.RowSource = «Sheet1!A1:B6»
or
Me.ListBox1.RowSource = «=Sheet1!A1:B6»
VBA code — if the list is dynamic:
Me.ListBox1.RowSource = «Sheet1!A1:B» & Sheet1.Cells(Rows.Count, «B»).End(xlUp).Row
Note: You can set the RowSource property of a ListBox or ComboBox in the Properties Window (without using vba code), by entering -> Sheet1!A1:B6
Example 8: Populate ComboBox by setting the RowSource property to a named list — refer Image 11
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘populate ComboBox by setting the RowSource property to a named list
With ComboBox1
.ColumnCount = 2
.ColumnWidths = «50;50»
.ColumnHeads = True
‘For a named list (viz. “HeightList” in Range A2:B6), the RowSource property can be set to Sheet1!HeightList
.RowSource = «Sheet1!HeightList»
End With
End Sub
2. Populate a ComboBox or ListBox from an Array:
VBA code — populate single column in ListBox:
ListBox1.List = Array(«RowOne», «RowTwo», «RowThree», «RowFour»)
VBA code — populate single column in ComboBox:
ComboBox1.List = Array(«Apples», «Bananas», «Oranges», «Pears»)
VBA code — populate ListBox from array named myArray:
Dim myArray As Variant
myArray = Array(«Adidas», «Nike», «Reebok»)
Me.ListBox1.List = myArray
VBA code — Populate single column ComboBox:
Dim i As Integer
Dim myArray As Variant
myArray = Array(«Adidas», «Nike», «Reebok», «Puma», «Polo»)
For i = LBound(myArray) To UBound(myArray)
Me.ComboBox1.AddItem myArray(i)
Next
Example 9 — Populate a multi-column Listbox directly with Worksheet Range — multiple rows added at one time using the List property:
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = False
End With
‘Load Worksheet Range directly to a ListBox
Dim rng As Range
Set rng = Sheet1.Range(«A1:C6»)
Me.ListBox1.List = rng.Cells.Value
End Sub
Example 10 — Populate a multi-column Listbox directly with Worksheet Range — multiple rows added at one time using the List property:
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = False
End With
‘Load Worksheet Range directly to a ListBox:
Dim var As Variant
var = Sheet1.Range(«A1:C6»)
Me.ListBox1.List = var
End Sub
Example 11: Load Worksheet Range to a multi-column ListBox, after placing Range data in a 2-dimensional Array — refer Image 12
Option Base 1
——————————————
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘Load Worksheet Range to a ListBox, after placing data in an Array
Dim rng As Range
Dim cell As Range
Dim totalRows As Integer, totalColumns As Integer
Dim iRow As Integer, iCol As Integer
Dim myArray() As Variant
Set rng = Sheet1.Range(«A1:C6»)
totalRows = Sheet1.Range(«A1:C6»).Rows.Count
totalColumns = Sheet1.Range(«A1:C6»).Columns.Count
‘if Option Base 1 was not set, this line of code should be: ReDim myArray(1 To totalRows, 1 To totalColumns)
ReDim myArray(totalRows, totalColumns)
‘place worksheet range data in an Array:
For Each cell In rng
For iRow = 1 To totalRows
For iCol = 1 To totalColumns
myArray(iRow, iCol) = rng.Cells(iRow, iCol)
Next iCol
Next iRow
Next
‘set ListBox properties and load Array to ListBox
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = False
.List = myArray
End With
End Sub
Example 12: Load a 2-dimensional array to ListBox using the List property (copies an array without transposing it) and Column property (which transposes the contents of the array) — refer Image 13
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = False
End With
With ListBox2
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = False
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘create a 2-dimensional array and load to ListBox using the List property (copies an array without transposing it) and Column property (which transposes the contents of the array)
‘Declaring the array and its dimensions. The array has been named myArray, of size 3 by 3 (three rows by three columns). Note: When you populate an array with data, the array will start at zero, and if you include Option Base 1 the array will start at 1.
Dim myArray(3, 3)
‘populate column 1 of myArray, with numbers
For n = 0 To 2
myArray(n, 0) = n + 1
Next n
‘populate column 2 of myArray
myArray(0, 1) = «R1C2»
myArray(1, 1) = «R2C2»
myArray(2, 1) = «R3C2»
‘populate column 3 of myArray
myArray(0, 2) = «R1C3»
myArray(1, 2) = «R2C3»
myArray(2, 2) = «R3C3»
‘copy data to ListBox1 (using List property) and ListBox2 (using Column property):
‘copies an array without transposing it
ListBox1.List() = myArray
‘transposes the contents of the array
ListBox2.Column() = myArray
End Sub
3. Populate a ComboBox or ListBox with AddItem method
Example 13: Populate a single-column ListBox from worksheet range
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 1
.ColumnWidths = «50»
.ColumnHeads = False
‘AddItem method will not work if ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource is cleared if it had been set
.RowSource = «»
End With
‘populating a single-column ListBox with AddItem method
Dim cell As Range
Dim rng As Range
Set rng = Sheet1.Range(«A1:A6»)
For Each cell In rng.Cells
Me.ListBox1.AddItem cell.Value
Next cell
End Sub
Example 14: Populate a single-column ListBox with values from 1 to 500
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on activation of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 1
.ColumnWidths = «50»
‘AddItem method will not work if ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource is cleared if it had been set
.RowSource = «»
End With
‘populate a single-column ListBox with values from 1 to 500, and «N/A»
With ListBox1
.AddItem «N/A»
For i = 1 To 500
.AddItem i
Next i
End With
End Sub
Example 15: Create a new row with AddItem and specify its row number — refer Image 14
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 1
.ColumnWidths = «50»
.ColumnHeads = False
‘AddItem method will not work if ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource is cleared if it had been set
.RowSource = «»
End With
‘using AddItem method to populate single-column ListBox:
ListBox1.AddItem «banana»
ListBox1.AddItem «orange»
‘Create a new row with AddItem and position as row number 1 — this will push down the above two rows
ListBox1.AddItem «apple», 0
‘Create a new row with AddItem and position as row number 2 — this will push down the above two rows to no. 3 and 4
ListBox1.AddItem «pears», 1
End Sub
Example 16: Populate a ComboBox with the 12 months in a year — Refer Image 15
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ComboBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ComboBox1
.ColumnCount = 1
.ColumnWidths = «50»
.ColumnHeads = False
‘AddItem method will not work if ComboBox is bound to data, hence RowSource is cleared if it had been set
.RowSource = «»
End With
‘populates ComboBox with the 12 months in a year
For n = 1 To 12
ComboBox1.AddItem Format(DateSerial(2011, n, 1), «mmmm»)
Next n
End Sub
4. Populate a multi-column ComboBox or ListBox using AddItem method and List & Column properties
Example 17: refer Image 16
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ComboBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ComboBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = False
‘AddItem method will not work if ComboBox is bound to data, hence RowSource is cleared if it had been set
.RowSource = «»
End With
‘Populating a multi-column ListBox using AddItem method and List & Column properties:
‘Create a new row with Additem
ComboBox1.AddItem «banana»
‘add item in second column of this first row, using List property
ComboBox1.List(0, 1) = «tuesday»
‘adding items in the 3 columns of the first row — this will become the second row in the end
ComboBox1.List(0, 2) = «day 2»
ComboBox1.AddItem «orange»
‘add item in second column of this second row, using Column property
ComboBox1.Column(1, 1) = «wednesday»
‘adding items in the 3 columns of the second row — this will become the third row in the end
ComboBox1.Column(2, 1) = «day 3»
‘Create a new row with Additem and position as row number 1
ComboBox1.AddItem «apple», 0
ComboBox1.List(0, 1) = «monday»
‘adding items in the 3 columns and positioning this row as the first row — this will push down the above two rows
ComboBox1.List(0, 2) = «day 1»
End Sub
5. Populate a multi-column ListBox from a worskheet range, using AddItem method and List property
Example 18: refer Image 17
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
‘AddItem method will not work if ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource is cleared if it had been set
.RowSource = «»
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘populate a multi-column ListBox from a worskheet range, using AddItem method and List property
Dim counter As Long
Dim totalRows As Long
‘determine total number of rows in column A
totalRows = Sheet4.Cells(Rows.Count, «A»).End(xlUp).Row
counter = 0
‘ListBox gets populated with all rows in column A:
Do
With Me.ListBox1
counter = counter + 1
‘create a new row with Additem
.AddItem Sheet4.Cells(counter, 1).Value
‘add item in second column of a row
.List(.ListCount — 1, 1) = Sheet4.Cells(counter, 1).Offset(0, 1).Value
‘add item in third column of a row
.List(.ListCount — 1, 2) = Sheet4.Cells(counter, 1).Offset(0, 2).Value
End With
Loop Until counter = totalRows
End Sub
6. Add a new item/row to the list if ComboBox is bound to data in a worksheet.
Example 19: refer Images 18a & 18b
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ComboBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ComboBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = True
.BoundColumn = 1
‘a named-range (name: «cbRange») has been created in Sheet3 of the workbook, using the Name Manager: «=Sheet3!$A$2:$C$6»
.RowSource = «cbRange»
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘add a new item/row to the list if ComboBox is bound to data in a worksheet
Dim colNo As Long
‘determine first column of the named-range «cbRange»
colNo = Range(«cbRange»).Column
‘create a new single-column named-range (name: «cbRangeTemp»), populated with only the first column of the named-range «cbRange».
Range(«cbRange»).Resize(Range(«cbRange»).Rows.Count, 1).Name = «cbRangeTemp»
‘checks if ComboBox1.Value is already existing in column 1 of named-range «cbRange»
If Application.CountIf(Range(«cbRangeTemp»), ComboBox1.Value) = 0 Then
‘resizing the named-range «cbRange», to add another worksheet row at the end, wherein the ComboBox1.Value will get posted:
Range(«cbRange»).Resize(Range(«cbRange»).Rows.Count + 1).Name = «cbRange»
ComboBox1.RowSource = «cbRange»
‘posting columns of the new row with values from ComboBox1, TextBox1 & TextBox2:
Sheet3.Cells(Range(«cbRange»).Rows.Count + 1, colNo) = ComboBox1.Value
Sheet3.Cells(Range(«cbRange»).Rows.Count + 1, colNo).Offset(0, 1) = TextBox1.Text
Sheet3.Cells(Range(«cbRange»).Rows.Count + 1, colNo).Offset(0, 2) = TextBox2.Text
Else
MsgBox «Item already in List»
End If
ComboBox1.Value = «»
TextBox1.Text = «»
TextBox2.Text = «»
End Sub
——————————————————————————————————————————————-
Extract ListBox & ComboBox Items, with VBA
VBA code — Display selected ComboBox item in TextBox:
‘the text area of ComboBox shows the item entered by user of his own choice or that selected from list items, and this item gets displayed in TextBox
TextBox1.Value = ComboBox1.Value
Note: VBA code-> TextBox1.Value = ListBox1.Value, or TextBox1.Text = ListBox1.Value, will work only in case MultiSelect property of ListBox is set to fmMultiSelectSingle, ie. in case of a single-selection enabled ListBox. It will copy the selected item (value in BoundColumn) from the list.
VBA code — Copy selected ComboBox item to a worksheet range:
‘the text area of ComboBox shows the item entered by user of his own choice or that selected from list items, and this item is copied to the worksheet range
Sheet1.Range(«G4»).Value = ComboBox1.Value
Note: VBA code-> Sheet4.Range(«G4»).Value = ListBox1.Value, will work only in case MultiSelect property of ListBox is set to fmMultiSelectSingle, ie. in case of a single-selection enabled ListBox. It will copy the selected item (value in BoundColumn) from the list.
VBA code — Copy ComboBox item determined by its position, to a worksheet range:
‘an existing ComboBox item, determined by its position (row 4, column 1), posted to a worksheet cell
Sheet1.Range(«F2»).Value = ComboBox1.List(3, 0)
Note: VBA code for ListBox -> Sheet1.Range(«F2»).Value = ListBox1.List(3, 0)
Example 20: Extracting ListBox items (of multi-column ListBox) to a worksheet range — refer Image 19
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = True
.RowSource = «Sheet2!A2:C6»
.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectMulti
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘Use Selected & List properties to copy multiple-selected ListBox items (of multi-column ListBox) to a worksheet range
‘check all items/rows in a ListBox
For r = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
‘if a ListBox row is selected, it will get copied to the worksheet range
If ListBox1.Selected(r) = True Then
‘copying multi-column ListBox rows to corresponding/matching worksheet rows & columns:
For c = 1 To ListBox1.ColumnCount
Sheet1.Cells(r + 1, c).Value = ListBox1.List(r, c — 1)
Next c
End If
Next r
End Sub
Example 21: Extract multiple items in a row from a single-selection enabled & multi-column ListBox, and copy to worksheet range — refer Image 20
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBoxBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = True
.BoundColumn = 1
.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectSingle
.RowSource = «Sheet3!A2:C6»
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘extract multiple items in a row from a single-selection enabled & multi-column ListBox, and copy to worksheet range
‘ListIndex property is used to return and set a selection in a single-selection ListBox, but not in a multi-selection ListBox
‘ListBox1.Value will work only in case of a single-selection ListBox. It will copy the selected item (value in BoundColumn) from the list.
Dim rng As Range
Set rng = Sheet3.Cells(9, 1)
If ListBox1.Value <> «» Then
rng.Value = ListBox1.Value
rng.Offset(0, 1).Value = ListBox1.List(ListBox1.ListIndex, 1)
rng.Offset(0, 2).Value = ListBox1.List(ListBox1.ListIndex, 2)
End If
End Sub
Example 22: Select or enter name in ComboBox, and lookup its corresponding Grade in a worksheet range — refer Image 21
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set comboBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ComboBox1
.ColumnCount = 1
.ColumnWidths = «50»
.ColumnHeads = True
.RowSource = «Sheet3!A2:B6»
End With
‘disallow manual entry in TextBox
With TextBox1
.Enabled = False
End With
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘select or enter name in ComboBox, and lookup its corresponding Grade in a worksheet range — use ComboBox, TextBox & CheckBox properties and worksheet functions Vlookup and Countif
Dim totalRows As Long
‘determine total number of rows in column B
totalRows = Sheet3.Cells(Rows.Count, «B»).End(xlUp).Row
Me.ComboBox1.ControlTipText = «Select Name»
Me.CommandButton1.ControlTipText = «Click to get Grade»
‘Name selected in ComboBox is posted to TextBox
TextBox1.Text = ComboBox1.Value
‘Grade will be searched only if a name is selected and the CheckBox is selected:
If CheckBox1 = True And TextBox1.Text <> «» Then
‘check if name selected or entered in ComboBox is present in the lookup range:
If Application.CountIf(Sheet3.Range(«A1:A» & totalRows), TextBox1.Text) > 0 Then
‘lookup Grade of selected Name, in the worksheet range
Sheet3.Cells(1, 4).Value = TextBox1.Text & «‘s grade is » & Application.VLookup(TextBox1.Text, Sheet3.Range(«A1:B» & totalRows), 2, False)
Else
MsgBox «Name not found!»
End If
End If
End Sub
——————————————————————————————————————————————-
Delete ListBox rows using the RemoveItem Method
Example 23: Use RemoveItem method to delete a ListBox row. The below code deletes the row from the ListBox and also deletes the row items (or rows) in the worksheet — refer Images 22a and 22b.
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.ColumnHeads = False
.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectMulti
End With
Dim totalRows As Long
‘determine total number of rows in column A
totalRows = Sheet3.Cells(Rows.Count, «A»).End(xlUp).Row
‘load a dynamic worksheet range to a ListBox
Dim rng As Range
Set rng = Sheet3.Range(«A2:C» & totalRows)
Me.ListBox1.List = rng.Cells.Value
‘removes all items in ListBox
‘ListBox1.Clear
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘use RemoveItem method to delete a ListBox row. The below code deletes the row from the ListBox and also deletes the row items (or rows) in the worksheet
Dim n As Long, i As Long
Dim var As Variant
‘deleting row from ListBox using RemoveItem method:
‘check all items in a ListBox; reverse order (Step -1) is used because rows are being deleted from ListBox.
For n = ListBox1.ListCount — 1 To 0 Step -1
If ListBox1.Selected(n) = True Then
‘item to be deleted is stored in the variable named var
var = ListBox1.List(n, 0)
ListBox1.RemoveItem (n)
‘determine row number in which items are to be deleted; Note: value of variable named var is derived from first column, hence Range(«A:A») is searched in the Match formula.
i = Application.Match(var, Sheet3.Range(«A:A»), 0)
‘delete all 3 columns of the determined row in the worksheet:
Sheet3.Cells(i, 1) = «»
Sheet3.Cells(i, 1).Offset(0, 1) = «»
Sheet3.Cells(i, 1).Offset(0, 2) = «»
‘use this code instead of the preceding 3-lines, to delete the determined row in the worksheet
‘Sheet3.Rows(i).Delete
End If
Next n
End Sub
Example 24: Delete all rows in ListBox, using RemoveItem method
Private Sub UserForm_Initialize()
‘set ListBoxBox properties on initialization of UserForm
With ListBox1
.ColumnCount = 3
.ColumnWidths = «50;50;50»
.BoundColumn = 1
.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectMulti
‘RemoveItem method will not work if ListBox is bound to data, hence RowSource is cleared if it had been set
ListBox1.RowSource = «»
End With
For n = 2 To 6
With Me.ListBox1
‘create a new row with Additem
.AddItem Sheet3.Cells(n, 1).Value
‘add item in second column of a row
.List(.ListCount — 1, 1) = Sheet3.Cells(n, 1).Offset(0, 1).Value
‘add item in third column of a row
.List(.ListCount — 1, 2) = Sheet3.Cells(n, 1).Offset(0, 2).Value
End With
Next n
End Sub
Private Sub CommandButton1_Click()
‘delete all rows in ListBox, using RemoveItem method
Dim n As Integer
For n = 1 To ListBox1.ListCount
‘Note: «ListBox1.RemoveItem 0» is the same as «ListBox1.RemoveItem (0)»
‘alternate code: ListBox1.RemoveItem 0
ListBox1.RemoveItem ListBox1.ListCount — 1
Next n
End Sub
January 22, 2019/
Chris Newman
What Are ListBox Controls?
ListBoxes are a great way to manage tables within your userform. I have used them in the past to allow users to manage rows of information without necessary displaying all that information within the userform itself. There are a lot of neat things you can do with a userform so I’ve collected some of the more popular tasks you may want to know how to write within your VBA code.
For all the example VBA code snippets, the name of the listbox with be called “ListBox1”. I also have a downloadable example file that you can get for free if you want to see a lot of this code in action.
Enjoy!
Add An Item to The ListBox
To The End
To A Specific Position
Remember ListBoxes are zero based, so the first item is really at position 0. So if you want to add an item to the 5th position, you need to reference number 4 in the AddItem function.
‘Add to the 2nd Position (subtract 1 from desired)
ListBox1.AddItem «Apple», 1
Add Multiple Items To The ListBox
Individually Written
Sub ListBox_Load()
ListBox1.AddItem «Apple»
ListBox1.AddItem «Orange»
ListBox1.AddItem «Pear»
End Sub
From An Array List
Sub ListBox_LoadArray()
Dim myArray As Variant
myArray = Array(«Apple», «Orange», «Pear»)
ListBox1.List = myArray
End Sub
From A Cell Range
Sub ListBox_LoadRange()
Dim cell As Range
‘Load to ListBox
For Each cell In Worksheets(«Sheet1»).Range(«A1:A6»)
ListBox1.AddItem cell.Value
Next cell
End Sub
From A Table Object (ListObject)
Sub ListBox_LoadTable()
Dim tbl As ListObject
Dim cell As Range
‘Store Table Object to a variable
Set tbl = Sheet1.ListObjects(«Table1»)
‘Load List Box
For Each cell In tbl.DataBodyRange.Columns(1).Cells
ListBox1.AddItem cell.Value
Next cell
End Sub
Delete ListBox Items
Remove An Item From The ListBox
‘Remove 4th item in ListBox (subtract 1 from desired row)
ListBox1.RemoveItem 3
Remove Selected Item(s) From The ListBox
Private Sub DeleteSelection()
‘PURPOSE: Remove any selected items from the ListBox
Dim x As Long
Dim OriginalCount As Long
‘Store original ListBox count
OriginalCount = ListBox1.ListCount
‘Temporarily hide ListBox (runs faster)
ListBox1.Visible = False
‘Delete selected line items
For x = OriginalCount — 1 To 0 Step -1
If ListBox1.Selected(x) = True Then ListBox1.RemoveItem x
Next x
‘Unhide ListBox
ListBox1.Visible = True
End Sub
Remove All Items From The ListBox
Listbox Selected Items
Select A Specific Item In The ListBox
‘Select the 5th item in the ListBox (subtract 1 from desired row)
ListBox1.Selected(4) = True
Deselect All Items
Unfortunately, the “ListIndex = -1” method does not work when a ListBox allows for multiple selections. Hence, the below code tests for the ListBox’s selection mode.
If ListBox1.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectSingle Then
ListBox1.ListIndex = -1
Else
For x = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
If ListBox1.Selected(x) Then ListBox1.Selected(x) = False
Next x
End If
Count How Many Items Are Selected (Function)
Function ListBoxSelectionCount(LB As ListBox) As Long
‘PURPOSE: Count how many items are selected in a give Listbox
Dim x As Long
Dim Count As Long
For x = 0 To LB.ListCount — 1
If LB.Selected(x) Then Count = Count + 1
Next x
ListBoxSelectionCount = Count
End Function
Count How Many Items Are In The ListBox
‘Return how many items are in the ListBox
MsgBox ListBox1.ListCount
Move Selected Item Up/Down
Move Selection Up One Position
Sub MoveUp()
‘PURPOSE: Move the selected item up one position in the list
Dim x As Long
Dim Count As Long
Dim Position As Long
‘Is there an item selected?
If ListBox1.ListIndex = -1 Then Exit Sub
‘Which Item is selected?
For x = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
If ListBox1.Selected(x) = True Then
Position = x
Count = Count + 1
If Count > 1 Then Exit Sub ‘More than 1 item selected
End If
Next x
‘Selected item already at the top?
If Position = 0 Then Exit Sub
‘Add an item above the current selection
ListBox1.AddItem ListBox1.List(Position), Position — 1
‘Remove Original Selection
ListBox1.RemoveItem Position + 1
‘Re-select the item that got moved
ListBox1.Selected(Position — 1) = True
End Sub
Move Selection Down One Position
Sub MoveDown()
‘PURPOSE: Move the selected item down one position in the list
Dim x As Long
Dim Count As Long
Dim Position As Long
‘Is A ValidSelection Made?
If ListBox1.ListIndex = -1 Then Exit Sub ‘No Selection made
‘Which Item is selected?
For x = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
If ListBox1.Selected(x) = True Then
Position = x
Count = Count + 1
If Count > 1 Then Exit Sub ‘More than 1 item selected
End If
Next x
‘Move selected item down if not already at the bottom
If Position < ListBox1.ListCount — 1 Then
‘Add an item below the current selection
ListBox1.AddItem ListBox1.List(Position), Position + 2
‘Remove Original Selection
ListBox1.RemoveItem Position
‘Re-select the item that got moved
ListBox1.Selected(Position + 1) = True
End If
End Sub
Additional Resources
-
Excel VBA UserForm Listbox (AnalysisTabs.com)
-
The Complete Guide to Excel VBA Form Control ListBoxes (wellsr.com)
Anything To Add?
I know there are a TON of things you can do with ListBoxes and if there are actions you are stuck trying to figure out, leave a comment below and I will try to add them to the guide. Please only ask for generic tasks and not super-specific ones. Also, if there is a more simplistic way to carry out some of these tasks, let me know!
Download The Excel Example File
If you would like to get a copy of the Excel file I used throughout this article, feel free to directly download the spreadsheet by clicking the download button below.
About The Author
Hey there! I’m Chris and I run TheSpreadsheetGuru website in my spare time. By day, I’m actually a finance professional who relies on Microsoft Excel quite heavily in the corporate world. I love taking the things I learn in the “real world” and sharing them with everyone here on this site so that you too can become a spreadsheet guru at your company.
Through my years in the corporate world, I’ve been able to pick up on opportunities to make working with Excel better and have built a variety of Excel add-ins, from inserting tickmark symbols to automating copy/pasting from Excel to PowerPoint. If you’d like to keep up to date with the latest Excel news and directly get emailed the most meaningful Excel tips I’ve learned over the years, you can sign up for my free newsletters. I hope I was able to provide you with some value today and I hope to see you back here soon!
— Chris
Founder, TheSpreadsheetGuru.com
Содержание
- VBA Listbox
- Create a Listbox
- Populate a Listbox in VBA code
- Populate a Listbox From a Cells Range
- Get a Selected Item of a Listbox in VBA
- Clear a Listbox
- Use a Listbox in a UserForm
- VBA Code Examples Add-in
- An Excel Blog For The Real World
- The VBA Guide For Using Userform ListBox Controls
- What Are ListBox Controls?
- Add An Item to The ListBox
- To The End
- To A Specific Position
- Add Multiple Items To The ListBox
- Individually Written
- From An Array List
- From A Cell Range
- From A Table Object (ListObject)
- Delete ListBox Items
- Remove An Item From The ListBox
- Remove Selected Item(s) From The ListBox
- Remove All Items From The ListBox
- Listbox Selected Items
- Select A Specific Item In The ListBox
- Deselect All Items
- Count How Many Items Are Selected (Function)
- Count How Many Items Are In The ListBox
- Move Selected Item Up/Down
- Move Selection Up One Position
- Move Selection Down One Position
- Additional Resources
- Anything To Add?
- Download The Excel Example File
- About The Author
- Excel VBA UserForm Listbox
- VBA Reference
- 120+ Project Management Templates
- VBA ListBox_Control on the UserForm
- Add dynamic ListBox_Control on the UserForm using VBA
- Procedure to call in the Command Button:
- Add Items to ListBox_Control using VBA
- Clear Items from the ListBox using VBA
- Check if a List box item is selected or not using VBA
- VBA ListBox Default Values in Excel
- Code 1:
- Code 2:
- Code 3:
- Code 4:
- Get the total count of Listbox Items
- Move all Items from ListBox1 to ListBox2
- Get Selected Items from ListBox1 to ListBox2
- Make ListBox to Select Multiple Items
- Populate ListBox from an Array
- More Details About the ListBox_Control
- VBA ListBox Excel Macros Examples Codes Adding Clearing Multiple Items
- VBA to Remove Duplicates in ListBox Excel
- Excel VBA FAQs: Frequently Asked Questions
VBA Listbox
In this Article
This tutorial will demonstrate how to work with Listboxes using VBA.
In VBA, you can create a Listbox where a user can choose one of the listed options. Listboxes are often used in UserForms, but can also be used in a Worksheet. In this tutorial, you will learn how to create, populate and delete a Listbox. You will also see how to get a user choice in VBA and use it in code.
If you want to learn how to create a ComboBox, click here: VBA ComboBox
If you want to learn how to create a Checkbox, click here: VBA Checkbox
Create a Listbox
In order to insert a Listbox in the Worksheet, you need to go to the Developer tab, click Insert and under ActiveX Controls choose List Box:
Image 1. Insert a Listbox in the Worksheet
When you select the Listbox which you inserted, you can click on Properties under the Developer tab:
Image 2. Change Listbox Properties
Here you can set different properties of the Listbox. For the beginning, we changed the attribute Name to lstListBox. Now, we can use the Listbox with this name in VBA code.
Populate a Listbox in VBA code
First, we need to populate the Listbox with values. In most cases, a Listbox needs to be populated when the Workbook is opened. Because of this, we need to put a code for populating the Listbox in object Workbook, procedure Open. This procedure is executed every time a user opens the Workbook. Here is the code:
As you can see in Image 3, we populated our Listbox with 5 names (John, Michael, Jennifer, Lilly and Robert):
Image 3. Populate the Listbox in VBA
Populate a Listbox From a Cells Range
Another possible way to populate a Listbox is to let a user do it. A Listbox can be linked to a range of cells. Therefore, every time a user enters a new value in the cells range, the Listbox will update with that value.
If you want to enable this, you have to go to the Properties of the ListBox and set the attribute ListFillRange:
Image 4. Populate the Listbox from the cells range
We linked our Listbox with the range E2:E5, where we put names we want (Nathan, Harry, George, Roberta). As a result, the Listbox is now populated with these names.
Get a Selected Item of a Listbox in VBA
The purpose of a Listbox is to get a users choice. In order to retrieve a value that is selected by a user, you need to use this code:
The users selection is in the attribute Value of Sheet1.lstListbox object. This value is assigned to the variable strSelectedItem:
Image 5. Get a selected value from the Listbox in VBA
We selected George in the Listbox and executed the procedure. As you can see in Image 5, the value of the strSelectedItem is George, which is the value we selected. Furthermore, you can process this variable in the code.
Clear a Listbox
In order to clear a Listbox in VBA, you need to use Clear method of Sheet1.lstListBox object. It will delete all the items from the Listbox. Here is the code:
(Note: If the attribute ListFillRange is set, the above code will produce an error.
You have to clear the attribute ListFillRange first.)
When we execute the code, we get the empty Listbox:
Image 6. Clear the Listbox
Use a Listbox in a UserForm
As we mentioned, Listbox is most often used in UserForms. To explain how you can do it, we will first insert an Userform. In VBA Editor, right-click on Module name, click on Insert and choose UserForm:
Image 7. Insert a Userform
To display controls for inserting, you need to enable the Toolbox. To do this, click on the Toolbox icon in the toolbar. After that, you will get the windows with all the controls available. You can click on ListBox to create it in the Userform.
Image 8. Insert a Listbox in the Userform
We will name the ListBox lstListBox. In order to populate it with values, we need to put the following code into the method Initialize of the object UserForm:
This code triggers every time a user runs the Userform and populates the Listbox with these 5 names:
Image 9. The Listbox with values in the Userform
If you want to get selected value from the ListBox, you need to use the same logic for the Listbox in a Worksheet, which is explained earlier in the article.
VBA Code Examples Add-in
Easily access all of the code examples found on our site.
Simply navigate to the menu, click, and the code will be inserted directly into your module. .xlam add-in.
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The VBA Guide For Using Userform ListBox Controls
What Are ListBox Controls?
ListBoxes are a great way to manage tables within your userform. I have used them in the past to allow users to manage rows of information without necessary displaying all that information within the userform itself. There are a lot of neat things you can do with a userform so I’ve collected some of the more popular tasks you may want to know how to write within your VBA code.
For all the example VBA code snippets, the name of the listbox with be called “ListBox1”. I also have a downloadable example file that you can get for free if you want to see a lot of this code in action.
Add An Item to The ListBox
To The End
To A Specific Position
Remember ListBoxes are zero based, so the first item is really at position 0. So if you want to add an item to the 5th position, you need to reference number 4 in the AddItem function.
‘Add to the 2nd Position (subtract 1 from desired)
ListBox1.AddItem «Apple», 1
Add Multiple Items To The ListBox
Individually Written
ListBox1.AddItem «Apple»
ListBox1.AddItem «Orange»
ListBox1.AddItem «Pear»
From An Array List
Dim myArray As Variant
myArray = Array(«Apple», «Orange», «Pear»)
From A Cell Range
Dim cell As Range
‘Load to ListBox
For Each cell In Worksheets(«Sheet1»).Range(«A1:A6»)
ListBox1.AddItem cell.Value
Next cell
From A Table Object (ListObject)
Dim tbl As ListObject
Dim cell As Range
‘Store Table Object to a variable
Set tbl = Sheet1.ListObjects(«Table1»)
‘Load List Box
For Each cell In tbl.DataBodyRange.Columns(1).Cells
ListBox1.AddItem cell.Value
Next cell
Delete ListBox Items
Remove An Item From The ListBox
‘Remove 4th item in ListBox (subtract 1 from desired row)
ListBox1.RemoveItem 3
Remove Selected Item(s) From The ListBox
Private Sub DeleteSelection()
‘PURPOSE: Remove any selected items from the ListBox
Dim x As Long
Dim OriginalCount As Long
‘Store original ListBox count
OriginalCount = ListBox1.ListCount
‘Temporarily hide ListBox (runs faster)
ListBox1.Visible = False
‘Delete selected line items
For x = OriginalCount — 1 To 0 Step -1
If ListBox1.Selected(x) = True Then ListBox1.RemoveItem x
Next x
‘Unhide ListBox
ListBox1.Visible = True
Remove All Items From The ListBox
Listbox Selected Items
Select A Specific Item In The ListBox
‘Select the 5th item in the ListBox (subtract 1 from desired row)
ListBox1.Selected(4) = True
Deselect All Items
Unfortunately, the “ListIndex = -1” method does not work when a ListBox allows for multiple selections. Hence, the below code tests for the ListBox’s selection mode.
If ListBox1.MultiSelect = fmMultiSelectSingle Then
ListBox1.ListIndex = -1
Else
For x = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
If ListBox1.Selected(x) Then ListBox1.Selected(x) = False
Next x
End If
Count How Many Items Are Selected (Function)
Function ListBoxSelectionCount(LB As ListBox) As Long
‘PURPOSE: Count how many items are selected in a give Listbox
Dim x As Long
Dim Count As Long
For x = 0 To LB.ListCount — 1
If LB.Selected(x) Then Count = Count + 1
Next x
Count How Many Items Are In The ListBox
‘Return how many items are in the ListBox
MsgBox ListBox1.ListCount
Move Selected Item Up/Down
Move Selection Up One Position
Sub MoveUp()
‘PURPOSE: Move the selected item up one position in the list
Dim x As Long
Dim Count As Long
Dim Position As Long
‘Is there an item selected?
If ListBox1.ListIndex = -1 Then Exit Sub
‘Which Item is selected?
For x = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
If ListBox1.Selected(x) = True Then
Position = x
Count = Count + 1
If Count > 1 Then Exit Sub ‘More than 1 item selected
End If
Next x
‘Selected item already at the top?
If Position = 0 Then Exit Sub
‘Add an item above the current selection
ListBox1.AddItem ListBox1.List(Position), Position — 1
‘Remove Original Selection
ListBox1.RemoveItem Position + 1
‘Re-select the item that got moved
ListBox1.Selected(Position — 1) = True
Move Selection Down One Position
Sub MoveDown()
‘PURPOSE: Move the selected item down one position in the list
Dim x As Long
Dim Count As Long
Dim Position As Long
‘Is A ValidSelection Made?
If ListBox1.ListIndex = -1 Then Exit Sub ‘No Selection made
‘Which Item is selected?
For x = 0 To ListBox1.ListCount — 1
If ListBox1.Selected(x) = True Then
Position = x
Count = Count + 1
If Count > 1 Then Exit Sub ‘More than 1 item selected
End If
Next x
‘Move selected item down if not already at the bottom
If Position Then
‘Add an item below the current selection
ListBox1.AddItem ListBox1.List(Position), Position + 2
‘Remove Original Selection
ListBox1.RemoveItem Position
‘Re-select the item that got moved
ListBox1.Selected(Position + 1) = True
End If
Additional Resources
Anything To Add?
I know there are a TON of things you can do with ListBoxes and if there are actions you are stuck trying to figure out, leave a comment below and I will try to add them to the guide. Please only ask for generic tasks and not super-specific ones. Also, if there is a more simplistic way to carry out some of these tasks, let me know!
Download The Excel Example File
If you would like to get a copy of the Excel file I used throughout this article, feel free to directly download the spreadsheet by clicking the download button below.
Hey there! I’m Chris and I run TheSpreadsheetGuru website in my spare time. By day, I’m actually a finance professional who relies on Microsoft Excel quite heavily in the corporate world. I love taking the things I learn in the “real world” and sharing them with everyone here on this site so that you too can become a spreadsheet guru at your company.
Through my years in the corporate world, I’ve been able to pick up on opportunities to make working with Excel better and have built a variety of Excel add-ins, from inserting tickmark symbols to automating copy/pasting from Excel to PowerPoint. If you’d like to keep up to date with the latest Excel news and directly get emailed the most meaningful Excel tips I’ve learned over the years, you can sign up for my free newsletters. I hope I was able to provide you with some value today and I hope to see you back here soon!
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Excel VBA UserForm Listbox
VBA Reference
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ListBox is one of the UserForm control. You can select and drag ListBox on the UserForm. This control is used to display list of items to a list. This is used on the UserForm. Please find more details about ListBox_Control in the following chapter. You can see how to load items to listbox_Control, how to move items from one listbox to another listbox, how to select items from a listbox_Control, etc.
VBA ListBox_Control on the UserForm
Please find more details about VBA ActiveX ListBox_Control and how we are adding it on the UserForm.
-
- Go To Developer Tab and then click Visual Basic from the Code or Press Alt+F11.
- Go To Insert Menu, Click UserForm. Please find the screenshot for the same.
-
- Drag Listbox_Control on the Userform from the Toolbox. Please find the screen shot for the same.
-
- Double Click on the UserForm, and select the Userform event as shown in the below screen shot.
-
- Now can see the following code in the module.
-
- Now, add the following code to the in between procedure.
Code:
-
- Now, Press ‘F5’ to run the code. You can see the following Output. It is shown in the following Screen Shot.
Add dynamic ListBox_Control on the UserForm using VBA
Please find the following steps and example code, it will show you how to add dynamic list box control on the userform.
-
- Add command button on the userform from the toolbox.
- Right click on the command button, click properties
- Change the command button caption to ‘Create_Listbox’
- Double click on the command button
- Now, it shows following code.
-
- Call the below procedure named ‘Add_Dynamic_Listbox’ and find the below procedure to run.
Procedure to call in the Command Button:
-
- Now, click F5 to run the macro, click ‘Create_Listbox’ button to see the result.
- You can see the created dynamic checkbox in the following screen shot.
output:
Add Items to ListBox_Control using VBA
Please find the following code, it will show you how to add list items to list box.
In the above code ListBox1 is the name of the listbox_Control. Where additem is the property of listbox.
Clear Items from the ListBox using VBA
Please find the following code, it will show you how to clear the list box items. The below code clears the list box1 items on the UserForm1.
Check if a List box item is selected or not using VBA
Please find the below code to know how to check if a List box is selected or not using VBA. In the below example (0) is the index number.
VBA ListBox Default Values in Excel
Here is the VBA list box default values in Excel. After adding items to list box by using any of the below code you can define the default value.
Code 1:
The below code is useful to select blank option in list box. Where ‘-1’ is the index number.
Code 2:
The below code is useful to select first item in the list box from the available list. . Where ‘0’ is the index number.
Code 3:
The below code is useful to select second item in the list box from the available list. Where ‘1’ is the index number.
Code 4:
The below code is useful to select the last item in the list box from the available list. Where ‘1’ is the index number.
Get the total count of Listbox Items
Here is the following example, it will show you how to get the total count of items in a list box. In the below example ListBox1 is the list box name and ListCount is the property of list box.
Output:
Move all Items from ListBox1 to ListBox2
Please find the below example code, it shows how to Move all Items from ListBox1 to ListBox2. In the below example ‘ListBox1 and ListBox2’ are the list box names.
Get Selected Items from ListBox1 to ListBox2
Please find the below example code, it shows how to Get Selected Items from ListBox1 to ListBox2. In the below example ‘ListBox1 and ListBox2’ are the list box names.
Make ListBox to Select Multiple Items
Please find the below example code, it shows how to make ListBox to Select Multiple Items. In the below example ‘ListBox1’ is the list box name.
Populate ListBox from an Array
Please find the below example code, it shows how to populate ListBox from an Array. In the below example ‘arrList’ is the array name. And ‘ListBox1’ is the list box name.
More Details About the ListBox_Control
VBA ListBox Excel Macros Examples Codes Adding Clearing Multiple Items
Please find the following link for more details about VBA ListBox Excel Macros Examples and Codes Adding and Clearing Multiple Items.
VBA to Remove Duplicates in ListBox Excel
Please find more details about Remove Duplicates in ListBox in Excel VBA.
Excel VBA FAQs: Frequently Asked Questions
Please find the most frequently asked questions and answers for your reference. These are explained more detailed way with examples.
Read More …
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