Chris Nielsen’s solution is simple and will work well. A slightly shorter option would be…
ws.Rows(Rand).Delete
…note there is no need to specify a Shift when deleting a row as, by definition, it’s not possible to shift left
Incidentally, my preferred method for deleting rows is to use…
ws.Rows(Rand) = ""
…in the initial loop. I then use a Sort function to push these rows to the bottom of the data. The main reason for this is because deleting single rows can be a very slow procedure (if you are deleting >100). It also ensures nothing gets missed as per Robert Ilbrink’s comment
You can learn the code for sorting by recording a macro and reducing the code as demonstrated in this expert Excel video. I have a suspicion that the neatest method (Range(«A1:Z10»).Sort Key1:=Range(«A1»), Order1:=xlSortAscending/Descending, Header:=xlYes/No) can only be discovered on pre-2007 versions of Excel…but you can always reduce the 2007/2010 equivalent code
Couple more points…if your list is not already sorted by a column and you wish to retain the order, you can stick the row number ‘Rand’ in a spare column to the right of each row as you loop through. You would then sort by that comment and eliminate it
If your data rows contain formatting, you may wish to find the end of the new data range and delete the rows that you cleared earlier. That’s to keep the file size down. Note that a single large delete at the end of the procedure will not impair your code’s performance in the same way that deleting single rows does
hk1209 Пользователь Сообщений: 271 |
#1 30.01.2014 11:39:19 всем доброго времени суток
спасибо за потраченное драгоценное время Изменено: hk1209 — 30.01.2014 20:05:32 |
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Hugo Пользователь Сообщений: 23251 |
Чтож Вы с строкой сравниваете дату? Или там тоже строка, а не дата? |
hk1209 Пользователь Сообщений: 271 |
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wowick Пользователь Сообщений: 972 |
А сравниваете вы ее с ТЕКСТОМ «20.11.2013»… В экселе, как и во-многих других средах программирования в кавычках подразумевает текстовый формат. Если автоматизировать бардак, то получится автоматизированный бардак. |
Sanja Пользователь Сообщений: 14838 |
#5 30.01.2014 11:51:07 Попробуйте так
Согласие есть продукт при полном непротивлении сторон. |
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Hugo Пользователь Сообщений: 23251 |
То что там дата — это ещё не факт. Видали мы всяких дат… Пока не докажете — не поверю |
hk1209 Пользователь Сообщений: 271 |
#7 30.01.2014 12:32:37 Sanja спасибо за подсказку
долго выполняется |
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Sanja Пользователь Сообщений: 14838 |
#8 30.01.2014 12:44:02 Для ускорения выполнения кода отключите автоматический пересчет:
в конце процедуры включить:
так определяется
номер последней строки с данными в 9-м столбце:
Изменено: Sanja — 30.01.2014 12:45:13 Согласие есть продукт при полном непротивлении сторон. |
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Hugo Пользователь Сообщений: 23251 |
4. Обрабатывать массивы, а не ячейки — на листе только удалять строки, да и тут можно это делать один раз сразу с группой. P.S.Упустил — Dim rw As Date — это ошибка! Изменено: Hugo — 30.01.2014 12:57:32 |
hk1209 Пользователь Сообщений: 271 |
#10 30.01.2014 13:52:19 Sanja & Hugo спасибо за подсказку и потраченное драгоценное время
Знаю что там не правильно, но не могу понять где именно Изменено: hk1209 — 30.01.2014 20:06:26 |
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The_Prist Пользователь Сообщений: 14182 Профессиональная разработка приложений для MS Office |
#11 30.01.2014 14:02:46 Cells(Rows.Count, 9).End(xlUp).Row < CDate(«20.11.2013») Hugo совсем иное советовал..
И уже в цикле:
С массивами чуть сложнее в понимании, но на Вашем примере было бы так:
P.S. И оформляйте коды тегами. Значок «<…>» среди кнопок вверху при создании сообщения. Даже самый простой вопрос можно превратить в огромную проблему. Достаточно не уметь формулировать вопросы… |
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Hugo Пользователь Сообщений: 23251 |
Супербыстрое удаление строк от ZVI есть тут: http://www.sql.ru/forum/actualthread.aspx?tid=722758 Можно использовать и в этой задаче. |
hk1209 Пользователь Сообщений: 271 |
#13 30.01.2014 14:24:29 The_Prist спасибо за потраченное драгоценное время и советы (включая код) |
In this Article
- Delete Entire Row or Column
- Delete Multiple Rows or Columns
- Delete Blank / Empty Rows
- Delete Row if Cell is Blank
- Delete Row Based on Cell Value
- More Delete Row and Column Examples
- Delete Duplicate Rows
- Delete Table Rows
- Delete Filtered Rows
- Delete Rows in Range
- Delete Selected Rows
- Delete Last Row
- Delete Columns by Number
This tutorial will demonstrate different ways to delete rows and columns in Excel using VBA.
Delete Entire Row or Column
To delete an entire row in VBA use this line of code:
Rows(1).Delete
Notice we use the Delete method to delete a row.
Instead of referencing the Rows Object, you can reference rows based on their Range Object with EntireRow:
Range("a1").EntireRow.Delete
Similarly to delete an entire column, use these lines of code:
Columns(1).Delete
Range("a1").EntireColumn.Delete
Delete Multiple Rows or Columns
Using the same logic, you can also delete multiple rows at once:
Rows("1:3").Delete
or columns:
Columns("A:C").Delete
Notice here we reference the specific row and column numbers / letters surrounded by quotations.
Of course, you can also reference the EntireRow of a range:
Range("a1:a10").EntireRow.Delete
Note: The examples below only demonstrate deleting rows, however as you can see above, the syntax is virtually identically to delete columns.
Delete Blank / Empty Rows
This example will delete a row if the entire row is blank:
Sub DeleteRows_EntireRowBlank()
Dim cell As Range
For Each cell In Range("b2:b20")
If Application.WorksheetFunction.CountA(cell.EntireRow) = 0 Then
cell.EntireRow.Delete
End If
Next cell
End Sub
It makes use of the Excel worksheet function: COUNTA.
Delete Row if Cell is Blank
This will delete a row if specific column in that row is blank (in this case column B):
Range("b3:b20").SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks).EntireRow.Delete
Delete Row Based on Cell Value
This will loop through a range, and delete rows if a certain cell value in that row says “delete”.
Sub DeleteRowswithSpecificValue()
Dim cell As Range
For Each cell In Range("b2:b20")
If cell.Value = "delete" Then
cell.EntireRow.Delete
End If
Next cell
End Sub
More Delete Row and Column Examples
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Delete Duplicate Rows
This code will delete all duplicate rows in a range:
Range("b2:c100").RemoveDuplicates Columns:=2
Notice we set Columns:=2. This tells VBA to check both the first two columns of data when considering if rows are duplicates. A duplicate is only found when both columns have duplicate values.
If we had set this to 1, only the first row would’ve been checked for duplicate values.
Delete Table Rows
This code will delete the second row in a Table by referencing ListObjects.
ThisWorkbook.Sheets("Sheet1").ListObjects("list1").ListRows(2).Delete
Delete Filtered Rows
To delete only rows that are visible after filtering:
Range("b3:b20").SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete
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Delete Rows in Range
This code will delete all rows in range:
Range("a1:a10").EntireRow.Delete
Delete Selected Rows
This code will delete all selected rows:
Selection.EntireRow.Delete
Delete Last Row
This will delete the last used row in column B:
Cells(Rows.Count, 2).End(xlUp).EntireRow.Delete
By changing 2 to 1, you can delete the last used row in column A, etc.:
Cells(Rows.Count, 1).End(xlUp).EntireRow.Delete
Delete Columns by Number
To delete a column by it’s number, use a code like this:
Columns (2).Delete
In this VBA Tutorial, you learn how to use Excel VBA to delete rows based on a variety of criteria.
This VBA Tutorial is accompanied by Excel workbooks containing the data and macros I use in the examples below. You can get immediate free access to these example workbooks by subscribing to the Power Spreadsheets Newsletter.
Use the following Table of Contents to navigate to the section you’re interested in.
Related VBA and Macro Tutorials
The following VBA and Macro Tutorials may help you better understand and implement the contents below.
- General VBA constructs and structures:
- Learn about using variables here.
- Learn about VBA data types here.
- Learn about R1C1 style-references here.
- Learn about using worksheet functions in VBA here.
- Practical VBA applications and macro examples:
- Learn how to work with worksheets here.
- Learn how to insert rows here.
- Learn how to delete columns here.
- Learn how to find the last column in a worksheet here.
You can find additional VBA and Macro Tutorials in the Archives.
VBA Code to Delete a Row
To delete a row using VBA, use a statement with the following structure:
Worksheets.Rows(Row#).Delete
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Worksheets.Rows(Row#).Delete
- Item: Worksheets.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
- Item: Rows(Row#).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing row number Row# of the worksheet returned by item #1 above.
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent Row#, use the Long data type.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #2 above.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes row 6 of the worksheet named “Delete row”.
Sub deleteRow() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Worksheets("Delete row").Rows(6).Delete End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes row 6 of the worksheet.
#2: Delete a Row and Shift Up
VBA Code to Delete a Row and Shift Up
To delete a row and explicitly shift cells up to replace the deleted row, use a statement with the following structure:
Worksheet.Rows(Row#).Delete Shift:=xlShiftUp
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Worksheet.Rows(Row#).Delete Shift:=xlShiftUp
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
- Item: Rows(Row#).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing row number Row# of the worksheet returned by item #1 above.
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent Row#, use the Long data type.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #2 above.
- Item: Shift:=xlShiftUp.
- VBA Construct: Shift parameter of the Range.Delete method.
- Description:
- Shifts rows up (xlShiftUp) to replace the deleted row.
- You can usually omit this parameter. By default, VBA decides how to shift the cells based on the range’s shape. When deleting a row, this generally results in Excel shifting the cells up.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes row 10 of the worksheet named “Delete row” and explicitly specifies to shift cells up to replace the deleted row.
Sub deleteRowShiftUp() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Worksheets("Delete row").Rows(10).Delete Shift:=xlShiftUp End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes row 10 of the worksheet and shifts cells up to replace the deleted row.
#3: Delete Multiple Rows
VBA Code to Delete Multiple Rows
To delete multiple rows, use a statement with the following structure:
Worksheet.Rows("FirstRow#:LastRow#").Delete
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Worksheet.Rows(“FirstRow#:LastRow#”).Delete
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
- Item: Rows(“FirstRow#:LastRow#”).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing rows number FirstRow# through LastRow# of the worksheet returned by item #1 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #2 above.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes rows 14 to 18 of the worksheet named “Delete row”.
Sub deleteMultipleRows() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Worksheets("Delete row").Rows("14:18").Delete End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes rows 14 to 18 of the worksheet.
#4: Delete Selected Row
VBA Code to Delete Selected Row
To delete the selected row (the row containing the active cell), use the following statement:
ActiveCell.EntireRow.Delete
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
ActiveCell.EntireRow.Delete
- Item: ActiveCell.
- VBA Construct: Application.ActiveCell property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the active cell.
- Item: EntireRow.
- VBA Construct: Range.EntireRow property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the entire row containing the cell range returned by item #1 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #2 above.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes the selected row (the row containing the active cell):
Sub deleteSelectedRow() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ ActiveCell.EntireRow.Delete End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. When I execute the macro, the active cell is B20. As expected, Excel deletes the selected row.
#5: Delete Multiple Selected Rows
VBA Code to Delete Multiple Selected Rows
To delete multiple selected rows, use the following statement:
Selection.EntireRow.Delete
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Selection.EntireRow.Delete
- Item: Selection.
- VBA Construct: Application.Selection property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the current cell range selection.
- Item: EntireRow.
- VBA Construct: Range.EntireRow property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the entire row containing the Range object returned by item #1 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #2 above.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes the (multiple) selected rows.
Sub deleteSelectedRows() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Selection.EntireRow.Delete End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. When I execute the macro, the selected cells are B24 to B28. As expected, Excel deletes the selected rows.
#6: Delete Blank Rows
VBA Code to Delete Blank Rows
To delete blank rows, use a macro with the following statement structure:
With Worksheet For Counter = LastRow To FirstRow Step -1 If WorksheetFunction.CountA(.Rows(Counter)) = 0 Then If Not BlankRows Is Nothing Then Set BlankRows = Union(BlankRows, .Rows(Counter)) Else Set BlankRows = .Rows(Counter) End If End If Next Counter End With If Not BlankRows Is Nothing Then BlankRows.Delete
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Lines #1 and #11: With Worksheet | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #2 through #10 below) are executed on the worksheet returned by item #2 below.
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
Lines #2 and #10: For Counter = LastRow To FirstRow Step -1 | Next Counter
- Item: For… Next Counter.
- VBA Construct: For… Next statement.
- Description: Repeats the statements within the loop (lines #3 through #9 below) for each row between (and including) FirstRow (item #4 below) and LastRow (item #3 below).
- Item: Counter.
- VBA Construct: Counter of For… Next statement.
- Description: Loop counter. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent the loop counter, use the Long data type.
- Item: LastRow.
- VBA Construct: Counter Start of For… Next statement.
- Description: Number of the last row (further down the worksheet) you want the macro to consider when identifying blank rows. The number of the last row is also the initial value of Counter (item #2 above).
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent the number of the last row to consider, use the Long data type.
- Item: FirstRow.
- VBA Construct: Counter End of For… Next statement.
- Description: Number of the first row (closer to the top of the worksheet) you want the macro to consider when identifying blank rows. The number of the first row is also the final value of Counter (item (#2 above).
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent the number of the first row to consider, use the Long data type.
- Item: Step -1.
- VBA Construct: Step of For… Next statement.
- Description: Amount by which Counter (item #2 above) changes every time a loop iteration occurs.
In this scenario, you loop backwards: from LastRow (item #3 above) to FirstRow (item #4 above). Therefore, step is -1.
Line #3: If WorksheetFunction.CountA(.Rows(Counter)) = 0 Then
- Item: If… Then.
- VBA Construct: Opening line of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: Conditionally executes the statements within the If… Then block (lines #4 through #8 below) if the condition specified by item #4 below is met.
- Item: WorksheetFunction.CountA.
- VBA Construct: WorksheetFunction.CountA method.
- Description: Counts the number of cells that aren’t empty in the range returned by item #3 below.
Since the range returned by item #3 below represents the row through which the macro is currently looping, Worksheet.CountA counts the number of cells that aren’t empty in that row.
- Item: .Rows(Counter).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the row through which the macro is currently looping.
- Item: WorksheetFunction.CountA(.Rows(Counter)) = 0.
- VBA Construct: Condition of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: This condition is a numeric expression that evaluates to True or False, as follows:
- True: When the WorksheetFunction.CountA method (item #2 above) returns 0. This happens when the row through which the macro is currently looping (item #3 above) is empty and, therefore, the number of non-empty cells is 0.
- False: When WorksheetFunction.CountA returns a number other than 0. This happens when the row through which the macro is currently looping isn’t empty and, therefore, the number of non-empty cells isn’t 0.
Line #4: If Not BlankRows Is Nothing Then
- Item: If… Then.
- VBA Construct: Opening line of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: Conditionally executes the statement within the If… Then… Else block (line #5 below) if the condition specified by item #6 below is met.
- Item: Not.
- VBA Construct: Not operator.
- Description: Carries out a logical negation on item #3 below. In other words, if item #3 returns:
- True, the result is False.
- False, the result is True.
- Item: BlankRows.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the empty rows found by the macro.
- Item: Is.
- VBA Construct: Is Operator.
- Description: Compares 2 object reference variables: (i) Not BlankRows (items #2 and #3 above) vs. (ii) Nothing (item #5 below).
If both object references refer to the same object, the Is operator returns True. If they refer to different objects, Is returns False.
- Item: Nothing.
- Description: The default value for a data type. In the case of an object variable (such as BlankRows), a null reference.
- Item: Not BlankRows Is Nothing.
- VBA Construct: Condition of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: The condition is an expression that evaluates to True or False, as follows:
- True: When “Not BlankRows” (items #2 and #3 above) refers to the same object as Nothing (item #5 above). This happens when BlankRows is “something”.
Since BlankRows holds a Range object representing cell ranges within the empty rows found by the macro, BlankRows is something if the macro finds at least one such row.
- False: When “Not BlankRows” refers to a different object from Nothing. This happens when BlankRows itself is Nothing. This occurs prior to the macro finding the first empty row. This is because BlankRows isn’t assigned to anything prior to that moment.
- True: When “Not BlankRows” (items #2 and #3 above) refers to the same object as Nothing (item #5 above). This happens when BlankRows is “something”.
Line #5: Set BlankRows = Union(BlankRows, .Rows(Counter))
- Item: Set… =.
- VBA Construct: Set statement.
- Description: Assigns the object reference returned by item #6 below to BlankRows (item #2 below).
- Item: BlankRows.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable of Set statement.
- Description:
- Holds a Range object representing the empty rows found by the macro.
- BlankRows is included twice in the statement. In the first mention (Set BlankRows), BlankRows is the object variable to which an object reference is assigned.
- Item: Union.
- VBA Construct: Application.Union method.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the union of the Range objects returned by items #4 and #5 below.
- Item: BlankRows.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description:
- Holds a Range object representing the empty rows found by the macro.
- BlankRows is included twice in the statement. In the second mention (Union(BlankRows, .Rows(Counter)), BlankRows is one of the parameters of the Application.Union method.
- Item: .Rows(Counter).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the row through which the macro is currently looping.
- Item: Union(BlankRows, .Rows(Counter).
- VBA Construct: Object expression of Set statement.
- Description: Returns the new Range object reference assigned to the BlankRows object variable (item #2 above). This is the union of the following 2 Range objects:
- Prior to the Set statement, BlankRows represents cell ranges within the empty rows found by the macro prior to the row through which it’s currently looping.
- “.Rows(Counter)” represents the row through which the macro is currently looping.
Graphically, this looks as follows:
In other words, any empty row the macro finds is “added” to BlankRows.
Line #6: Else
- Item: Else.
- VBA Construct: Else clause of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: The statement following the Else clause (line #7 below) is executed if the condition tested in the opening line of the If… Then… Else statement (line #4 above) isn’t met and returns False.
Line #7: Set BlankRows = .Rows(Counter)
- Item: Set… =.
- VBA Construct: Set statement.
- Description: Assigns the object reference returned by item #3 below to BlankRows (item #2 below).
- Item: BlankRows.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable of Set statement.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the empty rows found by the macro.
- Item: .Rows(Counter).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the row through which the macro is currently looping.
Lines #8 and #9: End If | End If
- Item: End If.
- VBA Construct: Closing lines of If… Then… Else statements.
- Description: Ends the If… Then… Else statements that began in lines #3 and #4 above.
Line #12: If Not BlankRows Is Nothing Then BlankRows.Delete
- Item: If… Then.
- VBA Construct: If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: Conditionally executes the statement at the end of the line (items #7 and #8 below) if the condition specified by item #6 below is met.
- Item: Not.
- VBA Construct: Not operator.
- Description: Carries out a logical negation on item #3 below. In other words, if item #3 returns:
- True, the result is False.
- False, the result is True.
- Item: BlankRows.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the empty rows found by the macro.
- Item: Is.
- VBA Construct: Is Operator.
- Description: Compares 2 object reference variables: (i) Not BlankRows (items #2 and #3 above) vs. (ii) Nothing (item #5 below).
If both object references refer to the same object, the Is operator returns True. If they refer to different objects, Is returns False.
- Item: Nothing.
- Description: The default value for a data type. In the case of an object variable (such as BlankRows), a null reference.
- Item: Not BlankRows Is Nothing.
- VBA Construct: Condition of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: The condition is an expression that evaluates to True or False, as follows:
- True: When “Not BlankRows” (items #2 and #3 above) refers to the same object as Nothing (item #5 above). This happens when BlankRows is “something”.
Since BlankRows holds a Range object representing cell ranges within the empty rows found by the macro, BlankRows is something if the macro has found at least 1 empty row.
- False: When “Not BlankRows” refers to a different object from Nothing. This happens when BlankRows itself is Nothing. This, in turn, occurs when the macro founds no empty rows.
- True: When “Not BlankRows” (items #2 and #3 above) refers to the same object as Nothing (item #5 above). This happens when BlankRows is “something”.
- Item: BlankRows.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the empty rows found by the macro.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #7 above.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes all blank rows between rows number myFirstRow and LastRow.
- myFirstRow is set to 6.
- myLastRow is set to the number of the last row with data in the worksheet named “Delete empty rows”. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last row with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Row property.
Sub deleteEmptyRows() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Dim myFirstRow As Long Dim myLastRow As Long Dim myWorksheet As Worksheet Dim iCounter As Long Dim myBlankRows As Range myFirstRow = 6 Set myWorksheet = Worksheets("Delete empty rows") With myWorksheet myLastRow = .Cells.Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByRows, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Row For iCounter = myLastRow To myFirstRow Step -1 If WorksheetFunction.CountA(.Rows(iCounter)) = 0 Then If Not myBlankRows Is Nothing Then Set myBlankRows = Union(myBlankRows, .Rows(iCounter)) Else Set myBlankRows = .Rows(iCounter) End If End If Next iCounter End With If Not myBlankRows Is Nothing Then myBlankRows.Delete End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes all blank rows between row 6 and the last row with data on the worksheet.
#7: Delete Rows with Blank Cells
VBA Code to Delete Rows with Blank Cells
To delete rows with blank cells using VBA, use a macro with the following statement structure:
With Worksheet Set RangeForCriteria = .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn)) End With On Error Resume Next RangeForCriteria.SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks).EntireRow.Delete
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Lines #1 and #3: With Worksheet | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: The statement within the With… End With statement (line #2 below) is executed on the worksheet returned by item #2 below.
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
Line #2: Set RangeForCriteria = .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn))
- Item: Set… =.
- VBA Construct: Set statement.
- Description: Assigns the object reference returned by items #3 through #5 below to RangeForCriteria (item #2 below).
- Item: RangeForCriteria.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the cell range you want the macro to search for blank cells.
- Item: .Range.
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Range property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing a cell range specified as follows:
- Upper-left corner cell: Range object returned by item #4 below.
- Lower-right corner cell: Range object returned by item #5 below.
- Item: .Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number FirstRow and column number FirstColumn.
FirstRow and FirstColumn are the number of, respectively, the first row and first column in the cell range you want the macro to search for blank cells. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent FirstRow or FirstColumn, use the Long data type.
- Item: .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number LastRow and column number LastColumn.
LastRow and LastColumn are the number of, respectively, the last row and last column in the cell range you want the macro to search for blank cells. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent LastRow or LastColumn, use the Long data type.
Line #4: On Error Resume Next
- Item: On Error Resume Next.
- VBA Construct: On Error Resume Next statement.
- Description: Specifies that, when a run-time error occurs, control goes to the statement following the statement where the error occurs.
The error-handler in this line #4 is necessary because, if the cell range you want the macro to search for blank cells doesn’t contain any such cells, line #5 below generates a run-time error.
Line #5: RangeForCriteria.SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks).EntireRow.Delete
- Item: RangeForCriteria.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the cell range you want the macro to search for blank cells.
- Item: SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks).
- VBA Construct: Range.SpecialCells method and Type parameter of Range.SpecialCells method.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing all empty cells within the cell range returned by RangeForCriteria (item #1 above).
- Item: EntireRow.
- VBA Construct: Range.EntireRow property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the entire rows containing the Range object returned by item #2 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #3 above.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes all rows with blank cells between:
- Rows number myFirstRow and myLastRow.
- Columns number myFirstColumn and myLastColumn.
In this example:
- myFirstRow is set to 6.
- myFirstColumn is set to 2.
- myLastRow is set to the number of the last row with data in the worksheet named “Delete row with blank cells”. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last row with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Row property.
- myLastColumn is set to the number of the last column with data in the same worksheet. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last column with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Column property.
Sub deleteRowBlankCells() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Dim myFirstRow As Long Dim myLastRow As Long Dim myFirstColumn As Long Dim myLastColumn As Long Dim myWorksheet As Worksheet Dim myRange As Range myFirstRow = 6 myFirstColumn = 2 Set myWorksheet = Worksheets("Delete row with blank cells") With myWorksheet With .Cells myLastRow = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByRows, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Row myLastColumn = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByColumns, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Column End With Set myRange = .Range(.Cells(myFirstRow, myFirstColumn), .Cells(myLastRow, myLastColumn)) End With On Error Resume Next myRange.SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks).EntireRow.Delete End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes all rows with blank cells between (i) row 6 and the last row with data on the worksheet, and (ii) column 2 and the last column with data on the worksheet.
#8: Delete Rows with Blank Cells in a Specific Column
VBA Code to Delete Rows with Blank Cells in a Specific Column
To delete rows with blank cells in a specific column using VBA, use a macro with the following statement structure:
With Worksheet With .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn)) .AutoFilter Field:=CriteriaField, Criteria1:="=" On Error Resume Next .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count - 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete End With .AutoFilterMode = False End With
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Lines #1 and #8: With Worksheet | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #2 through #7 below) are executed on the worksheet returned by item #2 below.
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
Lines #2 and #6: With .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn)) | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #3 through #6 below) are executed on the range object returned by items #2 through #4 below.
- Item: .Range.
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Range property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing a cell range specified as follows:
- Upper-left corner cell: Range object returned by item #3 below.
- Lower-right corner cell: Range object returned by item #4 below.
- Item: .Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number FirstRow and column number FirstColumn.
FirstRow and FirstColumn are the number of, respectively, the first row and first column in the cell range you work with. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent FirstRow or FirstColumn, use the Long data type.
- Item: .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number LastRow and column number LastColumn.
LastRow and LastColumn are the number of, respectively, the last row and last column in the cell range you work with. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent LastRow or LastColumn, use the Long data type.
Line #3: .AutoFilter Field:=CriteriaField, Criteria1:=”=”
- Item: .AutoFilter.
- VBA Construct: Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Filter the data within the range you work with using the AutoFilter and according to the parameters specified by items #2 and #3 below.
- Item: Field:=CriteriaField.
- VBA Construct: Field parameter of Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Specifies the field on which you want to base the filter. The leftmost field of the range you work with is Field 1. The rightmost field is the number of fields in the cell range you work with.
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent CriteriaField, use the Long data type.
- Item: Criteria1:=”=”.
- VBA Construct: Criteria1 parameter of Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Specifies the filtering criteria. “=” finds blank cells.
Line #4: On Error Resume Next
- Item: On Error Resume Next.
- VBA Construct: On Error Resume Next statement.
- Description: Specifies that, when a run-time error occurs, control goes to the statement following the statement where the error occurs.
The error-handler in this line #4 is necessary because, if the field you filter by (line #3 above) doesn’t contain blank cells, line #5 below generates a run-time error.
Line #5: .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count – 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete
- Item: Offset.
- VBA Construct: Range.Offset property.
- Description: Returns a Range object a number of rows above or below the cell range it works with, as returned by line #2 above.
- Item: RowOffset:=1.
- VBA Construct: RowOffset parameter of Range.Offset property.
- Description: Specifies that the cell range returned by Range.Offset (item #1 above) is 1 row below the range specified in line #2 above.
Line #2 above specifies the cell range you work with. Therefore, the Range object that Range.Offset returns has the same size but is 1 row below the cell range you work with. This results in the following:
- The headers of the cell range you work with are excluded from the Range object.
- The first empty row below the last row with data (LastRow in line #2 above) is included. This extra line is handled by item #7 below.
- Item: Resize.
- VBA Construct: Range.Resize property.
- Description: Resizes the cell range returned by items #1 and #2 above.
- Item: RowSize.
- VBA Construct: RowSize parameter of Range.Resize property.
- Description: Specifies the number of rows in the new cell range returned by Range.Resize (item #3 above).
- Item: Rows.
- VBA Construct: Range.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the rows in the cell range it works with, as returned by line #2 above.
- Item: Count.
- VBA Construct: Range.Count property.
- Description: Returns the number of rows within the Range object returned by item #5 above.
- Item: Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count – 1)).
- VBA Construct: Range.Resize property.
- Description: Resizes the cell range returned by items #1 and #2 above to reduce it by one row. The number of rows in the new range is obtained by subtracting 1 from the number of rows returned by line #2, as counted by items #5 and #6 above.
This results in a cell range that excludes the first empty row below the last row with data that the Range.Offset property (items #1 and #2 above) included.
- Item: SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).
- VBA Construct: Range.SpecialCells method and Type parameter of Range.SpecialCells method.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing all visible cells within the cell range you work with, excluding the headers (as required by item #2 above).
Since line #3 above filters the data according to the criteria you specify, the visible cells returned by Range.SpecialCells are those containing blank cells in the column (field) you specify.
- Item: EntireRow.
- VBA Construct: Range.EntireRow property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the entire rows containing the Range object returned by item #8 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #10 above.
Line #7: .AutoFilterMode = False
- Item: .AutoFilterMode = False.
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.AutoFilterMode property.
- Description: Specifies that the AutoFilter drop-down arrows aren’t displayed on the worksheet.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes all rows that meet the following conditions:
- Are between:
- Rows number (myFirstRow + 1) and myLastrow.
- Columns number myFirstColumn and myLastColumn.
- Contain a blank cell in field number myCriteriaField.
In this example:
- myFirstRow is set to 5.
- myFirstColumn is set to 2.
- myCriteriaField is set to 1.
- myLastRow is set to the number of the last row with data in the worksheet named “Delete row if cell is blank”. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last row with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Row property.
- myLastColumn is set to the number of the last column with data in the same worksheet. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last column with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Column property.
Sub deleteRowBlankCell() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Dim myFirstRow As Long Dim myLastRow As Long Dim myFirstColumn As Long Dim myLastColumn As Long Dim myCriteriaField As Long Dim myWorksheet As Worksheet myFirstRow = 5 myFirstColumn = 2 myCriteriaField = 1 Set myWorksheet = Worksheets("Delete row if cell is blank") With myWorksheet With .Cells myLastRow = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByRows, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Row myLastColumn = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByColumns, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Column End With With .Range(.Cells(myFirstRow, myFirstColumn), .Cells(myLastRow, myLastColumn)) .AutoFilter Field:=myCriteriaField, Criteria1:="=" On Error Resume Next .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count - 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete End With .AutoFilterMode = False End With End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes the rows containing blank cells in myCriteriaField (1).
#9: Delete Rows Containing Strings
VBA Code to Delete Rows Containing Strings
To delete rows containing strings using VBA, use a macro with the following statement structure:
With Worksheet Set RangeForCriteria = .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn)) End With On Error Resume Next RangeForCriteria.SpecialCells(xlCellTypeConstants, xlTextValues).EntireRow.Delete
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Lines #1 and #3: With Worksheet | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: The statement within the With… End With statement (line #2 below) is executed on the worksheet returned by item #2 below.
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
Line #2: Set RangeForCriteria = .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn))
- Item: Set… =.
- VBA Construct: Set statement.
- Description: Assigns the object reference returned by items #3 through #5 below to RangeForCriteria (item #2 below).
- Item: RangeForCriteria.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the cell range you want the macro to search for cells containing strings.
- Item: .Range.
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Range property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing a cell range specified as follows:
- Upper-left corner cell: Range object returned by item #4 below.
- Lower-right corner cell: Range object returned by item #5 below.
- Item: .Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number FirstRow and column number FirstColumn.
FirstRow and FirstColumn are the number of, respectively, the first row and first column in the cell range you want the macro to search for cells containing strings. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent FirstRow or FirstColumn, use the Long data type.
- Item: .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number LastRow and column number LastColumn.
LastRow and LastColumn are the number of, respectively, the last row and last column in the cell range you want the macro to search for cells containing strings. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent LastRow or LastColumn, use the Long data type.
Line #4: On Error Resume Next
- Item: On Error Resume Next.
- VBA Construct: On Error Resume Next statement.
- Description: Specifies that, when a run-time error occurs, control goes to the statement following the statement where the error occurs.
The error-handler in this line #4 is necessary because, if the cell range you want the macro to search for cells containing strings doesn’t contain any such cells, line #5 below generates a run-time error.
Line #5: RangeForCriteria.SpecialCells(xlCellTypeConstants, xlTextValues).EntireRow.Delete
- Item: RangeForCriteria.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the cell range you want the macro to search for cells containing strings.
- Item: SpecialCells(xlCellTypeConstants, xlTextValues).
- VBA Construct: Range.SpecialCells method, Type and Value parameters of Range.SpecialCells method.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing all cells containing constant (xlCellTypeConstants) text values (xlTextValues) within the cell range returned by RangeForCriteria (item #1 above). Those are the cells containing strings.
- Item: EntireRow.
- VBA Construct: Range.EntireRow property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the entire rows containing the Range object returned by item #2 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #3 above.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes all rows containing strings between:
- Rows number myFirstRow and myLastRow.
- Columns number myFirstColumn and myLastColumn.
In this example:
- myFirstRow is set to 6.
- myFirstColumn is set to 2.
- myLastRow is set to the number of the last row with data in the worksheet named “Delete rows containing strings”. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last row with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Row property.
- myLastColumn is set to the number of the last column with data in the same worksheet. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last column with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Column property.
Sub deleteRowContainingStrings() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Dim myFirstRow As Long Dim myLastRow As Long Dim myFirstColumn As Long Dim myLastColumn As Long Dim myWorksheet As Worksheet Dim myRange As Range myFirstRow = 6 myFirstColumn = 2 Set myWorksheet = Worksheets("Delete rows containing strings") With myWorksheet With .Cells myLastRow = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByRows, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Row myLastColumn = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByColumns, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Column End With Set myRange = .Range(.Cells(myFirstRow, myFirstColumn), .Cells(myLastRow, myLastColumn)) End With On Error Resume Next myRange.SpecialCells(xlCellTypeConstants, xlTextValues).EntireRow.Delete End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes all rows containing strings between (i) row 6 and the last row with data on the worksheet, and (ii) column 2 and the last column with data on the worksheet.
#10: Delete Row Based on Cell Value
VBA Code to Delete Row Based on Cell Value
To delete rows based on the value in a specific cell using VBA, use a macro with the following statement structure:
With Worksheet With .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn)) .AutoFilter Field:=CriteriaField, Criteria1:=Value On Error Resume Next .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count - 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete End With .AutoFilterMode = False End With
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Lines #1 and #8: With Worksheet | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #2 through #7 below) are executed on the worksheet returned by item #2 below.
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
Lines #2 and #6: With .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn)) | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #3 through #6 below) are executed on the range object returned by items #2 through #4 below.
- Item: .Range.
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Range property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing a cell range specified as follows:
- Upper-left corner cell: Range object returned by item #3 below.
- Lower-right corner cell: Range object returned by item #4 below.
- Item: .Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number FirstRow and column number FirstColumn.
FirstRow and FirstColumn are the number of, respectively, the first row and first column in the cell range you work with. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent FirstRow or FirstColumn, use the Long data type.
- Item: .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number LastRow and column number LastColumn.
LastRow and LastColumn are the number of, respectively, the last row and last column in the cell range you work with. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent LastRow or LastColumn, use the Long data type.
Line #3: .AutoFilter Field:=CriteriaField, Criteria1:=Value
- Item: .AutoFilter.
- VBA Construct: Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Filter the data within the range you work with using the AutoFilter and according to the parameters specified by items #2 and #3 below.
- Item: Field:=CriteriaField.
- VBA Construct: Field parameter of Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Specifies the field on which you want to base the filter. The leftmost field of the range you work with is Field 1. The rightmost field is the number of fields in the cell range you work with.
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent CriteriaField, use the Long data type.
- Item: Criteria1:=Value.
- VBA Construct: Criteria1 parameter of Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Specifies the filtering criteria. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent Value, ensure that the data type you use can handle the value you use as criteria.
Line #4: On Error Resume Next
- Item: On Error Resume Next.
- VBA Construct: On Error Resume Next statement.
- Description: Specifies that, when a run-time error occurs, control goes to the statement following the statement where the error occurs.
The error-handler in this line #4 is necessary because, if the field you filter by (line #3 above) doesn’t contain cells with the value you use as criteria, line #5 below generates a run-time error.
Line #5: .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count – 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete
- Item: Offset.
- VBA Construct: Range.Offset property.
- Description: Returns a Range object a number of rows above or below the cell range it works with, as returned by line #2 above.
- Item: RowOffset:=1.
- VBA Construct: RowOffset parameter of Range.Offset property.
- Description: Specifies that the cell range returned by Range.Offset (item #1 above) is 1 row below the range specified in line #2 above.
Line #2 above specifies the cell range you work with. Therefore, the Range object that Range.Offset returns has the same size but is 1 row below the cell range you work with. This results in the following:
- The headers of the cell range you work with are excluded from the Range object.
- The first empty row below the last row with data (LastRow in line #2 above) is included. This extra line is handled by item #7 below.
- Item: Resize.
- VBA Construct: Range.Resize property.
- Description: Resizes the cell range returned by items #1 and #2 above.
- Item: RowSize.
- VBA Construct: RowSize parameter of Range.Resize property.
- Description: Specifies the number of rows in the new cell range returned by Range.Resize (item #3 above).
- Item: Rows.
- VBA Construct: Range.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the rows in the cell range it works with, as returned by line #2 above.
- Item: Count.
- VBA Construct: Range.Count property.
- Description: Returns the number of rows within the Range object returned by item #5 above.
- Item: Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count – 1)).
- VBA Construct: Range.Resize property.
- Description: Resizes the cell range returned by items #1 and #2 above to reduce it by one row. The number of rows in the new range is obtained by subtracting 1 from the number of rows returned by line #2, as counted by items #5 and #6 above.
This results in a cell range that excludes the first empty row below the last row with data that the Range.Offset property (items #1 and #2 above) included.
- Item: SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).
- VBA Construct: Range.SpecialCells method and Type parameter of Range.SpecialCells method.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing all visible cells within the cell range you work with, excluding the headers (as required by item #2 above).
Since line #3 above filters the data according to the criteria you specify, the visible cells returned by Range.SpecialCells are those containing the value you’re looking for in the column (field) you specify.
- Item: EntireRow.
- VBA Construct: Range.EntireRow property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the entire rows containing the Range object returned by item #8 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #10 above.
Line #7: .AutoFilterMode = False
- Item: .AutoFilterMode = False.
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.AutoFilterMode property.
- Description: Specifies that the AutoFilter drop-down arrows aren’t displayed on the worksheet.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes all rows that meet the following conditions:
- Are between:
- Rows number (myFirstRow + 1) and myLastRow.
- Columns number myFirstColumn and myLastColumn.
- Contain the value myValue in field number myCriteriaField.
In this example:
- myFirstRow is set to 5.
- myFirstColumn is set to 2.
- myCriteriaField is set to 1.
- myValue is set to 5.
- myLastRow is set to the number of the last row with data in the worksheet named “Delete row based on value”. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last row with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Row property.
- myLastColumn is set to the number of the last column with data in the same worksheet. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last column with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Column property.
Sub deleteRowBasedOnValue() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Dim myFirstRow As Long Dim myLastRow As Long Dim myFirstColumn As Long Dim myLastColumn As Long Dim myCriteriaField As Long Dim myValue As Double Dim myWorksheet As Worksheet myFirstRow = 5 myFirstColumn = 2 myCriteriaField = 1 myValue = 5 Set myWorksheet = Worksheets("Delete row based on value") With myWorksheet With .Cells myLastRow = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByRows, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Row myLastColumn = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByColumns, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Column End With With .Range(.Cells(myFirstRow, myFirstColumn), .Cells(myLastRow, myLastColumn)) .AutoFilter Field:=myCriteriaField, Criteria1:=myValue On Error Resume Next .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count - 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete End With .AutoFilterMode = False End With End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes the rows containing myValue (5) in myCriteriaField (1).
#11: Delete Row Based on Date
VBA Code to Delete Row Based on Date
To delete rows based on the date in a specific cell using VBA, use a macro with the following statement structure:
With Worksheet For Counter = LastRow To FirstRow Step -1 With .Cells(Counter, CriteriaColumn) If .Value = Date Then If Not RowsWithDate Is Nothing Then Set RowsWithDate = Union(RowsWithDate, .Cells) Else Set RowsWithDate = .Cells End If End If End With Next Counter End With If Not RowsWithDate Is Nothing Then RowsWithDate.EntireRow.Delete
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Lines #1 and #13: With Worksheet | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #2 through #12 below) are executed on the worksheet returned by item #2 below.
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
Lines #2 and #12: For Counter = LastRow To FirstRow Step -1 | Next Counter
- Item: For… Next Counter.
- VBA Construct: For… Next statement.
- Description: Repeats the statements within the loop (lines #3 through #11 below) for each row between (and including FirstRow (item #4 below) and LastRow (item #3 below).
- Item: Counter.
- VBA Construct: Counter of For… Next statement.
- Description: Loop counter. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent the loop counter, use the Long data type.
- Item: LastRow.
- VBA Construct: Counter Start of For… Next statement.
- Description: Number of the last row (further down the worksheet) you want the macro to consider when identifying blank rows. The number of the last row is also the initial value of Counter (item #2 above).
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent the number of the last row to consider, use the Long data type.
- Item: FirstRow.
- VBA Construct: Counter End of For… Next statement.
- Description: Number of the first row (closer to the top of the worksheet) you want the macro to consider when identifying blank rows. The number of the first row is also the final value of Counter (item (#2 above).
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent the number of the first row to consider, use the Long data type.
- Item: Step -1.
- VBA Construct: Step of For… Next statement.
- Description: Amount by which Counter (item #2 above) changes every time a loop iteration occurs.
In this scenario, you loop backwards: from LastRow (item #3 above) to FirstRow (item #4 above). Therefore, step is -1.
Lines #3 and #11: With .Cells(Counter, CriteriaColumn) | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #4 through #10 below) are executed on the cell returned by item #2 below.
- Item: .Cells(Counter, CriteriaColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number Counter and column number CriteriaColumn.
At any given time, the value of the loop counter (Counter) is the same as that of the row through which the macro is currently looping. CriteriaColumn is the number of the column containing the cells with dates you consider.
Line #4: If .Value = Date Then
- Item: If… Then.
- VBA Construct: Opening line of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: Conditionally executes the statements within the If… Then block (lines #5 through #9 below) if the condition specified by item #3 below is met.
- Item: .Value.
- VBA Construct: Range.Value property.
- Description: Returns the value of the cell represented by the Range object returned by line #3 above (.Cells(Counter, CriteriaColumn)). This is the value of the cell at the intersection of the row through which the macro is currently looping and the column containing the cells with dates you consider.
- Item: .Value = Date.
- VBA Construct: Condition of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: This condition is a numeric expression that evaluates to True or False, as follows:
- True: When the value of the cell at the intersection of the row through which the macro is currently looping and the column containing the cells with dates you consider is equal to the date you specify (Date).
- False: When the value of the cell at the intersection of the row through which the macro is currently looping and the column containing the cells with dates you consider isn’t equal to the date you specify (Date).
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent Date, ensure that the data type you use can handle the value you use as criteria. Consider, for example, using the Date data type.
When specifying the date you use as criteria, ensure that you specify the date as a value as required by VBA. For these purposes, you can use VBA constructs such as the DateValue or DateSerial Functions.
Line #5: If Not RowsWithDate Is Nothing Then
- Item: If… Then.
- VBA Construct: Opening line of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: Conditionally executes the statement within the If… Then… Else block (line #6 below) if the condition specified by item #6 below is met.
- Item: Not.
- VBA Construct: Not operator.
- Description: Carries out a logical negation on item #3 below. In other words, if item #3 returns:
- True, the result is False.
- False, the result is True.
- Item: RowsWithDate.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the cells in the column you specify (CriteriaColumn in line #3 above) containing the date you use as criteria.
- Item: Is.
- VBA Construct: Is Operator.
- Description: Compares 2 object reference variables: (i) Not RowsWithDate (items #2 and #3 above) vs. (ii) Nothing (item #5 below).
If both object references refer to the same object, the Is operator returns True. If they refer to different objects, Is returns False.
- Item: Nothing.
- Description: The default value for a data type. In the case of an object variable (such as RowsWithDate), a null reference.
- Item: Not RowsWithDate Is Nothing.
- VBA Construct: Condition of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: The condition is an expression that evaluates to True or False, as follows:
- True: When “Not RowsWithDate” (items #2 and #3 above) refers to the same object as Nothing (item #5 above). This happens when RowsWithDate is “something”.
Since RowsWithDate holds a Range object representing the cells with the criteria date found by the macro in a specific column (CriteriaColumn in line #3 above), RowsWithDate is something after the macro finds the first such cell.
- False: When “Not RowsWithDate” refers to a different object from Nothing. This happens when RowsWithDate itself is Nothing. This occurs prior to the macro finding the first cell with the criteria date. This is because RowsWithDate isn’t assigned to anything prior to that moment.
- True: When “Not RowsWithDate” (items #2 and #3 above) refers to the same object as Nothing (item #5 above). This happens when RowsWithDate is “something”.
Line #6: Set RowsWithDate = Union(RowsWithDate, .Cells)
- Item: Set… =.
- VBA Construct: Set statement.
- Description: Assigns the object reference returned by item #6 below to RowsWithDate (item #2 below).
- Item: RowsWithDate.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable of Set statement.
- Description:
- Holds a Range object representing the cells in the column you specify (CriteriaColumn in line #3 above) containing the date you use as criteria.
- RowsWithDate is included twice in the statement. In the first mention (Set RowsWithDate), RowsWithDate is the object variable to which an object reference is assigned.
- Item: Union.
- VBA Construct: Application.Union method.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the union of the Range objects returned by items #4 and #5 below.
- Item: RowsWithDate.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description:
- Holds a Range object representing the cells in the column you specify (CriteriaColumn in line #3 above) containing the date you use as criteria.
- RowsWithDate is included twice in the statement. In the second mention (Union(RowsWithDate, .Cells), RowsWithDate is one of the parameters of the Application.Union method.
- Item: .Cells.
- VBA Construct: Range.Cells property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell represented by the Range object returned by line #3 above (.Cells(Counter, CriteriaColumn)). This is the cell at the intersection of the row through which the macro is currently looping and the column containing the cells with dates you consider.
- Item: Union(RowsWithDate, .Cells).
- VBA Construct: Object expression of Set statement.
- Description: Returns the new Range object reference assigned to the RowsWithDate object variable (item #2 above). This is the union of the following 2 Range objects:
- Prior to the Set statement, RowsWithDate represents cells in the column you specify containing the date you use as criteria found by the macro prior to the row through which it’s currently looping.
- “.Cells” represents the cell at the intersection of the row through which the macro is currently looping and the column containing the cells with dates you consider.
Graphically, this looks as follows:
In other words, any cell containing the criteria date the macro finds is “added” to RowsWithDate.
Line #7: Else
- Item: Else.
- VBA Construct: Else clause of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: The statement following the Else clause (line #8 below) is executed if the condition tested in the opening line of the If… Then… Else statement (line #5 above) isn’t met and returns False.
Line #8: Set RowsWithDate = .Cells
- Item: Set… =.
- VBA Construct: Set statement.
- Description: Assigns the object reference returned by item #3 below to RowsWithDate (item #2 below).
- Item: RowsWithDate.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable of Set statement.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the cells in the column you specify (CriteriaColumn in line #3 above) containing the date you use as criteria.
- Item: .Cells.
- VBA Construct: Range.Cells property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell represented by the Range object returned by line #3 above (.Cells(Counter, CriteriaColumn)). This is the cell at the intersection of the row through which the macro is currently looping and the column containing the cells with dates you consider.
Lines #9 and #10: End If | End If
- Item: End If.
- VBA Construct: Closing lines of If… Then… Else statements.
- Description: Ends the If… Then… Else statements that began in lines #4 and #5 above.
Line #14: If Not RowsWithDate Is Nothing Then RowsWithDate.EntireRow.Delete
- Item: If… Then.
- VBA Construct: If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: Conditionally executes the statement within at the end of the line (items #7 through #9 below) if the condition specified by item #6 below is met.
- Item: Not.
- VBA Construct: Not operator.
- Description: Carries out a logical negation on item #3 below. In other words, if item #3 returns:
- True, the result is False.
- False, the result is True.
- Item: RowsWithDate.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the cells in the column you specify (CriteriaColumn in line #3 above) containing the date you use as criteria.
- Item: Is.
- VBA Construct: Is Operator.
- Description: Compares 2 object reference variables: (i) Not RowsWithDate (items #2 and #3 above) vs. (ii) Nothing (item #5 below).
If both object references refer to the same object, the Is operator returns True. If they refer to different objects, Is returns False.
- Item: Nothing.
- Description: The default value for a data type. In the case of an object variable (such as RowsWithDate), a null reference.
- Item: Not RowsWithDate Is Nothing.
- VBA Construct: Condition of If… Then… Else statement.
- Description: The condition is an expression that evaluates to True or False, as follows:
- True: When “Not RowsWithDate” (items #2 and #3 above) refers to the same object as Nothing (item #5 above). This happens when RowsWithDate is “something”.
Since RowsWithDate holds a Range object representing the cells with the criteria date found by the macro in a specific column (CriteriaColumn in line #3 above), RowsWithDate is something if the macro finds at least one such cell.
- False: When “Not RowsWithDate” refers to a different object from Nothing. This happens when RowsWithDate itself is Nothing. This, in turn, occurs when the macro founds no cells with the criteria date within the specified column.
- True: When “Not RowsWithDate” (items #2 and #3 above) refers to the same object as Nothing (item #5 above). This happens when RowsWithDate is “something”.
- Item: RowsWithDate.
- VBA Construct: Object (Range) variable.
- Description: Holds a Range object representing the cells in the column you specify (CriteriaColumn in line #3 above) containing the date you use as criteria.
- Item: EntireRow.
- VBA Construct: Range.EntireRow property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the entire row containing the cell range returned by item #7 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #8 above.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes all rows that meet the following conditions:
- Are between rows number myFirstRow and myLastRow.
- Contain the date myDate in column number myCriteriaColumn.
In this example:
- myFirstRow is set to 5.
- myDate is set to the serial number representing June 15, 2017. For purposes of obtaining the appropriate serial number, I use the DateValue Function.
- myCriteriaColumn is set to 2.
- myLastRow is set to the number of the last row with data in the worksheet named “Delete row based on date”. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last row with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Row property.
Sub deleteRowBasedOnDate() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Dim myFirstRow As Long Dim myLastRow As Long Dim myCriteriaColumn As Long Dim myDate As Date Dim myWorksheet As Worksheet Dim iCounter As Long Dim myRowsWithDate As Range myFirstRow = 6 myCriteriaColumn = 2 myDate = DateValue("June 15, 2017") Set myWorksheet = Worksheets("Delete row based on date") With myWorksheet myLastRow = .Cells.Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByRows, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Row For iCounter = myLastRow To myFirstRow Step -1 With .Cells(iCounter, myCriteriaColumn) If .Value = myDate Then If Not myRowsWithDate Is Nothing Then Set myRowsWithDate = Union(myRowsWithDate, .Cells) Else Set myRowsWithDate = .Cells End If End If End With Next iCounter End With If Not myRowsWithDate Is Nothing Then myRowsWithDate.EntireRow.Delete End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes the rows containing myDate (June 15, 2017) in myCriteriaColumn (2).
#12: Delete Row Based on String Criteria
VBA Code to Delete Row Based on String Criteria
To delete rows based on the string in a specific cell using VBA, use a macro with the following statement structure:
With Worksheet With .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn)) .AutoFilter Field:=CriteriaField, Criteria1:=String On Error Resume Next .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count - 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete End With .AutoFilterMode = False End With
Process Followed by VBA Code
VBA Statement Explanation
Lines #1 and #8: With Worksheet | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #2 through #7 below) are executed on the worksheet returned by item #2 below.
- Item: Worksheet.
- VBA Construct: Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Description: Returns a Worksheet object representing the worksheet you work with.
Lines #2 and #6: With .Range(.Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn), .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn)) | End With
- Item: With… End With.
- VBA Construct: With… End With statement.
- Description: Statements within the With… End With statement (lines #3 through #6 below) are executed on the range object returned by items #2 through #4 below.
- Item: .Range.
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Range property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing a cell range specified as follows:
- Upper-left corner cell: Range object returned by item #3 below.
- Lower-right corner cell: Range object returned by item #4 below.
- Item: .Cells(FirstRow, FirstColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number FirstRow and column number FirstColumn.
FirstRow and FirstColumn are the number of, respectively, the first row and first column in the cell range you work with. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent FirstRow or FirstColumn, use the Long data type.
- Item: .Cells(LastRow, LastColumn).
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.Cells property and Range.Item property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the cell at the intersection of row number LastRow and column number LastColumn.
LastRow and LastColumn are the number of, respectively, the last row and last column in the cell range you work with. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent LastRow or LastColumn, use the Long data type.
Line #3: .AutoFilter Field:=CriteriaField, Criteria1:=String
- Item: .AutoFilter.
- VBA Construct: Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Filter the data within the range you work with using the AutoFilter and according to the parameters specified by items #2 and #3 below.
- Item: Field:=CriteriaField.
- VBA Construct: Field parameter of Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Specifies the field on which you want to base the filter. The leftmost field of the range you work with is Field 1. The rightmost field is the number of fields in the cell range you work with.
If you explicitly declare a variable to represent CriteriaField, use the Long data type.
- Item: Criteria1:=String.
- VBA Construct: Criteria1 parameter of Range.AutoFilter method.
- Description: Specifies the filtering criteria. If you explicitly declare a variable to represent String, use the String data type.
Line #4: On Error Resume Next
- Item: On Error Resume Next.
- VBA Construct: On Error Resume Next statement.
- Description: Specifies that, when a run-time error occurs, control goes to the statement following the statement where the error occurs.
The error-handler in this line #4 is necessary because, if the field you filter by (line #3 above) doesn’t contain cells with the string you use as criteria, line #5 below generates a run-time error.
Line #5: .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count – 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete
- Item: Offset.
- VBA Construct: Range.Offset property.
- Description: Returns a Range object a number of rows above or below the cell range it works with, as returned by line #2 above.
- Item: RowOffset:=1.
- VBA Construct: RowOffset parameter of Range.Offset property.
- Description: Specifies that the cell range returned by Range.Offset (item #1 above) is 1 row below the range specified in line #2 above.
Line #2 above specifies the cell range you work with. Therefore, the Range object that Range.Offset returns has the same size but is 1 row below the cell range you work with. This results in the following:
- The headers of the cell range you work with are excluded from the Range object.
- The first empty row below the last row with data (LastRow in line #2 above) is included. This extra line is handled by item #7 below.
- Item: Resize.
- VBA Construct: Range.Resize property.
- Description: Resizes the cell range returned by items #1 and #2 above.
- Item: RowSize.
- VBA Construct: RowSize parameter of Range.Resize property.
- Description: Specifies the number of rows in the new cell range returned by Range.Resize (item #3 above).
- Item: Rows.
- VBA Construct: Range.Rows property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the rows in the cell range it works with, as returned by line #2 above.
- Item: Count.
- VBA Construct: Range.Count property.
- Description: Returns the number of rows within the Range object returned by item #5 above.
- Item: Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count – 1)).
- VBA Construct: Range.Resize property.
- Description: Resizes the cell range returned by items #1 and #2 above to reduce it by one row. The number of rows in the new range is obtained by subtracting 1 from the number of rows returned by line #2, as counted by items #5 and #6 above.
This results in a cell range that excludes the first empty row below the last row with data that the Range.Offset property (items #1 and #2 above) included.
- Item: SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).
- VBA Construct: Range.SpecialCells method and Type parameter of Range.SpecialCells method.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing all visible cells within the cell range you work with, excluding the headers (as required by item #2 above).
Since line #3 above filters the data according to the criteria you specify, the visible cells returned by Range.SpecialCells are those containing the string you’re looking for in the column (field) you specify.
- Item: EntireRow.
- VBA Construct: Range.EntireRow property.
- Description: Returns a Range object representing the entire rows containing the Range object returned by item #8 above.
- Item: Delete.
- VBA Construct: Range.Delete method.
- Description: Deletes the Range object returned by item #10 above.
Line #7: .AutoFilterMode = False
- Item: .AutoFilterMode = False.
- VBA Construct: Worksheet.AutoFilterMode property.
- Description: Specifies that the AutoFilter drop-down arrows aren’t displayed on the worksheet.
Macro Example
The following macro deletes all rows that meet the following conditions:
- Are between:
- Rows number (myFirstRow + 1) and myLastRow.
- Columns number myFirstColumn and myLastColumn.
- Contain the string myString in field number myCriteriaField.
In this example:
- myFirstRow is set to 5.
- myFirstColumn is set to 2.
- myCriteriaField is set to 1.
- myString is set to “*to delete*”.
The asterisks at the beginning and end of the string act as wildcards representing any number of characters. Therefore, myString includes any strings that contain “to delete”, regardless of the text before or after it.
For example, in the example below, I use this macro to delete rows where the cell in the first column contains the string “Rows to delete now”. “to delete” is between the strings “Rows ” and ” now”, both of which are covered by the asterisk wildcard.
- myLastRow is set to the number of the last row with data in the worksheet named “Delete row based on string”. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last row with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Row property.
- myLastColumn is set to the number of the last column with data in the same worksheet. The constructs used by the statement that finds the last column with data in the worksheet are the Worksheet.Cells property, the Range.Find method, and the Range.Column property.
Sub deleteRowBasedOnString() 'Source: https://powerspreadsheets.com/ 'For further information: https://powerspreadsheets.com/excel-vba-delete-row/ Dim myFirstRow As Long Dim myLastRow As Long Dim myFirstColumn As Long Dim myLastColumn As Long Dim myCriteriaField As Long Dim myString As String Dim myWorksheet As Worksheet myFirstRow = 5 myFirstColumn = 2 myCriteriaField = 1 myString = "*to delete*" Set myWorksheet = Worksheets("Delete row based on string") With myWorksheet With .Cells myLastRow = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByRows, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Row myLastColumn = .Find(What:="*", LookIn:=xlFormulas, LookAt:=xlPart, SearchOrder:=xlByColumns, SearchDirection:=xlPrevious).Column End With With .Range(.Cells(myFirstRow, myFirstColumn), .Cells(myLastRow, myLastColumn)) .AutoFilter Field:=myCriteriaField, Criteria1:=myString On Error Resume Next .Offset(RowOffset:=1).Resize(RowSize:=(.Rows.Count - 1)).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeVisible).EntireRow.Delete End With .AutoFilterMode = False End With End Sub
Effects of Executing Macro Example
The following GIF illustrates the results of executing this macro example. As expected, VBA deletes the rows containing myString (“*to delete*”) in myCriteriaField (1).
References to VBA Constructs Used in this VBA Tutorial
Use the following links to visit the appropriate webpage within the Microsoft Office Dev Center:
- Identify the worksheet you work with:
- Workbook.Worksheets property.
- Find last row and last column with data in a worksheet and count number of rows in a cell range:
- Range.Find method.
- Range.Count property.
- Return Range objects:
- Application.ActiveCell property.
- Worksheet.Cells property.
- Range.Cells property.
- Range.Offset property.
- Range.Resize property.
- Application.Union method.
- Return Range objects representing rows:
- Worksheet.Rows property.
- Range.Rows property.
- Range.EntireRow property.
- Loop through rows:
- For… Next statement.
- Specify criteria for row deletion:
- DateSerial Function.
- DateValue Function.
- Range.Value property.
- Test if (i) rows meet criteria for deletion, or (ii) the macro has found rows or cells meeting the criteria for deletion:
- If… Then… Else statement.
- Range.AutoFilter method.
- Range.SpecialCells method.
- WorksheetFunction.CountA method.
- Not operator.
- Is operator.
- Delete rows.
- Range.Delete method.
- Work with variables:
- Dim statement.
- Set statement.
- Data types:
- Data data type.
- Double data type.
- Long data type.
- Object data type.
- String data type.
- Variant data type.
- Simplify object references:
- With… End With statement.
- Handle errors:
- On Error statement.
- Remove AutoFilter drop-down arrows:
- Worksheet.AutoFilterMode property.
Excel VBA Delete Row
Normally in an Excel worksheet, we have two different methods to delete rows: the keyboard shortcut and the right-click and insert method. But in VBA, we must use the “Delete” command and worksheet statement to delete any rows. The trick is that if we need to delete a single row, we give a single row reference, but for multiple columns, we give multiple row references.
Using VBA Delete Row method, we can delete all the blank rows and the row based on cell value. We can also delete the entire row if any cells are blank.
This article will discuss the method “VBA Delete Row.” Keep yourself occupied for the next 15 to 20 minutes to learn about the concept.
Table of contents
- Excel VBA Delete Row
- How to Delete Row?
- Example #1
- Example #2
- Example #3
- Example #4
- Example #5
- Example #6
- Recommended Articles
- How to Delete Row?
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How to Delete Row?
You can download this VBA Delete Row Excel Template here – VBA Delete Row Excel Template
Example #1
In VBA, we need to mention the row we are deleting.
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example1() Cells(1, 1) End Sub
Cells (1, 1) means first-row first column, i.e., A1 cell. Then, we use the method “Delete.”
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example1() Cells(1, 1).Delete End Sub
Now, this will delete the first cell. All the right-side values will shift from one cell to the left.
Example #2
If you want to delete the entire row, we need to use the property “EntireRow,” then, we need to use the method “Delete” to delete the entire row of the cell we have selected.
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example2() Cells(1, 1).EntireRow.Delete End Sub
For example, we have entered a few characters in an Excel sheet.
If we run this code, it will delete the entire row, not a single cell.
Example #3
We can delete the row by using several ways. In the above example, we deleted the row using the CELLS property. Now, we will see how to delete by using the ROWS property.
Now, we need to mention what is the row we need to delete. For example, we need to delete the 5th row.
Now, use the “EntireRow” property.
After selecting the property, what do we need to do? First, we need to delete the row.
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example3() Rows(5).EntireRow.Delete End Sub
So, this code will delete the 5th row.
Example #4
Delete Multiple Rows by Using Range Object
How do we delete multiple rows?
We can use the VBA RANGE objectRange is a property in VBA that helps specify a particular cell, a range of cells, a row, a column, or a three-dimensional range. In the context of the Excel worksheet, the VBA range object includes a single cell or multiple cells spread across various rows and columns.read more to delete more than one row. For example, assume you have some values from A1 to A6 cells.
Now, we want to delete the first five rows, so we can reference these rows by using the Range object as “Range (“A1: A5”).“
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example4() Range ("A1: A5") End Sub
Now, we want to use the word “EntireRow” property.
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example4() Range("A1:A5").EntireRow End Sub
In this row, we need to perform the method of deleting, so use the “Delete” method.
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example4() Range("A1:A5").EntireRow.Delete End Sub
Now, this will delete the selected rows.
Example #5
Delete Rows Based On Cell Value
We can also use this “EntireRow.Delete” method to delete the row based on the cell value in VBAIn VBA, there are two ways to interact with or get value from a cell: the range method and the cell method.read more. For example, we have “Yes” and “No” values from cells A1 to A10.
We need to delete the rows with the value “No.” We must use the function “IF” with loops to delete all the rows with the value of “No” to perform this task.
The below code will do the job for us.
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example5() Dim k As Integer For k = 10 To 1 Step -1 If Cells(k, 1).Value = "No" Then Cells(k, 1).EntireRow.Delete End If Next k End Sub
Example #6
Delete All the Blank Cells Rows
There are situations where we need to delete the entire row if any of the cells in the range are blank. For example, we have the below set of data.
All the colored cells are blank, so we must delete the entire row. We can perform this task with two sets of code. Below is the code.
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example6() Range("A1:F10").SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks).EntireRow.Delete End Sub
It will identify the blank cells in the range A1 to F10. If it finds any blank cells, it will delete the entire row.
The problem with this code is it will only delete the blank cell’s row in the range A1 to F10. But if any cells are blank in any other cells, it will not delete them. So, keeping this in mind, we have written one more code.
Code:
Sub DeleteRow_Example7() Dim RangeToDelete As Range Dim DeletionRange As Range Set RangeToDelete = Application.InputBox("Please select the range", "Blank Cells Rows Deletion", Type:=8) Set DeletionRange = RangeToDelete RangeToDelete.SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks).EntireRow.Delete End Sub
When you run this code, firstly, it will ask you to select the range with an input box appearing in front of you.
After selecting the range, you need to click on “OK.” It will delete all the blank cells rowsThere are several methods for deleting blank rows from Excel: 1) Manually deleting blank rows if there are few blank rows 2) Use the formula delete 3) Use the filter to find and delete blank rows.read more in the selected range.
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