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| Excel 2003 VBA Programmer's Reference (Programmer to Programmer) | 
| Authors: Paul T. Kimmel, Stephen Bullen, John Green, Rob Bovey, Robert Rosenberg Creator: Brian Patterson Publisher: Wrox Category: Book
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $10.98 You Save: $29.01 (73%)
New (33) from $10.98
Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 210590
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 1176 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.4 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.4 x 2.4
ISBN: 0764556606 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.54 UPC: 785555879492 EAN: 9780764556609 ASIN: 0764556606
Publication Date: July 9, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: SHIPS TODAY!! BRAND NEW BOOK
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 1-5 of 9 | | NEXT » |
Yup it's bad alright May 11, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Just want to echo the negative reviews below. I've owned and read a lot of programming books in my life and this is one of the worst. Avoid it.
Just bad writing August 12, 2006 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
This book is very poorly written and badly organized. Essential introductory topics are sprinkled throughout the book seemingly randomly. Much of the writing is horribly ambiguous or just plain unreadable. I am a beginning programmer, though I am highly proficient with Excel. I was lucky to be familiar with some other programming languages because the explanations of object-oriented programming concepts in this book (as well as other topics covered) would have been completely incomprehensible without a moderate level of background experience. The examples in the book are neither practical, nor particularly well designed to illustrate the VBA concepts that the authors are trying to teach. Instead, the authors seem to be preoccupied with designing examples to convey stylistic programming conventions that they personally favor.
A Cautionary Note August 29, 2005 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have not read this book, but it is obviously based on a book by the same authors, Excel 2002 VBA Programmer's Reference.That book has numerous errors: incorrect code that will not run, code that has incorrect variables, code that has nothing to do with the text above or below it, screen shots that have nothing to do with the text. It also has an eclectic index that on occasion leads you to what you want. The authors have been let down by the Wrox editors, but on occasion one can find gems of useful information in their book. I would be quite tempted to review the present version of the text, but my past experience with Wrox-edited books makes me hesitant to spend more money on such texts. I hope someone who has actually read the book can supply us with a better review than this one. --j.r.a.
is not a good start from here March 30, 2005 7 out of 13 found this review helpful
sorry to say that i'm very dissapointed to own this book. For those who are new to VBA, it is not a good start from here. I also find that the example and the function covered is not practical enough to use to develop your own program. I would recomend a book written by John Walkenbach which the examples and function cover more practical
Everything is Here, Organization a bit confusing. November 23, 2004 9 out of 12 found this review helpful
This huge (1176 page) book is intended for Excel users and programmers from beginning to advanced, this book presumes you have a reasonable working knowledge of excel and a full installation of the software. It does not presume that you have a working knowledge of VBA, after all, that's it's subject.
In fact, chapter 1 is titled Primer in Excel VBA. Excel VBA is, of course, a specialized version of Microsoft's standard VBA, where those specific points that cater to spread sheet manipulation are differrent from the VBA's associated with other parts of the Microsoft Office package.
This book gives a general introduction to VBA, but it is entirely within the context of Excel. This is indeed a Primer. It starts with how you open the Visual Basic Editor and goes on from there. Generally the book grows step by step. But not always. ==On page 83 it says: "OnTime - You can use the OnTime method to schedule a macro to run sometime in the future." OK, I understand this. But only 7 pages later it says: "VBA does support interface polymorphism. Interface polymorphism is orthogonal to class polymorphism." Huh? Does this help me schedule something to run in the future? Is this supposed to mean anything at all to me? Since I have no idea what it's talking about am I supposed to go look up all these new words somewhere? Is this really going to help me? Anyway, you skip a few chapters and you're back into getting some useful information about things like creating user forms.
All in all I rate the book quite high. Everything you always wanted to know is there. And it is supposed to be a reference manual, not a tutorial. My only complaint is that I think it could have organized a bit better.
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