I am looking to programmatically freeze the top row of an Excel worksheet from VBA. The end goal is to produce the same effect as the View > Freeze Panes > Freeze Top Row
command in Excel 2007 so that the top row of the worksheet is frozen and users can see the top row of the worksheet even as they scroll through the data.
6 Answers
Tomalak already gave you a correct answer, but I would like to add that most of the times when you would like to know the VBA code needed to do a certain action in the user interface it is a good idea to record a macro.
In this case click Record Macro on the developer tab of the Ribbon, freeze the top row and then stop recording. Excel will have the following macro recorded for you which also does the job:
With ActiveWindow
.SplitColumn = 0
.SplitRow = 1
End With
ActiveWindow.FreezePanes = True
The problem with the recorded macro is the same as the problem with the built-in action: Excel chooses to freeze the top visible row, rather than the actual top row where the header information can be found.
The purpose of a macro in this case is to freeze the actual top row. When I am viewing row #405592 and I need to check the header for the column (because I forgot to freeze rows when I opened the file), I have to scroll to the top, freeze the top row, then find my way back to row #405592 again. Since I believe this is stupid behavior, I want a macro to correct it, but, like I said, the recorded macro just mimics the same stupid behavior.
I am using Office 2011 for Mac OS X Lion
Update (2 minutes later):
I found a solution here: http://www.ozgrid.com/forum/showthread.php?t=19692
Dim r As Range
Set r = ActiveCell
Range("A2").Select
With ActiveWindow
.FreezePanes = False
.ScrollRow = 1
.ScrollColumn = 1
.FreezePanes = True
.ScrollRow = r.Row
End With
r.Select
Just hit the same problem... For some reason, the freezepanes command just caused crosshairs to appear in the centre of the screen. It turns oout I had switched ScreenUpdating off! Solved with the following code:
Application.ScreenUpdating = True
Cells(2, 1).Select
ActiveWindow.FreezePanes = True
Now it works fine.
To expand this question into the realm of use outside of Excel s own VBA, the ActiveWindow property must be addressed as a child of the Excel.Application object.
Example for creating an Excel workbook from Access:
Using the Excel.Application object in another Office application's VBA project will require you to add Microsoft Excel 15.0 Object library (or equivalent for your own version).
Option Explicit
Sub xls_Build__Report()
Dim xlApp As Excel.Application, ws As Worksheet, wb As Workbook
Dim fn As String
Set xlApp = CreateObject("Excel.Application")
xlApp.DisplayAlerts = False
xlApp.Visible = True
Set wb = xlApp.Workbooks.Add
With wb
.Sheets(1).Name = "Report"
With .Sheets("Report")
'report generation here
End With
'This is where the Freeze Pane is dealt with
'Freezes top row
With xlApp.ActiveWindow
.SplitColumn = 0
.SplitRow = 1
.FreezePanes = True
End With
fn = CurrentProject.Path & "\Reports\Report_" & Format(Date, "yyyymmdd") & ".xlsx"
If CBool(Len(Dir(fn, vbNormal))) Then Kill fn
.SaveAs FileName:=fn, FileFormat:=xlOpenXMLWorkbook
End With
Close_and_Quit:
wb.Close False
xlApp.Quit
End Sub
The core process is really just a reiteration of previously submitted answers but I thought it was important to demonstrate how to deal with ActiveWindow when you are not within Excel's own VBA. While the code here is VBA, it should be directly transcribable to other languages and platforms.
Rows("2:2").Select
ActiveWindow.FreezePanes = True
This is the easiest way to freeze the top row. The rule for FreezePanes
is it will freeze the upper left corner from the cell you selected. For example, if you highlight C10, it will freeze between columns B and C, rows 9 and 10. So when you highlight Row 2, it actually freeze between Rows 1 and 2 which is the top row.
Also, the .SplitColumn
or .SplitRow
will split your window once you unfreeze it which is not the way I like.