If you want to see a fairly drastic example of why ScreenUpdating
is important, run the following code. It takes roughly 45 times longer in Excel 2011 for me to run this swap without ScreenUpdating = false
! This is a huge difference in time.
Sub testScreenUpdating()
Dim i As Integer
Dim numbSwitches As Integer
Dim results As String
'swap between sheets this number of times
numbSwitches = 1000
'keep track of time
Dim startTime As Double
startTime = Time
'swap between sheets 1/2 (need both sheets or this will crash)
For i = 1 To numbSwitches
Sheets(1 + (i Mod 2)).Select
Next i
'get results
results = "Screen Updating not disabled: " & Format(Time - startTime, "hh:mm:ss") & " seconds"
startTime = Time
'scenario 2 - screenupdating disabled
Application.ScreenUpdating = False
'swap between sheets 1/2 (need both sheets or this will crash)
For i = 1 To numbSwitches
Sheets(1 + (i Mod 2)).Select
Next i
Application.ScreenUpdating = True
'get results for part two
results = results & vbCrLf & "Screen Updating IS disabled: " & Format(Time - startTime, "hh:mm:ss") & " seconds"
'show results
MsgBox results
End Sub
Also, while we're on the topic of ways to increase efficiency, another key point is that Select
, Selection
, and Activate
are rarely (if ever) necessary. When you record macros it will always use these but there are very few situations when you need to actually use them in code. Likewise, anything with Active
in title (such as ActiveCell
) normally is an indication you will have slower code because you presumably are selecting cells.
You can almost always refer to cells/worksheets specifically and avoid select. For example:
msgbox (Worksheets(1).Range("A1").value)
will work regardless of whether you are currently on the first worksheet. A common new VBA mistake is to do something more like:
Worksheets(1).Select
msgbox (Range("A1").value)
which is an unneeded step.
This adds significant time to code runtimes.