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ShapeRange Object

Excel Developer Reference

Represents a shape range, which is a set of shapes on a document.

Remarks

A shape range can contain as few as a single shape or as many as all the shapes on the document. You can include whichever shapes you want — chosen from among all the shapes on the document or all the shapes in the selection — to construct a shape range. For example, you could construct a ShapeRange collection that contains the first three shapes on a document, all the selected shapes on a document, or all the freeforms on a document.

Example

Returning a Set of Shapes You Specify by Name or Index Number

Use Shapes.Range(

index

), where

index

is the name or index number of the shape or an array that contains either names or index numbers of shapes, to return a ShapeRange collection that represents a set of shapes on a document. You can use the Array function to construct an array of names or index numbers. The following example sets the fill pattern for shapes one and three on myDocument.

Visual Basic for Applications
  Set myDocument = Worksheets(1)
myDocument.Shapes.Range(Array(1, 3)).Fill.Patterned _
    msoPatternHorizontalBrick

The following example sets the fill pattern for the shapes named Oval 4 and Rectangle 5 on myDocument.

Although you can use the Range property to return any number of shapes or slides, it's simpler to use the Item method if you want to return only a single member of the collection. For example, Shapes(1) is simpler than Shapes.Range(1).

Visual Basic for Applications
  Set myDocument = Worksheets(1)
Set myRange = myDocument.Shapes.Range(Array("Oval 4", _
    "Rectangle 5"))
myRange.Fill.Patterned msoPatternHorizontalBrick

Returning All or Some of the Selected Shapes on a Document

Use the ShapeRange property of the Selection object to return all the shapes in the selection. The following example sets the fill foreground color for all the shapes in the selection in window one, assuming that there’s at least one shape in the selection.

Visual Basic for Applications
  Windows(1).Selection.ShapeRange.Fill.ForeColor.RGB = _
    RGB(255, 0, 255)

Use Selection.ShapeRange(

index

), where

index

is the shape name or the index number, to return a single shape within the selection. The following example sets the fill foreground color for shape two in the collection of selected shapes in window one, assuming that there are at least two shapes in the selection.

Visual Basic for Applications
  Windows(1).Selection.ShapeRange(2).Fill.ForeColor.RGB = _
    RGB(255, 0, 255)

See Also