This is why. When you say this:
Dim startCell, iCell As Range
you think you've done this:
Dim startCell As Range, iCell As Range
but what you've really done is this:
Dim startCell 'As Variant, by default
Dim iCell As Range
This is a classic VBA mistake. Most VBA programmers have made it, and that's why most VBA programmers fall back on declaring only one variable per Dim
statement (i.e. one per line). Otherwise it's way too easy to make that mistake, and difficult to spot it afterwards.
So with Dim startCell
you've implicitly declared your variable as Variant type (equivalent to Dim startCell As Variant
).
When you then say this:
Set startCell = Cells(iCell.Row + 1, iCell.Column)
the Variant acquires the type of the thing on the right hand side of the reference assignment (Range). However, when you say this:
startCell = Cells(iCell.Row + 1, iCell.Column)
without the Set
keyword, you're not assigning a reference, but a value to the variable startCell
, which now acquires the type of the value on the right hand side. What is that type? Well, the default property of a Range object is Value
, so you're going to get the type of Cells(iCell.Row + 1, iCell.Column).Value
. If that cell contains a string, then you'll get a string.
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