YES, of course, it is possible.
Put this code in Module1 of VBA editor:
Function UDF_RectangleArea(A As Integer, B As Integer)
Evaluate "FireYourMacro(" & Application.Caller.Offset(0, 1).Address(False, False) & "," & A & "," & B & ")"
UDF_RectangleArea = "Hello world"
End Function
Private Sub FireYourMacro(ResultCell As Range, A As Integer, B As Integer)
ResultCell = A * B
End Sub
The result of this example UDF is returned in another, adjacent cell. The user defined function UDF_RectangleArea
calculates the rectangle area based on its two parameters A
and B
and returns result in a cell to the right. You can easily modify this example function.
The limitation Microsoft imposed on function is bypassed by the use of VBA Evaluate function. Evaluate simply fires VBA macro from within UDF. The reference to the cell is passed by Application.Caller
. Have fun!
UDF limitation documentation: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/170787/description-of-limitations-of-custom-functions-in-excel
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