1) Yes your code is possible.
2) This is how you pass an argument:
Assuming myObject
is an object of your class:
myObject.foo(lngSubSet) = lngSuperSet
The placement of arguments in the arglist does indeed look weird, but that's VBA for you. Say you have 4 arguments, two of which are optional, plus your right hand side. You would place them like this:
Public Property Let foo(arg1, arg2, Optional arg3, Optional arg4, _
RHS)
and use them like this (assuming you're opting out of arg4
):
myObject.foo(arg1,arg2,arg3) = RHS
3) Is there a better way to do this? There always is, depending who you ask. You could have your lngSubSet
argument as a separate property entirely. That's how I tend to do it. But in your case, your way of doing things may work well for you. I don't know, it's largely a question of taste and dependent on your specific application.
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