The preceding three VBA chapters gave you an eagle’s-eye view of how to put macros to
work in your office. After you move beyond the fundamentals of VBA, becoming truly pro-
ductive is mostly a question of mastering the vocabulary. In the case of Office 2003, that
means learning the underlying object models of each of the Office applications. Like any
language, VBA gets easier with practice. As you work with VBA and build up a library of
macros and code that you want to reuse, managing the collection becomes a challenge.
Storing Projects
When you begin writing macros in Word and Excel, ...
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