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Workbook.Colors Property

Gets or sets colors in the palette for the workbook.

Namespace:  Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel
Assembly:  Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel (in Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.dll)

Syntax

'Declaration
ReadOnly Property Colors As Workbook_ColorsType
    Get
Workbook_ColorsType Colors { get; }

Property Value

Type: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.Workbook_ColorsType
An RGB color value in the color palette for the workbook, or an array that contains all 56 RGB color values in the color palette for the workbook.

Remarks

The Colors property can be used with the following parameter.

Parameter

Description

Index

The index number of a color in the workbook color palette (from 1 to 56). If this argument is not specified, this property returns an array that contains all 56 of the colors in the palette.

If you attempt to use Colors without specifying any parameters, Colors will get a _ColorsType object that is part of the Office development tools in Visual Studio infrastructure and is not intended to be used directly from your code.

The workbook palette has 56 entries, each represented by an RGB value.

Optional Parameters

For information on optional parameters, see Optional Parameters in Office Solutions.

Examples

The following code example uses the Colors property to set the first color in the workbook's color palette to blue, and then programmatically displays the Microsoft Office Excel Color Palette dialog to verify that this change was made.

This version is for an application-level add-in.

Private Sub SetFirstColorInPalette()
    Dim vstoWorkbook As Workbook = Globals.Factory.GetVstoObject(Me.Application.ActiveWorkbook)
    vstoWorkbook.Colors(1) = System.Drawing.ColorTranslator.ToOle(System.Drawing.Color.Blue)
    vstoWorkbook.Application.Dialogs( _
        Excel.XlBuiltInDialog.xlDialogColorPalette).Show()
End Sub
private void SetFirstColorInPalette()
{
    Workbook vstoWorkbook = Globals.Factory.GetVstoObject(this.Application.ActiveWorkbook);
    vstoWorkbook.Colors[1] = System.Drawing.ColorTranslator.ToOle(System.Drawing.Color.Blue);

    vstoWorkbook.Application.Dialogs[
        Excel.XlBuiltInDialog.xlDialogColorPalette].Show(
        missing, missing, missing, missing, missing, missing,
        missing, missing, missing, missing, missing, missing,
        missing, missing, missing, missing, missing, missing,
        missing, missing, missing, missing, missing, missing,
        missing, missing, missing, missing, missing, missing);
}

.NET Framework Security

See Also

Reference

Workbook Interface

Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel Namespace