Partager via


NamedRange.FormulaHidden Property

Definition

Gets or sets a value that indicates whether the formula in the NamedRange control will be hidden when the worksheet is protected.

public:
 property System::Object ^ FormulaHidden { System::Object ^ get(); void set(System::Object ^ value); };
public object FormulaHidden { get; set; }
member this.FormulaHidden : obj with get, set
Public Property FormulaHidden As Object

Property Value

true if the formula will be hidden when the worksheet is protected; null if the NamedRange control contains some cells with FormulaHidden equal to true and some cells with FormulaHidden equal to false.

Examples

The following code example sets the Formula property of a NamedRange control to calculate the sum of cells A1 through A5, uses the FormulaHidden property to hide the formula, and then calls the Calculate method to calculate the sum of the cells and place the sum in cell A6.

This example is for a document-level customization.

private void CalculateRange()
{
    Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange namedRange1 =
        this.Controls.AddNamedRange(this.Range["A1", "A5"],
        "namedRange1");

    Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange namedRange2 =
        this.Controls.AddNamedRange(this.Range["A6"],
        "namedRange2");

    namedRange1.Value2 = 5;
    namedRange2.Formula = "=SUM(A1:A5)";
    namedRange2.FormulaHidden = true;
    namedRange2.Calculate();
}
Private Sub CalculateRange()
    Dim namedRange1 As Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange _
        = Me.Controls.AddNamedRange(Me.Range("A1", "A5"), _
        "namedRange1")

    Dim namedRange2 As Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange _
        = Me.Controls.AddNamedRange(Me.Range("A6"), _
        "namedRange2")

    namedRange1.Value2 = 5
    namedRange2.Formula = "=SUM(A1:A5)"
    namedRange2.FormulaHidden = True
    namedRange2.Calculate()
End Sub

Remarks

Do not confuse this property with the Hidden property. The formula will not be hidden if the workbook is protected and the worksheet is not.

Applies to