taigovinda
Well-known Member
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2007
- Messages
- 2,639
Hi,
I know there are other threads out on this, and I've looked at a few of them... Forgive me for starting my own.
My impression, based on my particular level of novice - with which some of you may be somewhat familiar - is that I should like to buy one of these two books:
<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-comfficeffice" /><o>1. John Walkenbach's Excel 200X Power Programming With VBA<o></o>
<o></o>
2. "VBA and Macros for Microsoft Office Excel 200X" by Bill Jelen and Tracy Syrstad. (or other MrExcel book)
I have a few questions...
a. I mostly use Excel 2003 though I have access to 2007. Should I get the 2007 version? I'm guessing that from where I am it won't make a ton of difference; I won't be missing critical info from the 2003 version.
b. Are these two books similiar? Should I start with one, then do the other? Or just pick one of the two and then move on to something more advanced?
c. I read somewhere that it is a good idea to supplement one of these two books with "the Roman book" as a reference. What book is that, and should I have it? Would it be more a reference, or a next step after #1 or #2?
Also, because I love to read, I think I will check out this one:
Professional Excel Development: The Definitive Guide to Developing Applications Using Microsoft Excel, VBA, and .NET: The Definitive Guide to ... and VBA, by Bovey, Wallentin, Bullen, Green
Thanks to anyone who offers any input.
Tai</o>
I know there are other threads out on this, and I've looked at a few of them... Forgive me for starting my own.
My impression, based on my particular level of novice - with which some of you may be somewhat familiar - is that I should like to buy one of these two books:
<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-comfficeffice" /><o>1. John Walkenbach's Excel 200X Power Programming With VBA<o></o>
<o></o>
2. "VBA and Macros for Microsoft Office Excel 200X" by Bill Jelen and Tracy Syrstad. (or other MrExcel book)
I have a few questions...
a. I mostly use Excel 2003 though I have access to 2007. Should I get the 2007 version? I'm guessing that from where I am it won't make a ton of difference; I won't be missing critical info from the 2003 version.
b. Are these two books similiar? Should I start with one, then do the other? Or just pick one of the two and then move on to something more advanced?
c. I read somewhere that it is a good idea to supplement one of these two books with "the Roman book" as a reference. What book is that, and should I have it? Would it be more a reference, or a next step after #1 or #2?
Also, because I love to read, I think I will check out this one:
Professional Excel Development: The Definitive Guide to Developing Applications Using Microsoft Excel, VBA, and .NET: The Definitive Guide to ... and VBA, by Bovey, Wallentin, Bullen, Green
Thanks to anyone who offers any input.
Tai</o>