Shape.CellExistsU property (Visio)
Determines whether a particular ShapeSheet cell exists in the scope of the search. Read-only.
Syntax
expression. CellExistsU
( _localeIndependentCellName_
, _fExistsLocally_
)
expression A variable that represents a Shape object.
Parameters
Name | Required/Optional | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
localeIndependentCellName | Required | String | The universal name of the ShapeSheet cell for which you want to search. |
fExistsLocally | Required | Integer | The scope of the search. |
Return value
Integer
Remarks
The localeIndependentCellName argument must specify a universal cell name. To search for a cell by section, row, and column index, use the CellsSRCExists property.
The fExistsLocally argument specifies the scope of the search.
If fExistsLocally is non-zero (True), the CellExistsU property value is True only if the object contains the cell locally; if the cell is inherited, the CellExistsU property value is False.
If fExistsLocally is zero (False), the CellExistsU property value is True if the object either contains or inherits the cell.
For a list of cell index values, view the Visio type library for the members of class VisCellIndices.
Note
Beginning with Microsoft Visio 2000, you can use both local and universal names to refer to Visio shapes, masters, documents, pages, rows, add-ons, cells, hyperlinks, styles, fonts, master shortcuts, UI objects, and layers. When a user names a shape, for example, the user is specifying a local name. Beginning with Microsoft Office Visio 2003, the ShapeSheet spreadsheet displays only universal names in cell formulas and values. (In prior versions, universal names were not visible in the user interface.)
As a developer, you can use universal names in a program when you don't want to change a name each time a solution is localized. Use the CellExists property to determine if a cell exists by passing either the cell's local name or its universal name. Use the CellExistsU property to determine if a cell exists by passing the cell's universal name.
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