
Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > Workbooks > Creating Individual Workbooks
Summary: As a workbook grows, there may be a time when you need to “break out” all the worksheets to their own workbooks. This tip presents a way that you can easily—in one step—create a new workbook for each and every worksheet in your present workbook. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, and Excel 2003.)
If you use Excel quite a bit, you know you may get some rather large workbooks from colleagues. Often it is desirable to break the workbook down, so that each worksheet is in its own workbook. While this can be done manually, the process quickly becomes tedious if you have a lot of breaking down to do.
This sort of repetitive work is a natural for a macro. The following macro, called BreakItUp, will create individual workbook files based on the worksheets in the current workbook. Thus, if the current workbook contains 25 worksheets, running this macro results in 25 individual Excel workbook files being created. Each workbook has a single worksheet, and the name of the workbook is the same as that of the worksheet.
Sub BreakItUp()
Dim sht As Worksheet
Dim NFName As String
Const WBPath = "C:\"
For Each sht In ActiveWorkbook.Worksheets
sht.Copy
NFName = WBPath & sht.Name & ".xls"
ActiveWorkbook.SaveAs FileName:=NFName, _
FileFormat:=xlNormal, CreateBackup:=False
ActiveWindow.Close
Next
End Sub
The BreakItUp macro stores the new workbooks in the root directory on the C: drive. If you want your workbooks saved in a different place, you can simply change the line in which the WBPath constant is created.
You should also know that it is relatively easy to crash this macro. For instance, if you use a character in a worksheet name that is not "legal" for a file name, the macro will rudely stop when it tries to create the file. Of course, you could easily make the modifications to the macro to check for and replace such illegal characters.
Another potential pitfall for the macro is that it will stop running if a file already exists that has the same name as a worksheet. For instance, let's suppose you have a worksheet named MySheet1. If there is already a file on disk called MySheet1.xls, then the macro will stop when it tries to overwrite the file. You can get around this by making sure there are no file name conflicts in the directory where the workbooks are being saved.
Tip #2230 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 2000 2002 2003
More Power! For some people, the prospect of creating macros can be scary. Those who conquer their fears, however, find they become much more confident and productive once they learn how to make Excel do exactly what they want. ExcelTips: The Macros is an invaluable source for learning Excel macros. You are introduced to the topic in bite-sized chunks, pulled from past issues of ExcelTips. Learn at your own pace, exactly the way you want.
Check out ExcelTips: The Macros today!
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