
Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > Online and Web > Hyperlinks > Converting a Range of URLs to Hyperlinks
Summary: When you enter a URL into a cell of your worksheet and press Enter, Excel normally recognizes it as a URL and automatically converts it to a hyperlink. If you have a whole series of non-linked, plain-text URLS in a worksheet, converting them all to hyperlinks can be a tedious task—if you don’t use a macro. This tip shows how easy it is to do the conversion once you create the right tool. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 2000, Excel 2002, and Excel 2003.)
John has a workbook that has well over a thousands URLs in it, all in column A. These are not hyperlinks; they are straight text of individual URLs. John wants to convert the URLs to active hyperlinks, but doing the conversion individually is extremely tedious, especially for that many URLs.
As is the case with most tedium in Excel, the solution is to use a macro to do the conversion. To be effective, the macro would need to step through each cell in a selected range and, if the cell is not blank, convert the contents to a hyperlink. The following will do the trick:
Sub URL_List()
For Each cell In Selection
If cell.Value <> "" Then
If Left(cell.Value, 7) = "http://" Then
URL = cell.Value
Else
URL = "http://" + cell.Value
End If
ActiveSheet.Hyperlinks.Add Anchor:=cell, _
Address:=URL, TextToDisplay:=cell.Value
End If
Next cell
End Sub
The macro is not foolproof; it assumes that if a cell contains anything at all it is a valid URL. What it does is to check the cell contents and, if the contents aren't prefaced by the "http://" text, then it is added. The hyperlink is then created based on the cell contents.
Tip #3110 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 2000 2002 2003
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