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Declares the name,
arguments
, and code that form the body of a
Function
procedure
.
Syntax
[
Public
|
Private
|
Friend
] [
Static
]
Function
name
[ (
arglist
) ] [
As
type
]
[
statements
]
[
name
=
expression
]
[
Exit Function
]
[
statements
]
[
name
=
expression
]
End Function
The
Function
statement syntax has these parts:
Description
Public
Optional. Indicates that the
Function
procedure is accessible to all other procedures in all
modules
. If used in a module that contains an
Option Private
, the procedure is not available outside the
project
.
Private
Optional. Indicates that the
Function
procedure is accessible only to other procedures in the module where it is declared.
Friend
Optional. Used only in a
class module
. Indicates that the
Function
procedure is visible throughout the project, but not visible to a controller of an instance of an object.
Static
Optional. Indicates that the
Function
procedure's local
variables
are preserved between calls. The
Static
attribute doesn't affect variables that are declared outside the
Function
, even if they are used in the procedure.
Required. Name of the
Function
; follows standard variable naming conventions.
arglist
Optional. List of variables representing arguments that are passed to the
Function
procedure when it is called. Multiple variables are separated by commas.
Optional.
Data type
of the value returned by the
Function
procedure; may be
Byte
,
Boolean
,
Integer
,
Long
,
Currency
,
Single
,
Double
,
Decimal
(not currently supported),
Date
,
String
(except fixed length),
Object
,
Variant
, or any
user-defined type
.
statements
Optional. Any group of statements to be executed within the
Function
procedure.
expression
Optional. Return value of the
Function
.
The
arglist
argument has the following syntax and parts:
[
Optional
] [
ByVal
|
ByRef
] [
ParamArray
]
varname
[ ( ) ] [
As
type
] [
=
defaultvalue
]
Description
Optional
Optional. Indicates that an argument is not required. If used, all subsequent arguments in
arglist
must also be optional and declared by using the
Optional
keyword.
Optional
can't be used for any argument if
ParamArray
is used.
ByVal
Optional. Indicates that the argument is passed
by value
.
ByRef
Optional. Indicates that the argument is passed
by reference
.
ByRef
is the default in Visual Basic.
ParamArray
Optional. Used only as the last argument in
arglist
to indicate that the final argument is an
Optional
array of
Variant
elements. The
ParamArray
keyword allows you to provide an arbitrary number of arguments. It may not be used with
ByVal
,
ByRef
, or
Optional
.
varname
Required. Name of the variable representing the argument; follows standard variable naming conventions.
Optional. Data type of the argument passed to the procedure; may be
Byte
,
Boolean
,
Integer
,
Long
,
Currency
,
Single
,
Double
,
Decimal
(not currently supported)
Date
,
String
(variable length only),
Object
,
Variant
, or a specific
object type
. If the parameter is not
Optional
, a user-defined type may also be specified.
defaultvalue
Optional. Any
constant
or constant expression. Valid for
Optional
parameters only. If the type is an
Object
, an explicit default value can only be
Nothing
.
If not explicitly specified by using
Public
,
Private
, or
Friend
,
Function
procedures are public by default.
If
Static
isn't used, the value of local variables is not preserved between calls.
The
Friend
keyword can only be used in class modules. However,
Friend
procedures can be accessed by procedures in any module of a project. A
Friend
procedure does not appear in the
type library
of its parent class, nor can a
Friend
procedure be late bound.
Function
procedures can be recursive; that is, they can call themselves to perform a given task. However, recursion can lead to stack overflow. The
Static
keyword usually isn't used with recursive
Function
procedures.
All executable code must be in procedures. You can't define a
Function
procedure inside another
Function
,
Sub
, or
Property
procedure.
The
Exit Function
statement causes an immediate exit from a
Function
procedure. Program execution continues with the statement following the statement that called the
Function
procedure. Any number of
Exit Function
statements can appear anywhere in a
Function
procedure.
Like a
Sub
procedure, a
Function
procedure is a separate procedure that can take arguments, perform a series of statements, and change the values of its arguments. However, unlike a
Sub
procedure, you can use a
Function
procedure on the right side of an
expression
in the same way you use any intrinsic function, such as
Sqr
,
Cos
, or
Chr
, when you want to use the value returned by the function.
You call a
Function
procedure by using the function name, followed by the argument list in parentheses, in an expression. See the
Call
statement for specific information about how to call
Function
procedures.
To return a value from a function, assign the value to the function name. Any number of such assignments can appear anywhere within the procedure. If no value is assigned to
name
, the procedure returns a default value: a numeric function returns 0, a string function returns a zero-length string (""), and a
Variant
function returns
Empty
. A function that returns an object reference returns
Nothing
if no object reference is assigned to
name
(using
Set
) within the
Function
.
The following example shows how to assign a return value to a function. In this case,
False
is assigned to the name to indicate that some value was not found.
Function BinarySearch(. . .) As Boolean
'. . .
' Value not found. Return a value of False.
If lower > upper Then
BinarySearch = False
Exit Function
End If
'. . .
End Function
Variables used in Function procedures fall into two categories: those that are explicitly declared within the procedure and those that are not.
Variables that are explicitly declared in a procedure (using Dim or the equivalent) are always local to the procedure. Variables that are used but not explicitly declared in a procedure are also local unless they are explicitly declared at some higher level outside the procedure.
A procedure can use a variable that is not explicitly declared in the procedure, but a naming conflict can occur if anything you defined at the module level has the same name. If your procedure refers to an undeclared variable that has the same name as another procedure, constant, or variable, it is assumed that your procedure refers to that module-level name. Explicitly declare variables to avoid this kind of conflict. Use an Option Explicit statement to force explicit declaration of variables.
Visual Basic may rearrange arithmetic expressions to increase internal efficiency. Avoid using a Function procedure in an arithmetic expression when the function changes the value of variables in the same expression. For more information about arithmetic operators, see Operators.
Example
This example uses the Function statement to declare the name, arguments, and code that form the body of a Function procedure. The last example uses hard-typed, initialized Optional arguments.
' The following user-defined function returns the square root of the
' argument passed to it.
Function CalculateSquareRoot(NumberArg As Double) As Double
If NumberArg < 0 Then ' Evaluate argument.
Exit Function ' Exit to calling procedure.
CalculateSquareRoot = Sqr(NumberArg) ' Return square root.
End If
End Function
Using the ParamArray keyword enables a function to accept a variable number of arguments. In the following definition, it is passed by value.
Function CalcSum(ByVal FirstArg As Integer, ParamArray OtherArgs())
Dim ReturnValue
' If the function is invoked as follows:
ReturnValue = CalcSum(4, 3, 2, 1)
' Local variables are assigned the following values: FirstArg = 4,
' OtherArgs(1) = 3, OtherArgs(2) = 2, and so on, assuming default
' lower bound for arrays = 1.
Optional arguments can have default values and types other than Variant.
' If a function's arguments are defined as follows:
Function MyFunc(MyStr As String,Optional MyArg1 As _
Integer = 5,Optional MyArg2 = "Dolly")
Dim RetVal
' The function can be invoked as follows:
RetVal = MyFunc("Hello", 2, "World") ' All 3 arguments supplied.
RetVal = MyFunc("Test", , 5) ' Second argument omitted.
' Arguments one and three using named-arguments.
RetVal = MyFunc(MyStr:="Hello ", MyArg1:=7)
See also
Calling Sub and Function procedures
Understanding named arguments and optional arguments
Writing a Function procedure
Data types
Statements
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