Displays a prompt in a dialog box, waits for the user to input text or choose a button, and returns the contents of the text box.
InputBox(prompt[, title][, default][, xpos][, ypos][, helpfile, context])
The InputBox function syntax has these named arguments:
Part |
Description |
prompt |
String expression displayed as the message in the dialog box. The maximum length of prompt is approximately 1024 characters, depending on the width of the characters used. If prompt consists of more than one line, you can separate the lines using either a carriage return character (Chr(13)), a linefeed character (Chr(10)), or carriage return-linefeed character combination (Chr(13) & Chr(10)) between each line. |
title |
String expression displayed in the title bar of the dialog box. If you omit title, the application name is placed in the title bar. |
default |
String expression displayed in the text box as the default response if no other input is provided. If you omit default, the text box is displayed empty. |
xpos |
Numeric expression that specifies, in twips, the horizontal distance of the left edge of the dialog box from the left edge of the screen. If xpos is omitted, the dialog box is horizontally centered. |
ypos |
Numeric expression that specifies, in twips, the vertical distance of the upper edge of the dialog box from the top of the screen. If ypos is omitted, the dialog box is vertically positioned approximately one-third of the way down the screen. |
Part |
Description |
helpfile |
String expression that identifies the Help file to use to provide context-sensitive Help for the dialog box. If helpfile is provided, context must also be provided. |
context |
Numeric expression that is the Help context number the Help author assigned to the appropriate Help topic. If context is provided, helpfile must also be provided. |
When both helpfile and context are supplied, a Help button is automatically added to the dialog box.
If the user chooses OK or presses ENTER, the InputBox function returns whatever is in the text box. If the user chooses Cancel, the function returns a zero-length string ("").
Note If you want to specify more than the first named argument, you must use InputBox in an expression. If you want to omit some positional arguments, you must include the corresponding comma delimiter.
MsgBox Function.
You can’t open a Help file from a dialog box created by the InputBox function in Microsoft Access. If you specify values for the helpfile and context arguments, they will be ignored. However, Microsoft Access won’t generate an error.
This example shows various ways to use the InputBox function to prompt the user to enter a value. If the x and y positions are omitted, the dialog box is automatically centered for the respective axes. The variable MyValue contains the value entered by the user if the user chooses OK or presses the ENTER key . If the user chooses Cancel, a zero-length string is returned.
Message = "Enter a value between 1 and 3" ' Set prompt.= "InputBox Demo" ' Set title.= "1" ' Set default. ' Display message, title, and default value.= InputBox(Message, Title, Default) ' Use Helpfile and context. The Help button is added automatically.= InputBox(Message, Title, , , , "DEMO.HLP", 10) ' Display dialog box at position 100, 100.= InputBox(Message, Title, Default, 100, 100)
The following example uses the InputBox function to return the user’s name. Note that you can’t open a Help file from a dialog box created by the InputBox function in Microsoft Access.
Sub Greeting() Dim strInput As String, strMsg As String strMsg = "Enter your name." strInput = InputBox(strMsg, "User Info", , 2000, 2000) MsgBox "Hello, " & strInputSub