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Applies to:
Visual Studio
Visual Studio for Mac
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You can store document properties along with a document. Office applications provide a number of built-in properties, such as author, title, and subject. This topic shows how to set document properties in Microsoft Office Excel and Microsoft Office Word.
Applies to: The information in this topic applies to document-level projects and VSTO Add-in projects for the following applications: Excel; PowerPoint; Project; Word. For more information, see Features available by Office application and project type.
Set document properties in Excel
To work with built-in properties in Excel, use the following properties:
In a document-level project, use the BuiltinDocumentProperties property of the
ThisWorkbookclass.In a VSTO Add-in project, use the BuiltinDocumentProperties property of a Workbook object.
These properties return a DocumentProperties object, which is a collection of DocumentProperty objects. You can use the
Itemproperty of the collection to retrieve a particular property, either by name or by index within the collection.The following code example shows how to change the built-in Revision Number property in a document-level project.
To change the Revision Number property in Excel
Assign the built-in document properties to a variable.
Dim properties As Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperties properties = DirectCast(Globals.ThisWorkbook.BuiltinDocumentProperties, _ Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperties) Dim prop As Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperty prop = properties.Item("Revision Number")Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperties properties; properties = (Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperties) Globals.ThisWorkbook.BuiltinDocumentProperties; Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperty prop; prop = properties["Revision Number"];Increment the
Revision Numberproperty by one.If prop.Value Is Nothing Then prop.Value = 1 Else Dim revision As Integer If Integer.TryParse(prop.Value.ToString(), revision) Then prop.Value = revision + 1 MessageBox.Show("Revision Number = " & revision) Else MessageBox.Show("Revision Number = invalid value") End If End Ifif (prop.Value == null) { prop.Value = 1; } else { int revision; if (int.TryParse((string)prop.Value, out revision)) { prop.Value = revision + 1; MessageBox.Show("Revision Number = " + revision); } else { MessageBox.Show("Revision Number = invalid value"); } }
Set document properties in Word
To work with built-in properties in Word, use the following properties:
In a document-level project, use the BuiltInDocumentProperties property of the
ThisDocumentclass.In a VSTO Add-in project, use the BuiltInDocumentProperties property of a Document object.
These properties return a DocumentProperties object, which is a collection of DocumentProperty objects. You can use the
Itemproperty of the collection to retrieve a particular property, either by name or by index within the collection.The following code example shows how to change the built-in Subject property in a document-level project.
To change the Subject property
Assign the built-in document properties to a variable.
Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperties properties; properties = (Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperties) Globals.ThisDocument.BuiltInDocumentProperties;Dim properties As Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperties properties = DirectCast(Globals.ThisDocument.BuiltInDocumentProperties, _ Microsoft.Office.Core.DocumentProperties)Change the
Subjectproperty to "Whitepaper".// Set the Subject property. properties["Subject"].Value = "Whitepaper";' Set the Subject property. properties.Item("Subject").Value = "Whitepaper"
Robust programming
The examples assume that you have written the code in the ThisWorkbook class in a document-level project for Excel, and the ThisDocument class in a document-level project for Word.
Although you are working with Word and Excel and their objects, Microsoft Office supplies the list of available built-in document properties. Attempting to access an undefined property raises an exception.