Copyright: 2019-2022, ICARDA
Author: Khaled Al-Shamaa [email protected]
Version: 3.0
License: This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Disclaimer: This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
Citation: Khaled Al-Shamaa (2022). ICARDA VBA Toolkit. ICARDA, Cairo, Egypt. URL https://github.com/icarda-git/VBA_Toolkit
Convert Degrees Minutes Seconds (DMS) coordinates to Decimal Degrees (DD) format.
dms2dd(string)
Convert Decimal Degrees (DD) coordinates to Degrees Minutes Seconds (DMS) format.
dd2dms(double)
Convert Degrees Decimal Minutes (DDM) coordinates to Decimal Degrees (DD) format.
ddm2dd(string)
Convert Decimal Degrees (DD) coordinates to Degrees Decimal Minutes (DDM) format.
dd2ddm(double)
Encode a location coordinates in decimal degrees (latitude and longitude in WGS84) into Open Location Code string.
dd2olc(latitude, longitude [, codeLength])
codeLength
: Default value is 10. This provides an area that is 1/8000 x 1/8000 degree in size, roughly 14x14 meters.
Decode an Open Location Code string into its location coordinates in decimal degrees (latitude and longitude in WGS84).
olc2dd(string [, coordinates, codeLength])
coordinates
: Default value is 0 (i.e., both latitude and longitude in decimal degrees as a string with comma separator). Other options includes 1 to return latitude and 2 for longitude (both in decimal degrees).codeLength
: Default value is 10. This provides an area that is 1/8000 x 1/8000 degree in size, roughly 14x14 meters.
Determine if an Open Location Code is valid.
volc(string [,codeLength])
codeLength
: Default value is 10. This provides an area that is 1/8000 x 1/8000 degree in size, roughly 14x14 meters.
Generate the Code 128 Barcode, including the checksum. Output font is Libre Barcode 128.
barcode(string)
Function | Example Call | Example Input | Example Output |
---|---|---|---|
DMS2DD | =dms2dd(C3) | 6° 42' 56.88'' W | -6.7158 |
DD2DMS | =dd2dms(C4) | -6.7158 | 6°42'56.88" |
DD2OLC | =dd2olc(C5, C6) | 33.810558 | 8G5QRX6R+65 |
35.990411 | https://plus.codes/8G5QRX6R+65 | ||
OLC2DD | =olc2dd(C7) | 8G5QRX6R+65 | 33.8105, 35.990375 |
OLC2DD | =olc2dd(C7, 1) | 8G5QRX6R+65 | 33.8105 |
OLC2DD | =olc2dd(C7, 2) | 8G5QRX6R+65 | 35.990375 |
Barcode | =barcode(C10) | C0M2Pe1AzUn4R | ÌC0M2Pe1AzUn4RjÎ |
DDM2DD | =ddm2dd(C11) | 31 41.592 | 31.68333333 |
DD2DDM | =dd2ddm(C12) | 31.4159 | 31°24.954' |
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Download the ZIP file of this VBA toolkit > unzip it somewhere on your computer.
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Start Excel > right-click on the worksheet name tab > click "View Code".
This will open the "Microsoft Visual Basic for Application" editor window.
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In the "Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications" window > File menu > click "Import File...".
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Browse to the "ICARDA_VBA_Toolkit.bas" file and import it, then close this MS VBA window.
That's it. Save the Excel file. You can now use this toolkit functions in that spreadsheet!
To add the library to a OpenOffice or LibreOffice spreadsheet, follow these steps (this example uses LibreOffice):
- Select the menu option Tools > Macros > Organize Macros > LibreOffice Basic
- In the Macro From panel, select the spreadsheet to add the library to.
- Click New, enter a name for the module (e.g. ICARDA_Toolkit), and press OK. It will then display the macro editor.
- Paste the full file into the editor, replacing the existing contents.
- Uncomment the line to enable VBA compatibility:
Option VBASupport 1
That's it. Save the file. You can now use the functions above in your spreadsheet!