Categories
RSS Feed
Search NewtonExcelBach
Archives
Top Posts
- Using LINEST for non-linear curve fitting
- 3DFrame Ver 1.03 and Frame4 Ver 3.07
- Cubic Splines
- About Newton Excel Bach
- Downloads
- Frame Analysis with Excel - 3, Continuous beam or frame
- Writing Arrays to the worksheet - VBA function
- XLDennis, the MSDN Library, and VBA rant
- Daily Download 2: SLS design of reinforced concrete sections ...
- Filling Blanks with Go To-Special (and local help rant)
Recent Comments

Z on Downloads py_xlCBA – Sup… on py_xlCBA update 
dougaj4 on Downloads 
Z on Downloads py_xlCBA update | Ne… on Calling PyCBA from Excel 
Z on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
dougaj4 on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
khoitsma on Continuous beam animations wit… 
Z on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
dougaj4 on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
dougaj4 on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
Z on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
Z on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
dougaj4 on Downloads 
dougaj4 on Installing Adobe Reader non-DC…
Category Archives: PyXLL
Getting near matches from a list with Python
To return a list of near matches from a long list of strings would be quite difficult in VBA (unless I’m missing something), but in Python it is very simple. Here is the code for this operation, using pyxll to … Continue reading
Posted in Excel, Link to Python, PyXLL, UDFs
Tagged close matches, Excel, Python, PyXLL, UDFs, using Excel function wizard
Leave a comment
Stepping through Python code called from Excel
Setting up your editor to allow Python code debugging for functions called from Excel can be tricky, depending on the details of your editor and linking software, but using the Visual Studio Code Editor and Pyxll, this works for me: … Continue reading
Posted in Computing - general, Excel, Link to Python, PyXLL, UDFs
Tagged Debugging, Excel, Python, PyXLL, Visual studio code
4 Comments
More Python Traps
I recently posted on some Python Traps, focussing on code where changes in the values of sub-routine arguments were not reflected in the calling routines. The reverse can also be a problem: if an array, a, is passed to a … Continue reading
Posted in Arrays, Excel, Link to Python, Newton, NumPy and SciPy, PyXLL, UDFs
Tagged Numpy, Passing variables, Python, python traps, PyXLL, UDF
Leave a comment
Python Traps
When converting existing VBA code to Python there are a number of obvious changes to the syntax that need to be made for the code to run at all, but there are also a number of not so obvious traps … Continue reading
Posted in Arrays, Excel, Link to Python, Newton, NumPy and SciPy, PyXLL, UDFs, VBA
Tagged Excel, for loop counters |, Numpy, Passing variables, Python, python traps, PyXLL, UDF, VBA
1 Comment
More powers of 3
Following the discovery of a question to which the answer is 42, the same team has now reported a sum of three cubes equal to 3. As before, the result can be checked from Excel, linking to mpmath, via pyxll. … Continue reading
Posted in Computing - general, Excel, Link to Python, Maths, Newton, PyXLL
Tagged 42, Excel, Life the Universe and Everything, mpmath, PyXLL, sum of 3 cubes
Leave a comment