Save as PDF Macro working for Windows but not MAC OS

jhirst001

New Member
Joined
Jan 19, 2023
Messages
8
Office Version
  1. 365
Platform
  1. Windows
  2. MacOS
I am new to VBA and have found several solutions to creating a form control button that works on Windows OS. currently, it is able to work on my personal PC as well as co-workers using Windows OS. Where I have run into trouble is getting this to work for co-workers using a Mac device. Any help adapting this code to work for our resident Mac users is greatly appreciated.

The goal is for the Mac user to click the "save as PDF" button and have it save to their local downloads folder.

The code:

Code:
 Sub PDFActiveSheet()
        'www.contextures.com
        'for Excel 2010 and later
        Dim wsA As Worksheet
        Dim wbA As Workbook
        Dim strTime As String
        Dim strName As String
        Dim ID As String
        Dim strPath As String
        Dim strFile As String
        Dim strPathFile As String
        Dim myFile As Variant
        On Error GoTo errHandler
        
        ID = Range("A2")
        Set wbA = ActiveWorkbook
        Set wsA = ActiveSheet
        strTime = Format(Now(), "mmmm")
        
        'get active workbook folder, if saved
        strPath = wbA.Path
        If strPath = "" Then
          strPath = Application.DefaultFilePath
        End If
        strPath = strPath & "\"
        
        'replace spaces and periods in sheet name
        strName = Replace(wsA.Name, " ", "")
        strName = Replace(strName, ".", "_")
        
        'create default name for savng file
        strFile = ID & "_" & strName & "_" & strTime & ".pdf"
        strPathFile = strPath & strFile
        
        'use can enter name and
        ' select folder for file
        myFile = Application.GetSaveAsFilename _
            (InitialFileName:=strPathFile, _
                FileFilter:="PDF Files (*.pdf), *.pdf", _
                Title:="Select Folder and FileName to save")
        
        'export to PDF if a folder was selected
        If myFile <> "False" Then
            wsA.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _
                Filename:=myFile, _
                Quality:=xlQualityStandard, _
                IncludeDocProperties:=True, _
                IgnorePrintAreas:=False, _
                OpenAfterPublish:=False
            'confirmation message with file info
            MsgBox "PDF file has been created: " _
              & vbCrLf _
              & myFile
              
        End If
        
exitHandler:
            Exit Sub
errHandler:
            MsgBox "Could not create PDF file"
            Resume exitHandler
        End Sub
 

Excel Facts

How to show all formulas in Excel?
Press Ctrl+` to show all formulas. Press it again to toggle back to numbers. The grave accent is often under the tilde on US keyboards.
The way you are doing error handling throws away the information needed to diagnose the error. Comment out the On Error statement, then tell us which line of code is raising the error. When this occurs, also capture the values of all variables referenced on that line of code and include those in your description.

I suspect the problem is that you are hardcoding "\" as the path separator. It is "/" on a Mac but I do not have Mac for testing to see if it is robust enough to accept "\". To insulate against this use Application.PathSeparator instead of hardcoding the "\". I only see it used once:
VBA Code:
        strPath = strPath & Application.PathSeparator

This is such an easy change I would try it. Then if you still get an error report as described above.
 
Upvote 0
The way you are doing error handling throws away the information needed to diagnose the error. Comment out the On Error statement, then tell us which line of code is raising the error. When this occurs, also capture the values of all variables referenced on that line of code and include those in your description.

I suspect the problem is that you are hardcoding "\" as the path separator. It is "/" on a Mac but I do not have Mac for testing to see if it is robust enough to accept "\". To insulate against this use Application.PathSeparator instead of hardcoding the "\". I only see it used once:
VBA Code:
        strPath = strPath & Application.PathSeparator

This is such an easy change I would try it. Then if you still get an error report as described above.
I commented out the On Error Line.

After making the adjustment you suggested, the code continues to work on Windows OS.

Mac users are now getting the message box:

"Run Time Error '1004':
Method 'GetSaveAsFileName' of object '_Application' failed

The code is failing on Line 38. When the user clicks 'debug' they see this:

TT-Marco-Failure.png


Variables include:

Line 22

VBA Code:
If strPath = "" Then
          strPath = Application.DefaultFilePath
        End If
        strPath = strPath & "\"

Line 32

VBA Code:
 strFile = ID & "_" & strName & "_" & strTime & ".pdf"
        strPathFile = strPath & strFile

Again, I'm new to all of this, so if I've left something out, my apologies. Let me know if you need more/different information.
 
Upvote 0
In the line you have marked as Line 22 you haven't used the suggestion by @6StringJazzer to use Application.PathSeparator
 
Upvote 0
The FileFilter parameter is not supported on a Mac.


At this point it's probably not necessary but you are showing the code that sets the variables but I wanted to see the actual values of those variables at the point where the error occurs. I already had the code.
 
Upvote 0
The FileFilter parameter is not supported on a Mac.


At this point it's probably not necessary but you are showing the code that sets the variables but I wanted to see the actual values of those variables at the point where the error occurs. I already had the code.
Do I then need to add an "On Error" statement which accounts for the different verbiage required on Mac OS?

On my Windows machine, the actual values are as follows:

When I click the button the "save as" window pops up. It is defaults to the folder/location in which I have the document saved, and saves the file as "Athletes Name_2-WeekTrainingSummary_January.pdf".
 
Upvote 0
I would suggest retrieving the OS name
VBA Code:
Dim TheOS As String
TheOS = Application.Operatingsystem
and having one line of code when the name contains "Windows" and another when it does not (for Mac). The code will work fine without FileFilter, just shows the users more files.
 
Upvote 0

Forum statistics

Threads
1,223,099
Messages
6,170,108
Members
452,302
Latest member
TaMere

We've detected that you are using an adblocker.

We have a great community of people providing Excel help here, but the hosting costs are enormous. You can help keep this site running by allowing ads on MrExcel.com.
Allow Ads at MrExcel

Which adblocker are you using?

Disable AdBlock

Follow these easy steps to disable AdBlock

1)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the "Pause on this site" option.
Go back

Disable AdBlock Plus

Follow these easy steps to disable AdBlock Plus

1)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the toggle to disable it for "mrexcel.com".
Go back

Disable uBlock Origin

Follow these easy steps to disable uBlock Origin

1)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the "Power" button.
3)Click on the "Refresh" button.
Go back

Disable uBlock

Follow these easy steps to disable uBlock

1)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the "Power" button.
3)Click on the "Refresh" button.
Go back
Back
Top