Excl objects pasted into VBA as object - Macro to list out the addresses

BuJay

Board Regular
Joined
Jun 24, 2020
Messages
73
Office Version
  1. 365
  2. 2019
  3. 2016
  4. 2013
Platform
  1. Windows
I have a bunch of charts linked to excel from within powerpoint.

Can someone provide a macro that would list out the full addresses of each linked object, i.e., all of the source addresses? Printing to the immediate window is sufficient - I am just thinking that there is an improperly linked object somewhere and cannot expand the address string in the powerpoint edit links window. (See image)
 

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Thank you so much Domenic
You're very welcome, I'm glad I could help.

I'll try to figure out why this worked and the previous versions did not - but - alas - this worked! Thank you very much!
With the previous versions, we were checking whether the shape or placeholder contains a chart. Whereas with this version, we're checking whether the shape contains a linked worksheet object. These are two different types of objects. The latter is simply a shortcut to the file so that changes to the file will be reflected in your presentation. I know, it gets confusing. :)
 
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I think the first version didn't work because it assumed the linked chart was in a placeholder. In my experience, most people just paste a chart onto a slide without regards to placeholders.
 
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I think the first version didn't work because it assumed the linked chart was in a placeholder. In my experience, most people just paste a chart onto a slide without regards to placeholders.

Actually, the first version assumed that the chart was pasted onto a slide. And the second one assumed that it was placed in a placeholder. It was the third one that worked, since the chart was inserted as a linked worksheet object.

Cheers!
 
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Actually, the first version assumed that the chart was pasted onto a slide. And the second one assumed that it was placed in a placeholder. It was the third one that worked, since the chart was inserted as a linked worksheet object.

Cheers!
Oops! Guess I lost track.
 
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