Yes, Mike, Others pointed that out as well.
The difficulty is that they are all in VBAs. Most of them can be translated to Python fairly easily, and some I can get from looking at the recorded macro - but some requires quite a bit of head scratching. For instance, I wanted to figure out how create a new window. So, I went through the record macro process and looked at the VBA code, it says: ActiveWindow.NewWindow Okay. Now what??? And for switching window, it says: Windows("Book1:1").Activate Okay. ??? So, I look through the online information on msdn and viola! No mentioning of that anwhere.... Would be nice if there's a Python specific of it....but just dreaming... Back to reading MSDN..... Thanks, "Mike Thompson" <none.by.e-mail> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > It's me wrote: > > I followed the example in > > http://stompstompstomp.com/weblog/technical/2004-05-20 and learned that to > > add a new worksheet to an Excel workbook, you would use the > > workbook.Worksheets.Add() method. That works. However, the new worksheet > > got added *in front* of the last worksheet I was at. How can I get it to > > add *after*? > > > > Thanks, > > > > -- > > Me > > > > > > Does this help? > > http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/library/en-us/dv_wrcore/html/wrtskhowtomoveworksheetswithinworkbooks.asp > > -- > Mike -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list