![]() ![]() It still needs a bit of work.īut anyway - there are a whole lot of different things being worked on, and there will definitely be some sort of solution out there for you, but see how you go with Selenium and let me know if you're not having much luck. I haven't had a chance to sit down and work it all out yet though. There is also a project on Github that allows VBA to connect with Chrome direct - no drivers, no selenium, etc. WebDriver accesses functionality and information thats not available to JavaScript running in browsers. ![]() I don't quite understand why/how that should be the case, but oh well. It's currently a year or two late, I think, and what's more - according to the Road Map, it's only for Access users. Also, interestingly, MS have a development roadmap for Office products, and they area apparently producing a new Edge-compatible webbrowser control to be released next month. For any driver that Selenium must use to open the browser (chromedriver, geckodriver, etc), you dont have to worry about where it is installed, as long as its set in the PATH variable. Internet Explorer is theoretically gone (as of 15 June), but you can still use the web browser control in VBA. Download version 4.8.1. save for the fact that MS keeps pulling the plug on all of it's products, and leaves VBA users high and dry without a replacement., or so they say. IE is staggeringly easy to get working - VBA + IE = a dream to use. ![]()
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