Returns or sets the object's formula in A1-style notation and in the language of the macro. Read/write String.
expression.Formula
expression Required. An expression that returns one of the above objects.
Formula property as it applies to the CalculatedMember object.
Returns the member's formula in multidimensional expressions (MDX) syntax. Read-only String.
expression.Formula
expression Required. An expression that returns a CalculatedMember object.
Formula property as it applies to the Range object.
Returns or sets the object's formula in A1-style notation and in the language of the macro. Read/write Variant.
expression.Formula
expression Required. An expression that returns a Range object.
Remarks
This property is not available for OLAP data sources.
If the cell contains a constant, this property returns the constant. If the cell is empty, this Formula property returns an empty string. If the cell contains a formula, the Formula property returns the formula as a string in the same format that would be displayed in the formula bar (including the equal sign).
If you set the value or formula of a cell to a date, Microsoft Excel checks to see whether that cell is already formatted with one of the date or time number formats. If not, Microsoft Excel changes the number format to the default short date number format.
If the range is a one- or two-dimensional range, you can set the formula to a Visual Basic array of the same dimensions. Similarly, you can put the formula into a Visual Basic array.
Setting the formula for a multiple-cell range fills all cells in the range with the formula.
Example
As it applies to the Range object.
This example sets the formula for cell A1 on Sheet1.
Worksheets("Sheet1").Range("A1").Formula = "=$A$4+$A$10"