I believe this issue is a result of a recent update to MS Office/Access or Windows 10. When I run this code:
Dim s As String
With CreateObject(\"Scriptlet.T
Since windows update taken out "Scriptlet.TypeLib", try the following:-
Declare Function CoCreateGuid Lib "ole32" (ByRef GUID As Byte) As Long
Public Function GenerateGUID() As String
Dim ID(0 To 15) As Byte
Dim N As Long
Dim GUID As String
Dim Res As Long
Res = CoCreateGuid(ID(0))
For N = 0 To 15
GUID = GUID & IIf(ID(N) < 16, "0", "") & Hex$(ID(N))
If Len(GUID) = 8 Or Len(GUID) = 13 Or Len(GUID) = 18 Or Len(GUID) = 23 Then
GUID = GUID & "-"
End If
Next N
GenerateGUID = GUID
End Function
Alternatively, if you are connecting to SQL Server 2008 or higher, try to use the SQL NEWID() function instead.
In Access, we can suffice with this very short function to generate a GUID by leveraging Application.StringFromGUID
to cast bytes to a GUID. It generates pretty verbose GUIDs, though, with the format {guid {00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000}}
.
Declare PtrSafe Sub CoCreateGuid Lib "ole32" (ByVal GUID As LongPtr)
Public Function NewGUID() As String
Dim b(15) As Byte
CoCreateGUID VarPtr(b(0))
NewGUID = Application.StringFromGUID(b)
End Function
You can strip away unwanted characters, for example by replacing the last line of this function with NewGUID = Mid(Application.StringFromGUID(b), 8, 36)
. Then, the format will be 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
From Microsoft:
This issue is by design, as of the July security updates. This control is blocked as a security measure to help prevent malicious code from running in Office applications. We are working on getting a knowledgebase article out with the recommended method. Until that KB is ready, I'll post the content here:
Workaround The preferred method is to change the code to use Windows API CoCreateGuid (https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms688568(v=vs.85).aspx) instead of
CreateObject("Scriptlet.TypeLib").Guid
' No VT_GUID available so must declare type GUID
Private Type GUID_TYPE
Data1 As Long
Data2 As Integer
Data3 As Integer
Data4(7) As Byte
End Type
Private Declare PtrSafe Function CoCreateGuid Lib "ole32.dll" (Guid As GUID_TYPE) As LongPtr
Private Declare PtrSafe Function StringFromGUID2 Lib "ole32.dll" (Guid As GUID_TYPE, ByVal lpStrGuid As LongPtr, ByVal cbMax As Long) As LongPtr
Function CreateGuidString()
Dim guid As GUID_TYPE
Dim strGuid As String
Dim retValue As LongPtr
Const guidLength As Long = 39 'registry GUID format with null terminator {xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx}
retValue = CoCreateGuid(guid)
If retValue = 0 Then
strGuid = String$(guidLength, vbNullChar)
retValue = StringFromGUID2(guid, StrPtr(strGuid), guidLength)
If retValue = guidLength Then
' valid GUID as a string
CreateGuidString = strGuid
End If
End if
End Function
Alternate Workaround
This will allow you to use
CreateObject("Scriptlet.TypeLib")
however it will lessen the security protection added by the Office July 2017 security update. You can set a registry key that will allowScriptlet.TypeLib
to instantiate inside of Office applications. When this registry key is set, Office will not block any use of this COM control.
- Open Registry Editor.
- Go to: Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Office\16.0\Common\COM Compatibility{06290BD5-48AA-11D2-8432-006008C3FBFC}
- Note: you may need to search the registry to find the correct location under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE based on your installed Office version.
- Add ActivationFilterOverride
- Set DWORD: 1
Detailed Instructions:
- Click Start, click Run, type regedit in the Open box, and then click OK. Locate and then click the following key in the registry: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
- On the Edit menu, point to Find, and then enter the following in the Find What: text box: COM Compatibility
- Ensure Keys is selected, and Values and Data are deselected. Next select Match whole string only, click Find Next Locate and then click the following key: {06290BD5-48AA-11D2-8432-006008C3FBFC} Note: if the key is not present you will need to add it. On the Edit menu, point to New, and then click Key. Type in {06290BD5-48AA-11D2-8432-006008C3FBFC}
- On the Edit menu, point to New, and then click DWORD (32-bit) Value
- Type ActivationFilterOverride for the name of the DWORD, and then press Enter.
- Right-click ActivationFilterOverride, and then click Modify.
- In the Value data box, type 1 to enable the registry entry, and then click OK.
- Note to disable the ActivationFilterOverride setting, type 0 (zero), and then click OK.
- Exit Registry Editor, and then restart any open Office application.