Enables and returns a reference to an Automation object.
newObj = new ActiveXObject(servername.typename[, location])
Automation servers provide at least one type of object. For example, a word-processing application may provide an application object, a document object, and a toolbar object.
To create an Automation object, assign the new ActiveXObject to an object variable:
var ExcelSheet; ExcelApp = newActiveXObject
("Excel.Application"); ExcelSheet = newActiveXObject(
"Excel.
Sheet")
;
This code starts the application creating the object (in this case, a Microsoft Excel worksheet). Once an object is created, you refer to it in code using the object variable you defined. In the following example, you access properties and methods of the new object using the object variable ExcelSheet
and other Excel objects, including the Application object and the ActiveSheet.Cells collection.
// Make Excel visible through the Application object. ExcelSheet.Application.Visible = true; // Place some text in the first cell of the sheet. ExcelSheet.ActiveSheet.Cells(1,1).Value = "This is column A, row 1"; // Save the sheet. ExcelSheet.SaveAs("C:\\TEST.XLS"); // Close Excel with the Quit method on the Application object. ExcelSheet.Application.Quit();
Creating an object on a remote server can only be accomplished when Internet security is turned off. You can create an object on a remote networked computer by passing the name of the computer to the servername argument of ActiveXObject. That name is the same as the machine name portion of a share name. For a network share named "\\myserver\public", the servername is "myserver". In addition, you can specify servername using DNS format or an IP address.
The following code returns the version number of an instance of Excel running on a remote network computer named "myserver":
function GetAppVersion() { var XLApp = newActiveXObject(
"Excel.
Application",
"MyServer")
; return(XLApp.Version); }
An error occurs if the specified remote server does not exist or cannot be found.