VBA-Web (formerly Excel-REST) makes working with complex webservices and APIs easy with VBA on Windows and Mac. It includes support for authentication, automatically converting and parsing JSON, working with cookies and headers, and much more.
- Download the latest release (v4.0.12)
- To install/upgrade in an existing file, use
VBA-Web - Installer.xlsm
- To start from scratch in Excel,
VBA-Web - Blank.xlsm
has everything setup and ready to go
For more details see the Wiki
To upgrade from Excel-REST to VBA-Web, follow the Upgrading Guide
Note: XML support has been temporarily removed from VBA-Web while parser issues for Mac are resolved. XML support is still possible on Windows, follow these instructions to use a custom formatter.
The following examples demonstrate using the Google Maps API to get directions between two locations.
Function GetDirections(Origin As String, Destination As String) As String
' Create a WebClient for executing requests
' and set a base url that all requests will be appended to
Dim MapsClient As New WebClient
MapsClient.BaseUrl = "https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/"
' Use GetJSON helper to execute simple request and work with response
Dim Resource As String
Dim Response As WebResponse
Resource = "directions/json?" & _
"origin=" & Origin & _
"&destination=" & Destination & _
"&sensor=false"
Set Response = MapsClient.GetJSON(Resource)
' => GET https://maps.../api/directions/json?origin=...&destination=...&sensor=false
ProcessDirections Response
End Function
Public Sub ProcessDirections(Response As WebResponse)
If Response.StatusCode = WebStatusCode.Ok Then
Dim Route As Dictionary
Set Route = Response.Data("routes")(1)("legs")(1)
Debug.Print "It will take " & Route("duration")("text") & _
" to travel " & Route("distance")("text") & _
" from " & Route("start_address") & _
" to " & Route("end_address")
Else
Debug.Print "Error: " & Response.Content
End If
End Sub
There are 3 primary components in VBA-Web:
WebRequest
for defining complex requestsWebClient
for executing requestsWebResponse
for dealing with responses.
In the above example, the request is fairly simple, so we can skip creating a WebRequest
and instead use the Client.GetJSON
helper to GET json from a specific url. In processing the response, we can look at the StatusCode
to make sure the request succeeded and then use the parsed json in the Data
parameter to extract complex information from the response.
If you wish to have more control over the request, the following example uses WebRequest
to define a complex request.
Function GetDirections(Origin As String, Destination As String) As String
Dim MapsClient As New WebClient
MapsClient.BaseUrl = "https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/"
' Create a WebRequest for getting directions
Dim DirectionsRequest As New WebRequest
DirectionsRequest.Resource = "directions/{format}"
DirectionsRequest.Method = WebMethod.HttpGet
' Set the request format
' -> Sets content-type and accept headers and parses the response
DirectionsRequest.Format = WebFormat.Json
' Replace {format} segment
DirectionsRequest.AddUrlSegment "format", "json"
' Add querystring to the request
DirectionsRequest.AddQuerystringParam "origin", Origin
DirectionsRequest.AddQuerystringParam "destination", Destination
DirectionsRequest.AddQuerystringParam "sensor", "false"
' => GET https://maps.../api/directions/json?origin=...&destination=...&sensor=false
' Execute the request and work with the response
Dim Response As WebResponse
Set Response = MapsClient.Execute(DirectionsRequest)
ProcessDirections Response
End Function
Public Sub ProcessDirections(Response As WebResponse)
' ... Same as previous example
End Sub
The above example demonstrates some of the powerful feature available with WebRequest
. Some of the features include:
- Url segments (Replace {segment} in resource with value)
- Method (GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE)
- Format (json, xml, url-encoded, plain-text) for content-type and accept headers and converting/parsing request and response
- QuerystringParams
- Body
- Cookies
- Headers
For more details, see the WebRequest
portion of the Docs
The following example demonstrates using an authenticator with VBA-Web to query Twitter. The TwitterAuthenticator
(found in the authenticators/
folder) uses Twitter's OAuth 1.0a authentication and details of how it was created can be found in the Wiki.
Function QueryTwitter(Query As String) As WebResponse
Dim TwitterClient As New WebClient
TwitterClient.BaseUrl = "https://api.twitter.com/1.1/"
' Setup authenticator
Dim TwitterAuth As New TwitterAuthenticator
TwitterAuth.Setup _
ConsumerKey:="Your consumer key", _
ConsumerSecret:="Your consumer secret"
Set TwitterClient.Authenticator = TwitterAuth
' Setup query request
Dim Request As New WebRequest
Request.Resource = "search/tweets.json"
Request.Format = WebFormat.Json
Request.Method = WebMethod.HttpGet
Request.AddParameter "q", Query
Request.AddParameter "lang", "en"
Request.AddParameter "count", 20
' => GET https://api.twitter.com/1.1/search/tweets.json?q=...&lang=en&count=20
' Authorization Bearer Token... (received and added automatically via TwitterAuthenticator)
Set QueryTwitter = TwitterClient.Execute(Request)
End Function
For more details, check out the Wiki, Docs, and Examples
View the changelog for release notes
- Author: Tim Hall
- License: MIT