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ms access - VBA: Difference in two ways of declaring a new object? (Trying to understand why my solution works)

I was creating a new object within a loop, and adding that object to a collection; but when I read back the collection after, it was always filled entirely with the last object I had added. I've come up with two ways around this, but I simply do not understand why my initial implementation was wrong.

Original:

Dim oItem As Variant
Dim sOutput As String
Dim i As Integer

Dim oCollection As New Collection
For i = 0 To 10
    Dim oMatch As New clsMatch
    oMatch.setLineNumber i
    oCollection.Add oMatch
Next
For Each oItem In oCollection
    sOutput = sOutput & "[" & oItem.lineNumber & "]"
Next
MsgBox sOutput

This resulted in every lineNumber being 10; I was obviously not creating new objects, but instead using the same one each time through the loop, despite the declaration being inside of the loop.

So, I added Set oMatch = Nothing immediately before the Next line, and this fixed the problem, it was now 0 to 10. So if the old object was explicitly destroyed, then it was willing to create a new one? I would have thought the next iteration through the loop would cause anything declared within the loop do be destroyed due to scope?

Curious, I tried another way of declaring a new object: Dim oMatch As clsMatch: Set oMatch = New clsMatch. This, too, results in 0 to 10.

Can anyone explain to me why the first implementation was wrong?

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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Fink's answer gets your main problem right, which is that your first loop is adding multiple references to the same instance of 'clsMatch' to your collection. I'll just elaborate on why your fix works.

In VBA, a line like:

Dim c As New Collection

doesn't actually create a new collection. The 'Dim' statement is always just a declaration. Think of the 'As New' form as being shorthand for this:

Dim c As Collection
'...

'(later, when you're about to use 'c')

If c Is Nothing Then
    Set c = New Collection
End If

'...

That is why destroying your reference by setting the variable that contained it to 'Nothing' was working. [NOTE: to whomever edited this to say "was not" - that changes the meaning of the answer and makes it incorrect. Please read the original question. The OP found that setting the variable to Nothing did work, and I was explaing why that was the case.] When the loop came back around to the 'oMatch.setLineNumber' line, VBA "helpfully" created a new instance of 'clsMatch' for your 'oMatch' variable to refer to, and then you got multiple different instances in your collection.

It would probably be better to do this explicitly:

Dim oMatch As clsMatch   

For i = 0 To 10                
    Set oMatch = New clsMatch                
    oMatch.setLineNumber i                
    oCollection.Add oMatch                
Next  

Note that (unlike in C/C++ or ??.NET) it doesn't matter where the 'Dim' declaration goes. It's not being "executed" multiple times inside the loop, and the scope of what it declares is procedure-wide even though it appears inside the loop.


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