WorksheetFunction.Fixed (Excel)
Rounds a number to the specified number of decimals, formats the number in decimal format using a period and commas, and returns the result as text.
Numbers in Microsoft Excel can never have more than 15 significant digits, but decimals can be as large as 127. If decimals is negative, number is rounded to the left of the decimal point. If you omit decimals, it is assumed to be 2. If no_commas is False or omitted, the returned text includes commas as usual. The major difference between formatting a cell containing a number with the Cells command (Format menu) and formatting a number directly with the Fixed function is that Fixed converts its result to text. A number formatted with the Cells command is still a number.
Fixed (Arg1, Arg2, Arg3)
Dim dblArg1 As Double: dblArg1 =
Dim strFixed As String
strFixed = WorksheetFunction.Fixed(Arg1:=dblArg1)
Arguments
Arg1, Arg2, Arg3Arg1 (Double) - Number - the number you want to round and convert to text.
Arg2 - Decimals - the number of digits to the right of the decimal point
Arg3 (Boolean) - No_commas - a logical value that, if True, prevents Fixed from including commas in the returned text.