What is the alternative to \n (for new line) in a MsgBox()?
18 Answers
- for VB:
vbCrLforvbNewLine - for VB.NET:
Environment.NewLineorvbCrLforConstants.vbCrLf
Info on VB.NET new line:
The info for Environment.NewLine came from Cody Gray and J Vermeire
Try using vbcrlf for a newline
msgbox "This is how" & vbcrlf & "to get a new line" 1 These are the character sequences to create a new line:
vbCris the carriage return (return to line beginning),vbLfis the line feed (go to next line)vbCrLfis the carriage return / line feed (similar to pressing Enter)
I prefer vbNewLine as it is system independent (vbCrLf may not be a true new line on some systems)
Use the Environment.NewLine property
Add a vbNewLine as:
"text1" & vbNewLine & "text2" An alternative to Environment.NewLine is to use :
Regex.Unescape("\n\tHello World\n")from System.Text.RegularExpressions
This allows you to escape Text without Concatenating strings as you can in C#, C, java
The correct format is :
"text1" + vbNewLine + "text2" Use the command "vbNewLine"
Example
Hello & vbNewLine & "World"will show up as Hello on one line and World on another
You can use Environment.NewLine OR vbCrLF OR vbNewLine
MsgBox($"Hi!{Environment.NewLine}I'M HERE") You can use carriage return character (Chr(13)), a linefeed character (Chr(10)) also like
MsgBox "Message Name: " & objSymbol1.Name & Chr(13) & "Value of BIT-1: " & (myMessage1.Data(1)) & Chr(13) & "MessageCount: " & ReceiveMessages.Count Module MyHelpers <Extension()> Public Function UnEscape(ByVal aString As String) As String Return Regex.Unescape(aString) End Function
End ModuleUsage:
console.writeline("Ciao!\n".unEscape) On my side I created a sub MyMsgBox replacing \n in the prompt by ControlChars.NewLine
A lot of the stuff above didn't work for me. What did end up working is
Chr(13) 3 msgbox "This is the first line" & vbcrlf & "and this is the second line"or in .NET msgbox "This is the first line" & Environment.NewLine & "and this is the second line"
do not forget to set the Multiline property to true in textbox
msgbox("your text here" & Environment.NewLine & "more text") is the easist way. no point in making your code harder or more ocmplicated than you need it to be...
1This work for me:MessageBox.Show("YourString" & vbcrlf & "YourNewLineString")
The message box must end with a text and not with a variable