The Microsoft object models for the various Office applications are language-agnostic; they can (generally1) be used equally well from any OLE-Automation-supporting language. Use of the API is the same between all these languages; there is nothing specifically VBA about the object models. Moreover, in most5 cases, it is the same DLL/EXE referenced from the different Automation-supporting languages.
For the most part, questions tagged [*-vba] are questions about the object model in question; such questions -- and their answers -- could have been asked and answered under any Automation-supporting language, or with any host environment (Word, Excel, CorelDraw, Classic ASP, WSH). 2
- There are some questions tagged [ * -vba] which relate to VBA syntax or pure VBA objects (collections, arrays, classes), and do not relate to any specific object model. Tagging with [excel-vba] or [word-vba] on these questions only because the host application is Excel or Word seems unjustified; they should just be tagged vba.
Therefore, I propose synonymizing the [ * -vba] tags to something language agnostic and that more accurately conveys their meaning -- [ * -objects] or [ * -object-model]3; or perhaps [ * -automation], or even [ * -activex-automation]4.
Since these questions are about the object model in any case, there is no loss of information in automatically retagging the question and setting these aliases.
(The relevant tag wikis would have to be changed appropriately, but that is a follow-up to this discussion.)
There are other libraries for working with Office documents. Shouldn't they also be tagged with [ * -objects]?
Libraries/APIs such as xlwt and Office Open XML SDK are focused on extracting data from Office documents. In contrast, the Microsoft APIs are designed to automate the application (although they can be used to extract data as well).
In addition, the Automation APIs are provided by Microsoft, the publisher of these applications, and can be considered the official object models.
Why [ * -objects] + [vba] and not [ * ] + [vba]?
It could be argued that there are subdomains to Office applications programming, such as [excel-formulas], [excel-addins], [word-fieldexpressions], that should be differentiated from automating Office applications with the supplied API.
How will new users know to use these tags?
The same way users until now are guided to tag with both vba and [ * -vba] -- via the tag wikis for [vba].
What about people who don't know what an object is? They won't understand this tag!
What is the purpose of a tag? To attract the attention of experts who follow this tag and might be able to answer the question. It's rather unlikely that an expert in programming the object model will not know what is an object. (Perhaps not the formal "object == state + behavior", but at least in the sense of a programmable entity.)
Regarding askers who approach a programming QA site (this already presumes some knowledge) with a question on how to automate Excel for example, either they understand what an object is (at least as a thing that can be manipulated in a program), or they cannot.
* If they can, the tag makes perfect sense.
* If not, they will inevitably get an answer which they don't understand (they have no idea what is an object), so there is nothing wrong with guiding such users to use a tag incomprehensible to them. Alternatively, they could be guided to use the [excel] tag.
I have come across the following edge cases.
(a) Javascript depends on the host to provide mechanisms for connecting event sources to event handlers.
(b) I've had trouble passing arguments to properties in CPython + pywin32.Questions on programs written in VBA and under a specifc host application should still be tagged with VBA because of the language, but they shouldn't be used to justify all the [*-vba] tags.
Technically more accurate, but perhaps less approachable to newcomers to programming.
To distinguish the Automation object model — the Microsoft object model for automating these applications under OLE Automation — from other libraries such as xlwings.
I know of one exception - .NET Office Interop.
FooApp
was; some sort of VBA environment? Maybe clarify near the top thatFooApp
means one of Word, Excel, etc. for dummies like me.