You see, if the user presses cancel, vbNullString is returned. However if they press OK, the empty string ("") is sent back. But in Visual Basic, vbNullString equates to an empty string, so you can't compare the two - even though in reality, they're completely different.
However you can use the StrPtr ('string pointer') function to determine whether the return string is indeed a vbNullString - as by definition, a vbNullString 'pointer' is zero.
And this code demonstrates how to do that.
Code: Select all
Dim strInput As String
strInput = InputBox("Enter something:")
If StrPtr(strInput) = 0 Then
MsgBox "You pressed cancel!"
End If