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See Also 
 DescriptionReturns a zero-based, one-dimensional array containing a specified number of substrings. SyntaxSplit(expression[, delimiter[, count[, compare]]])
The Split function syntax has these parts: 
 
	| Part | Description |  
	| expression | Required. String expression containing substrings and delimiters. If expression is a zero-length string, Split returns an empty array, that is, an array with no elements and no data. |  
	| delimiter | Optional. String character used to identify substring limits. If omitted, the space character (" ") is assumed to be the delimiter. If delimiter is a zero-length string, a single-element array containing the entire expression string is returned. |  
	| count | Optional. Number of substrings to be returned; -1 indicates that all substrings are returned. |  
	| compare | Optional. Numeric value indicating the kind of comparison to use when evaluating substrings. See Settings section for values. |  SettingsThe compare argument can have the following values:
 
	| Constant | Value | Description |  
	| vbBinaryCompare | 0 | Perform a binary comparison. |  
	| vbTextCompare | 1 | Perform a textual comparison. |  RemarksThe following example uses the Split function to return an array from a string. The function performs a textual comparison of the delimiter, and returns all of the substrings.
Dim MyString, MyArray, Msg
MyString = "VBScriptXisXfun!"
MyArray = Split(MyString, "x", -1, 1)
' MyArray(0) contains "VBScript".
' MyArray(1) contains "is".
' MyArray(2) contains "fun!".
Msg = MyArray(0) & " " & MyArray(1)
Msg = Msg  & " " & MyArray(2)
MsgBox Msg
 
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