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Home/ Questions/Q 4017920
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T09:55:11+00:00 2026-05-20T09:55:11+00:00

Given that we have a script Option Explicit Class CClass Private m_date Private Sub

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Given that we have a script

Option Explicit

Class CClass
    Private m_date

    Private Sub Class_Initialize()
        m_date = CDate("1970-01-01 00:00:00")
    End Sub

    Public Function Foo()
        Dim d : d = Date()
        WScript.Echo "d is " & FormatDateTime(d, vbGeneralDate)
    End Function

    Public Property Get Date()
        Date = m_date
    End Property

    Public Property Let Date(p_date)
        m_date = CDate(p_date)
    End Property

End Class

Dim obj : Set obj = NEW CClass
Call obj.Foo()

How can class function CClass.Foo() call built-in VBScript function Date() without the property CClass.Date interfering?

My current solution is to introduce a dummy Date_() function which can be called instead. But that just seems wrong. I’m thinking there should be some way to specify that we want to call something outside the class scope.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T09:55:12+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 9:55 am

    I am almost positive that there is no way to do what you’re asking in VBScript.

    But even if you could figure out a way to do this, you really shouldn’t. You need to choose names for your own functions that don’t conflict with the names of built-in functions. Anything else is completely unmaintainable for a dynamic scripting language like VBScript.

    Pick a different name for your Date property. Preferably something more descriptive: what kind of date does that property return? What does the date refer to? How is it likely to be used? Whatever you do, don’t rename it to Date_—that’s not any better.

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