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Before Access 2010, Access supported a wide variety of expressions in different areas of the application. Tables and fields, queries, form and report properties, controls, and macros can all use expressions to evaluate data or logic to drive the behavior of an application. In the past, each of these contexts in which an expression is used have shared a single, common expression evaluation engine. This means that no matter where you use an expression, the functions and operators available to you will likely be the same. Things change when you start to build web databases with Access 2010.
Working in an ice cream factory in Chicago led Juan Soto to found IT Impact, Inc., an Access development consulting firm. The ice cream factory's large Enterprise Resource Planning system required that he spend hours manually calculating whether a final batch of ice cream really made the company money. He had to factor the waste for every step of the manufacturing process and soon realized that he could automate the analysis with Access. He built a complex Access system which was soon used throughout the entire operation.
In this Q&A, we asked Juan to share his experiences and knowledge that he's gained designing and building Access solutions that help businesses build customer relationships.
Guest blogger Juan Soto, an Access MVP and founder of IT Impact, Inc., shares five tips on upgrading Access to SQL, including information about using the SQL Server Migration Assistant, adding tables, bit fields, and foreign keys. You can also read more about Juan and his knowledge of Access in our Q&A with him.
The ControlTipText property is usually associated with providing static information. But it can also be used to display real-time info in a wide range of scenarios.
When Donna took on the role of Director at Choral Arts (a non-profit singing ensemble), she inherited a disorganized database with redundant, unreliable data. We helped Donna devise a data model and import her data into a new set of normalized tables.
Our good friends at accesshosting.com are offering 30-day trials of two Access "cloud" solutions. Curious? Here's the deal...
Many of you search Office.com for help using date functions in Access. Perhaps you want to select some portion of a date (e.g., the year). Maybe you want to format the display of date/time data, or find the difference between dates. In this post we'll consider each of those scenarios and see how a date function can do the job.
I created an online poll to find out what you think this blog should feature.
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