Kamis, 30 Juni 2011

RE: [MS_AccessPros] Building an Access Database similar to this.

 

Deb-

No, you don't need a password unless you want to sign on as one of the defined
employees. If you had the book, you would find out that the default password
for all defined employees in the database is the employee last name. <s> The
only user who has "manager" privileges (able to define other users, for example)
is me.

When you open the database, it first displays a "splash" form to tell you about
the database, then displays a message telling you to open frmSplash to start the
application. To run the database in "production" mode, you would change the
Startup Form for the database to frmSplash or modify the code in frmCopyright to
go directly to frmSplash without displaying the message. I built it this way so
that you can immediately get to the Database Window to start exploring how the
application work. You apparently want to run it first to see what features it
has, so I recommend you sign on as me so that you get the full functionality.

John Viescas, author
Microsoft Office Access 2010 Inside Out
Microsoft Office Access 2007 Inside Out
Building Microsoft Access Applications
Microsoft Office Access 2003 Inside Out
SQL Queries for Mere Mortals
http://www.viescas.com/
(Paris, France)

-----Original Message-----
From: MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Deb
Sent: Friday, July 01, 2011 12:40 AM
To: MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [MS_AccessPros] Building an Access Database similar to this.

John,

Ok, third time is the charm, my apologies everyone, found it in the spam
folder - sorry!! Anyhow, it is saying that I need a password to use the
files? I am using Access XP which I think is 2002?

Thanks!

Deb

On Wed, Jun 29, 2011 at 11:57 PM, John Viescas <john@viescas.com> wrote:

> Deb-
>
> You certainly can build an Inventory and/or Sales management database
> application using Access. Have you looked at the sample Northwind
> application
> that comes with Access? Which version of Access do you have?
>
> I built a fully-functional Sales and Inventory management app that comes
> with my
> "Building" book. It was built using Access 2002, but it should run just
> fine in
> any later version. The sample database is fully costumizable to suit your
> needs, but be forewarned that it is fairly complex.
>
> Amazon has the book for about $32 that comes with four sample databases and
> sections that describe the design and workings of each. Or, you can just
> download the sample from:
>
> ftp://ftp.viescas.com/Download/Inventory.zip
>
>
> John Viescas, author
> Microsoft Office Access 2010 Inside Out
> Microsoft Office Access 2007 Inside Out
> Building Microsoft Access Applications
> Microsoft Office Access 2003 Inside Out
> SQL Queries for Mere Mortals
> http://www.viescas.com/
> (Paris, France)
>
>
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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