Sabtu, 17 Desember 2016

Re: [MS_AccessPros] me.requery

 

Me always refers to the object in which the code is running.  Me.Requery should suffice.  I'm not sure what Me.Form.RecordSet.Requery does - it might do the same thing.


John Viescas, Author
Effective SQL
SQL Queries for Mere Mortals 
Microsoft Access 2010 Inside Out
Microsoft Access 2007 Inside Out
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Building Microsoft Access Applications 
(Paris, France)




On Dec 17, 2016, at 10:36 PM, david.pratt@outlook.com [MS_Access_Professionals] <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com> wrote:



What is the difference between me.requery and me.form.recordset.requery?

Does "me" mean the same thing no matter where it is?  That is to say, does it infer the same thing if it is in an event associated with a form, as it does if is in an event associated with a control on a form?





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