Kamis, 23 Maret 2017

Re: [MS_AccessPros] ODBC - Call falled. Not Sure why!

 

THat was great thank you.... 

With Warm Regards,
 
Arthur D. Lorenzini
IT System Manager
Cheyenne River Housing Authority
Wk.(605)964-4265  Ext. 130
Fax (605)964-1070

"Anyone who claimed that old age had brought them patience was either lying or senile."  







From: "Duane Hookom duanehookom@hotmail.com [MS_Access_Professionals]" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
To: "MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, March 23, 2017 9:26 AM
Subject: Re: [MS_AccessPros] ODBC - Call falled. Not Sure why!

 
I agree with John regarding the filtering in the WHERE clause vs the HAVING clause. The ORDER BY clause should be last.
SELECT Count(ApplicantID) AS  Applications, Year(AppReceivedDate) AS Year_of_Application
FROM DBO.tblApplication
WHERE Year(AppReceivedDate)>=2008
GROUP BY Year(AppReceivedDate)
ORDER BY Year(AppReceivedDate);

Regards,
Duane



From: MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com> on behalf of Art Lorenzini dbalorenzini@yahoo.com [MS_Access_Professionals] <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, March 23, 2017 10:10 AM
To: MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [MS_AccessPros] ODBC - Call falled. Not Sure why!
 


How would I add a Order BY clause into this because I need it ordered by Year (oldest to newest). 

With Warm Regards,
 
Arthur D. Lorenzini
IT System Manager
Cheyenne River Housing Authority
Wk.(605)964-4265  Ext. 130
Fax (605)964-1070

"Anyone who claimed that old age had brought them patience was either lying or senile."  







From: "Bill Mosca wrmosca@comcast.net [MS_Access_Professionals]" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
To: "Professionals, MS" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2017 3:21 PM
Subject: Re: [MS_AccessPros] ODBC - Call falled. Not Sure why!

 
Art - you might also try moving the WHERE clause to a HAVING clause. It might improve performance.

SELECT Count(ApplicantID) AS Applications
, Year(AppReceivedDate) AS Year_of_Application
FROM DBO.tblApplication
GROUP BY Year(AppReceivedDate);
HAVING Year(AppReceivedDate)>=2008



Regards,
Bill Mosca

From: "Art Lorenzini dbalorenzini@yahoo.com [MS_Access_Professionals]" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
To: "MS Access Professionals" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2017 1:57:11 PM
Subject: Re: [MS_AccessPros] ODBC - Call falled. Not Sure why!

 


John, 
Perfect, thank you. 

With Warm Regards,
 
Arthur D. Lorenzini
IT System Manager
Cheyenne River Housing Authority
Wk.(605)964-4265  Ext. 130
Fax (605)964-1070

"Anyone who claimed that old age had brought them patience was either lying or senile."  







From: "John Viescas JohnV@msn.com [MS_Access_Professionals]" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
To: "MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2017 2:43 PM
Subject: Re: [MS_AccessPros] ODBC - Call falled. Not Sure why!

 
You could try a passthrough query:

SELECT Count(ApplicantID) AS  Applications, Year(AppReceivedDate) AS Year_of_Application
FROM DBO.tblApplication
WHERE Year(AppReceivedDate)>=2008
GROUP BY Year(AppReceivedDate);


John Viescas, Author
Effective SQL
SQL Queries for Mere Mortals 
Microsoft Access 2010 Inside Out
Microsoft Access 2007 Inside Out
Microsoft Access 2003 Inside Out
Building Microsoft Access Applications 
http://www.viescas.com/
www.viescas.com
Welcome to the home of John Viescas Consulting. If you're at all interested in Microsoft Access or SQL Server, this is the place to be! Check out the book ...

 
(Paris, France)




On Mar 22, 2017, at 9:27 PM, Art Lorenzini dbalorenzini@yahoo.com [MS_Access_Professionals] <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com> wrote:





Yes it is a SQL Server 2008. 

With Warm Regards,
 
Arthur D. Lorenzini
IT System Manager
Cheyenne River Housing Authority
Wk.(605)964-4265  Ext. 130
Fax (605)964-1070

"Anyone who claimed that old age had brought them patience was either lying or senile."   







From: "John Viescas JohnV@msn.com [MS_Access_Professionals]" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
To: "MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com> 
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2017 1:50 PM
Subject: Re: [MS_AccessPros] ODBC - Call falled. Not Sure why!

Art-

And what database stores that table?  SQL Server?

John Viescas, Author
Effective SQL
SQL Queries for Mere Mortals 
Microsoft Access 2010 Inside Out
Microsoft Access 2007 Inside Out
Microsoft Access 2003 Inside Out
Building Microsoft Access Applications 
(Paris, France)




On Mar 22, 2017, at 8:42 PM, Art Lorenzini dbalorenzini@yahoo.com [MS_Access_Professionals] <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com> wrote:





Yes it is. tblApplication is a linked table. 

With Warm Regards,
 
Arthur D. Lorenzini
IT System Manager
Cheyenne River Housing Authority
Wk.(605)964-4265  Ext. 130
Fax (605)964-1070

"Anyone who claimed that old age had brought them patience was either lying or senile."   







From: "John Viescas JohnV@msn.com [MS_Access_Professionals]" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com>
To: "MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com" <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com> 
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2017 1:41 PM
Subject: Re: [MS_AccessPros] ODBC - Call falled. Not Sure why!

Art-

ODBC implies you're connecting to a back end like SQL Server.  Is that the case?  Is tblApplication a linked table?

John Viescas, Author
Effective SQL
SQL Queries for Mere Mortals 
Microsoft Access 2010 Inside Out
Microsoft Access 2007 Inside Out
Microsoft Access 2003 Inside Out
Building Microsoft Access Applications 
(Paris, France)




On Mar 22, 2017, at 8:16 PM, dbalorenzini@yahoo.com [MS_Access_Professionals] <MS_Access_Professionals@yahoogroups.com> wrote:




I have the following query...

SELECT Count([tblApplication].[ApplicantID]) AS  Applications, Year([tblApplication].[AppReceivedDate]) AS [Year of Application]
FROM tblApplication
WHERE (((Year([tblApplication].[AppReceivedDate]))>=2008))
GROUP BY Year([tblApplication].[AppReceivedDate]);

I get ODBC-call failed... error. I am not sure what's wrong with it.

Thank you ,

Art Lorenzini

































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Posted by: Art Lorenzini <dbalorenzini@yahoo.com>
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