is an organised way of creating, editing and displaying data from the table
Report
c Query
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Microsoft Access basics – tables, forms, queries and reports
This is the first in a series of posts we’ll be creating over the coming months about the fundamentals of Microsoft Access.
This series has been devised to answer the questions that everyone has when they start using Microsoft Access for creating databases, or when they first begin to use existing Microsoft Access databases.
The series is designed to fill in the gaps left by the plethora of great articles on the web which answer the complex questions, or the challenges posed by developing a database, but often assume that the fundamentals are already grasped. In fact, in our experience, it’s all too easy to assume that people already get the basics when that’s not always the case.
So let’s start at the beginning, with a guided tour of the fundamental objects you’ll encounter when working in Microsoft Access.
An overview of the objects in Microsoft Access
When you create a database in Microsoft Access, you have a number of different types of object: tables, forms, reports, queries, macros and modules. You may also have – depending on which version of Microsoft Access you’re using – data access pages. But for the moment, we’ll stick to the basic six types of object and go through each of these in turn.
Explanation:
Explanation:
form is an organized way of creating, editing and displaying data from the table