
Access 2019 For Dummies
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People who really know how to build, populate, and simplify databases are few and far between. Access 2019 For Dummies is here to help you join the ranks of office heroes who possess these precious skills.
This book offers clear and simple advice on how to build and operate databases as well as create simple forms, import data from outside sources, query databases for information, and share knowledge in reports. In short, it's the book that holds all the secrets behind the mysteries of Access!
* Build effective databases from the ground up
* Simplify your data entry with forms and tables
* Write queries that produce answers to your data questions
* Simplify input with forms
There's no time like the present to get your hands on the insight that database beginners need to become Access gurus.
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Ken Cook built and manages a computer consulting business that has helped users for over 20 years. He's an expert at creating Microsoft Office and Access database solutions and teaches online Access courses.
Content
- Intro
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- About This Book
- Foolish Assumptions
- Icons Used in This Book
- Where to Go from Here
- Part 1: Basic Training
- Chapter 1: Access 2019 Basic Training
- What Is Access Good For, Anyway?
- What's New in Access 2019?
- Reach Out with SharePoint
- How Access Works and How You Work with It
- Now What?
- Chapter 2: Navigating the Access Workspace
- Diving Right In
- Working with Onscreen Tools in Access
- Customizing the Access Workspace
- Mousing Around
- Navigating Access with the Alt Key
- Chapter 3: Database Basics
- Database Lingo
- Field Types and Uses
- Choosing Between Flat and Relational Databases
- Building a Database
- Adding and Removing Tables
- Part 2: Getting It All on the Table
- Chapter 4: Sounds Like a Plan
- Planning Your Database Tables
- Building Tables in Design View
- Chapter 5: Table Tune Ups
- The Primary Key to Success
- Making Tables Get Along
- Building Table Relationships
- Indexing for Faster Queries
- Chapter 6: Remodeling Your Data
- Opening a Table for Editing
- Inserting Records and Fields
- Modifying Field Content
- Name-Calling
- Turn Uh-Oh! into Yee-Hah!
- Chapter 7: Types, Masks, and Triggers
- Access Table Settings
- Field Data Formats
- Gaining Control of Data Entry
- Give Your Fingers a Mini Vacation by Default
- Part 3: Data Management Mania
- Chapter 8: A Form for All Reasons
- Generating Forms
- Customizing Form Parts
- Managing Data in Form View
- Chapter 9: Importing and Exporting Data
- Retrieving Data from Other Sources
- Hit the Road, Data
- Chapter 10: Automatically Editing Data
- Please Read This First!
- Creating Consistent Corrections
- Using Queries to Automate the Editing Process
- Chapter 11: Access and the Web
- How Access Works with the Web
- Understanding Office 365
- Connect Office 365 to Access 2019
- Part 4: The Power of Questions
- Chapter 12: Finding, Filtering, and Sorting Your Data - Fast
- Using the Find Command
- Sorting Alphabetically and Numerically
- Fast and Furious Filtering
- Chapter 13: I Was Just Asking . for Answers
- Simple (Yet Potent) Filter and Sort Tools
- Select Queries
- Getting Your Feet Wet with Ad Hoc Queries
- Chapter 14: I Want These AND Those OR Them
- Working with AND and/or OR
- Combining AND with OR and OR with AND
- Chapter 15: Number Crunching with the Total Row
- Say Hello to the Total Row
- Adding the Total Row to Your Queries
- Working Out the Total Row
- Creating Your Own Top-Ten List
- Choosing the Right Field for the Summary Instruction
- Chapter 16: Express Yourself with Formulas
- A Simple Calculation
- Complex Calculations
- Hooray for Expression Builder
- Chapter 17: Take Charge with Action Queries
- Easy Update
- Add Records in a Flash
- Quick Cleanup
- Part 5: Simple and Snazzy Reporting
- Chapter 18: Fast and Furious Automatic Reporting
- Quick and Not-S0-Dirty Automatic Reporting
- Previewing Your Report
- Beauty Is Only Skin (Report) Deep
- Chapter 19: Professionally Designed Reports Made Easy
- Report Repairs
- Report Organization
- Formatting Stuff
- Sneaking a Peek
- Getting a Themes Makeover
- Adding More Design Elements
- Chapter 20: Groups and Page Breaks, Headers and Footers
- A Place for Everything and Everything in Its Place
- Customizing Properties
- Chapter 21: Mailings to the Masses
- Massive Mailings with the Label Wizard
- Part 6: The Parts of Tens
- Chapter 22: Ten Common Problems
- That's Just Not Normal
- You Type 73.725, but It Changes to 74
- The Words They Are A-Changing
- Was There and Now It's Gone
- You Run a Query, but the Results Aren't What You Expect
- The Dreaded Parameter Dialog Box
- The Slowest Database in Town
- Your Database File Is as Big as a House
- You Get a Mess When Importing Your Spreadsheet
- We're Sorry
- Your Database File Is Corrupt
- Chapter 23: Ten Uncommon Tips
- Document Everything as Though One Day You'll Be Questioned by the FBI
- Keep Your Fields as Small as Possible
- Use Number Fields for Real Numbers
- Validate Your Data
- Use Understandable Names to Keep Things Simple
- Delete with Great Caution
- Backup, Backup, Backup
- Think, Think, and Think Again
- Get Organized and Stay Organized
- There's No Shame in Asking for Help
- Appendix A: Getting Help
- Index
- About the Author
- Advertisement Page
- Connect with Dummies
- End User License Agreement
Chapter 1
Access 2019 Basic Training
IN THIS CHAPTER
Deciding when to use Access
Discovering what's new in Access 2019
Unlocking the basics of working with Access
Figuring out how to get started
Access 2019, the latest version of the Microsoft Office database application, has always been a powerful program, and this version is no different. Chances are, you're reading this book because all that power makes Access an application that's not so easy to learn on your own. If you're hoping to unleash that power for your data, you'll need us. So, good decision to buy this book!
Now, all that power and the need for our book aside, with the very basic parts of Access, the basic functionality that you'll discover in this book, you'll be able to put Access through many of its most important paces, yet you'll be working with wizards and other onscreen tools that keep you at a comfortable arm's distance from the software's inner workings, the things that programmers and serious developers play with. There. Don't you feel better now?
You don't have to use every feature and tool and push the edges of the Access envelope. In fact, you can use very little of everything Access has to offer and still create quite a significant solution to your needs for storing and accessing data - all because Access can really "do it all" - enabling you to set up a database quickly, build records into that database, and then use that data in several useful ways. Later on, who knows? You may become an Access guru.
In this chapter, you'll discover what Access does best (and when you might want to use another tool instead), and you'll get a look at what's new and improved in Access 2019 (compared to Access 2016). You'll see how it does what it does, and hopefully you'll begin to understand and absorb some basic terminology.
Now, don't panic; nobody's expecting you to memorize tons of complex vocabulary or anything scary like that. The goal here (and in the next two chapters) with regard to terms is to introduce you to some basic words and general concepts intended to help you make better use of Access - as well as better understand later chapters in this book, if you choose to follow us all the way to its stunning, life-altering conclusion.
What Is Access Good For, Anyway?
What is Access good for? That's a good question. Well, the list of what you can do with it is a lot longer than the list of what you can't do with it - of course, especially if you leave things like "wash your car" and "put away the dishes" off the "can't do" list. When it comes to data organization, storage, and retrieval, Access is at the head of the class.
Building big databases
Okay, what do I mean by big database? Any database with a lot of records - and by a lot, I mean hundreds. At least. And certainly if you have thousands of records, you need a tool like Access to manage them. Although you can use Microsoft Excel to store lists of records, it limits how many you can store (no more than the number of rows in a single worksheet). In addition, you can't use Excel to set up anything beyond a simple list that can be sorted and filtered. So anything with a lot of records and complex data is best done in Access.
Some reasons why Access handles big databases well are:
- Typically, a big database has big data-entry needs. Access offers not only forms but also features that can create a quick form through which someone can enter all those records. This can make data entry easier and faster and can reduce the margin of error significantly. (Check out Chapter 8 for more about building forms.)
- When you have lots and lots of records, you also have lots of opportunities for errors to creep in. This includes duplicate records, records with misspellings, and records with missing information - and that's just for openers. So you need an application such as Access to ferret out those errors and fix them. (Chapter 10 lays out how you can use Access to find and replace errors and search for duplicate entries.)
- Big databases mean big needs for accurate, insightful reporting. Access has powerful reporting tools you can use to create printed and onscreen reports - and those can include as few or as many pieces of your data as you need, drawn from more than one table if need be. You can tailor your reports to your audience, from what's shown on the reports' pages to the colors and fonts used.
- Big databases are hard to wade through when you want to find something. Access provides several tools for sorting, searching, and creating your own specialized tools (known as queries) for finding the elusive single record or group of records you need.
- Access saves time by making it easy to import and recycle data. You may have used certain tools to import data from other sources - such as Excel worksheets (if you started in Excel and maxed out its usefulness as a data-storage device) and Word tables. Access saves you from reentering all your data and allows you to keep multiple data sources consistent.
Creating databases with multiple tables
Whether your database holds 100 records or 100,000 records (or more), if you need to keep separate tables and relate them for maximum use of the information, you need a relational database - and that's Access. How do you know whether your data needs to be in separate tables? Think about your data - is it very compartmentalized? Does it go off on tangents? Consider the following example and apply the concepts to your data and see if you need multiple tables for your database.
The Big Organization database
Imagine you work for a very large company, and the company has data pertaining to their customers and their orders, the products the company sells, its suppliers, and its employees. For a complex database like this one, you need multiple tables, as follows:
- One table houses the customer data - names, addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses.
- A second table contains the customers' orders, including the name of the customer who placed the order, the salesperson who handled the sale, shipping information, and the date of the order.
- A third table contains information on the products the company sells, including product numbers, supplier names, prices, and the number of items in stock.
- A fourth table contains supplier data - about the companies from which the main organization obtains its inventory of products to resell to customers. The table contains the company names, their contact person, and the address, email, and phone number information to reach them.
- A fifth table contains employees' data - from the date they were hired to their contact information to their job title - and also contains notes about them, sort of a summary of their resumes for reference.
Other tables exist, too - to keep a list of shipping companies and their contact information (for shipping customer orders), an expense table (for the expenses incurred in running the business), and other tables that are used with the main four tables. The need for and ways to use the main tables and these additional tables are covered later in this book, as you find out how to set up tools for data entry, look up records, and create reports that provide varying levels of detail on all the data you've stored.
Because you don't have to fill in every field for each record - in any table in the database - if you don't have a phone number or don't know an email address, for example, it's okay to leave those fields blank until you've obtained that information.
Fail to plan? Plan to fail
If you think carefully about your database, how you use your data, and what you need to know about your employees, customers, volunteers, donors, products, or projects - whatever you're storing information about - you can plan:
- How many tables you'll need
- Which data will go into which table
- How you'll use the tables together to get the reports you need
Of course, everyone forgets something, and plans change after a system has already been implemented. But don't worry - Access isn't so rigid that chaos will ensue if you begin building your tables and forget something (a field or two, an entire table). You can always add a field that you forgot (or that some bright spark just told you is needed) or add a new table after the fact. But planning ahead as thoroughly as possible is still essential.
As part of thorough planning, sketch your planned database on paper, drawing a kind of flowchart with boxes for each table and lists of fields that you'll have in each one. Draw arrows to show how they might be related - it's sort of like drawing a simple family tree - and you're well on your way to a well-planned, useful database.
Here's a handy procedure to follow if you're new to the process of planning a database:
- On paper or in a word-processing document, whichever is more comfortable, type the...
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