Free Trial

Safari Books Online is a digital library providing on-demand subscription access to thousands of learning resources.


  • Create BookmarkCreate Bookmark
  • Create Note or TagCreate Note or Tag
  • DownloadDownload
  • PrintPrint
Share this Page URL
Help

Part IV: Access 2007 >  Queries: Reusable Searches

31. Queries: Reusable Searches

In a typical database, with thousands or millions of records, you may find it quite a chore finding the information you need. In Chapter 28, you learned how to go on the hunt using the tools of the datasheet, including filtering, searching, and sorting. At first glance, these tools seem like the perfect solution for digging up bits of hard-to-find information. However, there's a problem: The datasheet features are temporary.

To understand the problem, imagine you're creating an Access database for a mailorder food company named Boutique Fudge. Using datasheet filtering, sorting, and column hiding, you can pare down the Orders table so it shows only the most expensive orders placed in the past month. (This information's perfect for targeting big spenders or crafting a hot marketing campaign.) Next, you can apply a different set of settings to find out which customers order more than five pounds of fudge every Sunday. (You could use this information for more detailed market research, or just pass it along to the Department of Health.) But every time you apply new datasheet settings, you lose your previous settings. If you want to jump back from one view to another, then you need to painstakingly reapply all your settings. If you've spent some time crafting the perfect view of your data, this process adds up to a lot of unnecessary extra work.


  

You are currently reading a PREVIEW of this book.

                                                                                        

Get instant access to over
$1 million worth of books and videos.

  

Start a Free Trial