2007 Office System
To view Office Talk columns relating to the Microsoft Office 2007 system, click the articles to the left in the table of contents.
To view Office Talk columns relating to the Microsoft Office 2007 system, click the articles to the left in the table of contents.
The Microsoft Office System delivers a powerful collection of integrated programs, servers, services, tools, and technologies that can help developers build robust business solutions to streamline processes and connect people to information and to one another.
If you are new to Office development, and want to learn more about the possibilities offered by the Microsoft Office System to develop solutions, this section includes columns by long-time Microsoft Office developers and members of the Microsoft Office Developer Documentation team.
Read more...Office 2003
To view Office Talk columns pertaining to Microsoft Office 2003 Editions, click the articles to the left in the table of contents.
Microsoft Office 2000
The Microsoft Office System delivers a powerful collection of integrated programs, servers, services, tools, and technologies that can help developers build robust business solutions to streamline processes and connect people to information and to one another.
If you are new to Office development, and want to learn more about the possibilities offered by the Microsoft Office System to develop solutions, explore this set of helpful links to get you up to speed.
· FrontPage 2000 Server Extensions
· Microsoft SharePoint Products and Technologies
· Visual Studio Tools for the Microsoft Office System Reference
· Microsoft Office Developer Center
· Understanding Office Development
· 2007 Microsoft Office System for Architects
· Microsoft Office Business Applications
· Microsoft Visual Studio Developer Center
· Microsoft SharePoint Server 2007 Developer Center
· Windows SharePoint Services Developer Center
The Microsoft Office System delivers a powerful collection of integrated programs, servers, services, tools, and technologies that can help developers build robust business solutions to streamline processes and connect people to information and to one another.
If you are new to Office development, and want to learn more about the possibilities offered by the Microsoft Office System to develop solutions, explore this set of helpful links to get you up to speed.
· FrontPage 2000 Server Extensions
· Microsoft SharePoint Products and Technologies
· Visual Studio Tools for the Microsoft Office System Reference
· Microsoft Office Developer Center
· Understanding Office Development
· 2007 Microsoft Office System for Architects
· Microsoft Office Business Applications
· Microsoft Visual Studio Developer Center
· Microsoft SharePoint Server 2007 Developer Center
· Windows SharePoint Services Developer Center
Database File: This is your main file that encompasses the entire database and that is saved to your hard-drive or floppy disk.
Example) StudentDatabase.mdb Table:A table is a collection of data about a specific topic. There can be multiple tables in a database.
Example #1) Students
Example #2) Teachers Field:Fields are the different categories within a Table. Tables usually contain multiple fields.
Example #1) Student LastName
Example #2) Student FirstName Datatypes:Datatypes ar
e the properties of each field. A field only has 1 datatype.
FieldName) Student LastName
Datatype) Text
This tutorial will help you get started with Microsoft Access and may solve some of your problems, but it is a very good idea to use the Help Files that come with Microsoft Access (or any program you use for that matter), or go to Microsoft's web site located at http://microsoft.com/office/access/default.htm for further assistance.
Starting Microsoft AccessWhen Microsoft Access first starts up, a dialog box is automatically displayed with options to create a new database or open an existing one. If this dialog box is displayed,
click Access Database Wizards, pages, and projects and then click OK.
If you have already opened a database or closed the dialog box that displays when Microsoft Access starts up, click New Database on the toolbar.
On the Databases tab, double-click the icon for the kind of database you want to create.
When Microsoft Access first starts up, a dialog box is automatically displayed with options to create a new database or open an existing one. If this dialog box is displayed, click Blank Access Database, and then click OK.
If you have already opened a database or closed the dialog box that displays when Microsoft Access starts up, click New Database on the toolbar, and then double-click the Blank Database icon on the General tab.
Specify a name and location for the database and click Create. (Below is the screen that shows up following this step)
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