|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewWhen you hear the word ?database,? do your eyes glaze over? Does the mention of fields and tables make your blood pressure skyrocket? Does the idea of entering and using hyperlinks make you hyperventilate? Whether you?re running a business or a household . . . whether you need to be able to quickly access customer information, your recipe for chicken cacciatore, or the Little League team?s records, Access 2003 holds the key. This friendly guide unlocks the secrets of using Access 2003 to store, manage, organize, reorganize, and use data! It gives you: The basics of the whole database concept Suggestions for solving problems with Access What you need to know to design, build, use, and change Access tables Info on the ten most common types of fields The scoop on using queries to unearth the answers hiding somewhere in your data Guidelines for using the Access report system to make short work of long, previously time-consuming, reports In the relaxed, comfortable For Dummies style, this book has easy-to-follow, step-by-step instructions and lots of screen shots. If you want to create and manage a database for a huge auction house, this guide will get you going . . . going . . . gone. If you want to create a database for your music collection, it gives you the score then shows you how to use formatting and add graphics to jazz it up. You?ll get the low-down on extracting all kinds of information from databases and putting that information to practical use. You?ll discover how to: Use Label Wizard to create mailing labels, file labels, shipping labels, or name tags Use Chart Wizard to create line charts, bar, cone, and column charts, pie and donut charts, area charts, and XY and bubble charts Use Auto Reports to create columnar or tabular reports and then fine-tune them Export reports to Microsoft Word and Excel Get your data Web-ready and put it on the Internet in either static or dynamic form Build forms with Form Wizard And speaking of high-tech fun, Access 2003 For Dummies even tells you how to install and use speech recognition software with Access 2003. So if the idea of working with databases has you talking to yourself, this is just the book you need. Full Product DetailsAuthor: John KaufeldPublisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc Imprint: Hungry Minds Inc,U.S. Dimensions: Width: 18.90cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 23.30cm Weight: 0.584kg ISBN: 9780764538810ISBN 10: 0764538810 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 10 October 2003 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1 Part I: Which Came First, the Data or the Base? 7 Chapter 1: The 37-Minute Overview 9 Chapter 2: Finding Your Way Around like a Native 23 Chapter 3: Calling the Online St. Bernard and Other Forms of Help 35 Part II: Truly Tempting Tables 41 Chapter 4: Designing and Building a Home for Your Data 43 Chapter 5: Relationships, Keys, and Indexes (and Why You Really Do Care) 67 Chapter 6: New Data, Old Data, and Data in Need of Repair 77 Chapter 7: Making Your Table Think with Formats, Masks, and Validations 87 Chapter 8: Making Your Datasheets Dance 103 Chapter 9: Table Remodeling Tips for the Do-It-Yourselfer 117 Part III: Finding the Ultimate Answer to Almost Everything 127 Chapter 10: Quick Searches: Find, Filter, and Sort 129 Chapter 11: Pose a Simple Query, Get 10,000 Answers 143 Chapter 12: Searching a Slew of Tables 157 Chapter 13: Lions AND Tigers OR Bears? Oh My! 167 Chapter 14: Teaching Queries to Think and Count 175 Chapter 15: Calculating Your Way to Fame and Fortune 187 Chapter 16: Automated Editing for Big Changes 199 Part IV: Turning Your Table into a Book 209 Chapter 17: AutoReport: Like the Model-T, It's Clunky but It Runs 211 Chapter 18: Wizardly Help with Labels, Charts, and Multilevel Reports 223 Chapter 19: It's Amazing What a Little Formatting Can Do 239 Chapter 20: Headers and Footers for Groups, Pages, and Even (Egad) Entire Reports 257 Part V: Wizards, Forms, and Other Mystical Stuff 273 Chapter 21: Spinning Your Data onto the Web 275 Chapter 22: Making Forms that Look Cool and Work Great 285 Chapter 23: If Love Is Universal, Why Can't I Export to It? 299 Chapter 24: The Analyzer: Your Data's Dr. Freud, Dr. Watson, and Dr. Jekyll 307 Chapter 25: Talking to Your Computer 315 Part VI: The Part of Tens 325 Chapter 26: Ten Timesaving Keyboard Shortcuts 327 Chapter 27: Ten Common Crises and How to Survive Them 331 Chapter 28: Ten Tips from Database Nerds 337 Index 343ReviewsAuthor InformationJohn Kaufeld has written all previous editions of Access For Dummies as well as several other books. John also operates shippertools.com, an online shipping assistant. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |