R
Reese Watt
Several weeks ago, we had a good discussion about the future of ADP's. For
the most part, it seemed like most of the features of ADP's could be
duplicated with other products.
But does anybody know if there is a good solution for Access Pivot Tables?
I'm sure somebody will mention the new PIVOT command in SQL 2005. But I've
researched that and it has some serious drawbacks. For one, you have to
know in advance what columns you want to pick. But also, it will only show
a two-dimensional grid. It doesn't give the nifty mult-dimensional expand
and collapse functions that you have in Access.
Those Pivot Tables, and specifically the ability to drill-down and collapse
the tables, offer very real value to our current application. As far as I
can tell, there is no way to duplicate that, even using Visual Studio.
Am I right about that?
the most part, it seemed like most of the features of ADP's could be
duplicated with other products.
But does anybody know if there is a good solution for Access Pivot Tables?
I'm sure somebody will mention the new PIVOT command in SQL 2005. But I've
researched that and it has some serious drawbacks. For one, you have to
know in advance what columns you want to pick. But also, it will only show
a two-dimensional grid. It doesn't give the nifty mult-dimensional expand
and collapse functions that you have in Access.
Those Pivot Tables, and specifically the ability to drill-down and collapse
the tables, offer very real value to our current application. As far as I
can tell, there is no way to duplicate that, even using Visual Studio.
Am I right about that?