Hi, Jason.
Gunny i don't need your criticism
If I had criticized you, you'd feel one inch small right now. Trust me on
this. I gave you fair warning about learning Access on a beta version,
because you're in for a lot of frustration. Trust me on that, too.
I know what Access can do and have used it in the
past, but not consistently. I have experience programming w/ Oracle,
J2EE, .NET etc - I WILL know when it works right.
You're making unwarranted assumptions, because Access doesn't work like
Oracle or Java, and the .Net CLR you've worked with thus far is designed to
produce managed code to automate and control the pro 2003 versions of Excel
and Word, but not Access 2003 just yet. Access is designed so that even
computer novices can get a simple application to work without too much
difficulty, whereas Oracle, Java, and .Net are designed for IT professionals
to produce powerful software solutions.
I just might have an inkling of how you expect things to work, because I'm a
former C and Java software engineer and a current Oracle DBA. Access is
bass-ackwards from what you'd expect, but when you become well-versed in
Access, you'll realize that it's how Access was designed that produces much
of the head scratching episodes you are about to encounter. Access newbies
don't yet know these things, so it might help to listen to the advice of
others who have already been down this road.
That being said -
can any one help me to get to a state where when the User opens access
- he / she only sees Forms and Reports.
Don't expect a quick answer on this, as most of us experienced in Access and
signed up as beta testers are busy installing, activating, and playing with
the beta at the moment to see what it'll do. Or perhaps many are getting
ready to go out of town for the long holiday weekend. Perhaps I can get
back to you on this by tomorrow.
In the meantime, you just need to set a form to automatically open on start
up and make the Database Window not visible at start up. The steps are
probably similar in Access 2007 as they are in previous versions. Try the
Tools -> Startup... menu to open the Startup dialog window. Select your
startup form in the "Display Form/Page" combo box and uncheck the "Display
Database Window" check box. You can experiment with the other combo boxes
and check boxes in this dialog window, but make sure that you make a backup
of this file before you start experimenting. Access 2007 has a "lock down"
feature, which you may not want to use until you're comfortable with how to
unlock your settings.
Try using the shift bypass to open Access without the startup settings
running, so that you can see the Database Window when the application opens
and do your development work. Keep in mind that if you can bypass the
startup settings, your users can, too, so you'd have to get a little more
complex on your security strategy if you want to lock users out of seeing
things that they aren't supposed to.
HTH.
Gunny
See
http://www.QBuilt.com for all your database needs.
See
http://www.Access.QBuilt.com for Microsoft Access tips and tutorials.
http://www.Access.QBuilt.com/html/expert_contributors2.html for contact
info.