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From: Kim on 3 Jul 2008 12:53 I am new to Access and am setting up my first database to track several breakout sessions for one large conference. So far, I have a 'presenters' table and a 'sessions' table. I want to create a form that I can enter the session info and then select the presenter(s) from a dropdown list and then once I select the presenter(s) it would automatically fill in their company, title, phone number and email address. There could be just one presenter for each session or there could be multiple presenters. Also, each presenter could be teaching multiple breakout sessions. Any suggestions on how to make this work would be greatly appreciated - thanks!
From: Jeff Boyce on 3 Jul 2008 13:25 Kim It sounds like you are creating ... a spreadsheet! If you have a table with Presenters (and their contact info), you don't need to "fill in" that information because it is already available. There's no advantage to duplicating the same information over and over, and some serious disadvantages. Look into using a query to pull together the information you need (e.g., Presenter's contact info). Good luck! Regards Jeff Boyce Microsoft Office/Access MVP "Kim" <Kim(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:70EF2D82-DD36-4C98-B507-DA7DD2ECD2EB(a)microsoft.com... >I am new to Access and am setting up my first database to track several > breakout sessions for one large conference. So far, I have a 'presenters' > table and a 'sessions' table. I want to create a form that I can enter > the > session info and then select the presenter(s) from a dropdown list and > then > once I select the presenter(s) it would automatically fill in their > company, > title, phone number and email address. There could be just one presenter > for > each session or there could be multiple presenters. Also, each presenter > could be teaching multiple breakout sessions. Any suggestions on how to > make > this work would be greatly appreciated - thanks!
From: Ken Sheridan on 4 Jul 2008 19:31 You need a third table, SessionPresenters to model the many-to-many relationship type between Sessions and Presenters. Assuming Sessions and Presenters have primary key columns SessionID and PresenterID (probably autonumbers) the new table would have just two columns SessionID and PresenterID, but not autonumbers this time, just straightforward long integer number data types. The primary key of SessionPresenters is a composite one made up of both columns, each of which is a foreign key referencing the primary keys of the other two tables. For data entry have a Sessions form in single form view based on the Sessions table (or better still a query on that table sorted by session title or whatever order you want the form to show the sessions in) and a subform in continuous form view based on the SessionPresenters table. The LinkMasterFields and LinkChildFields properties of the subform control will both be SessionID. The subform will contain a combo box set up like this: Name: cboPresenter ContrlSource: PresenterID RowSource: SELECT [PresenterID], [Company], [Title], [Phone Number], [Email], [Presenter] FROM [Presenters] ORDER BY [Presenter]; BoundColum: 1 ColumnCount: 6 ColumnWidths 0cm;0cm;0cm;0cm;0cm;8cm If your units of measurement are imperial rather than metric Access will automatically convert the last one. The important thing is that the first 5 dimensions are zero to hide the first 5 columns and that the last is at least as wide as the combo box. If you have FirstName and LastName columns in the Presenters table rather than a single Presenter column, change the RowSource to: SELECT [PresenterID], [Company], [Title], [Phone Number], [Email], [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] FROM [Presenters] ORDER BY [LastName], [FirstName]; You'll have to change the column names in the above to your actual ones of course. Add 4 unbound text boxes to the subform with ControlSource properties of: =[cboPresenter].[Column](1) =[cboPresenter].[Column](2) =[cboPresenter].[Column](3) =[cboPresenter].[Column](4) The Column property is zero-based, so Column(1) is the second column (Company) and so on. When you select a presenter from the combo box's list the four unbound text boxes will show the company, title, phone number and email address for the selected presenter. You can add as many presenters per session simply by entering a new row for each in the subform. You can use the form wizards to create the form and subform, then open the former in design view and embed the latter in it as a subform. You could create a report/subreport in much the same way of course for printing out the sessions and their presenters. However, a better way would be to join all three tables in query, base a report on this and group the report by session title (or whatever), putting the session data in a group header and the presenters data in the detail section. Once you've created the query you can use the report wizard to build the report. Ken Sheridan Stafford, England "Kim" wrote: > I am new to Access and am setting up my first database to track several > breakout sessions for one large conference. So far, I have a 'presenters' > table and a 'sessions' table. I want to create a form that I can enter the > session info and then select the presenter(s) from a dropdown list and then > once I select the presenter(s) it would automatically fill in their company, > title, phone number and email address. There could be just one presenter for > each session or there could be multiple presenters. Also, each presenter > could be teaching multiple breakout sessions. Any suggestions on how to make > this work would be greatly appreciated - thanks!
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