From: szag via AccessMonster.com on
I split my database recently and now I am experience terrible performance
when designing my forms. It can take 10 seconds just to select a field and
delete it. Or when I go into the design view of a form it may take a minute.
I realize that it might add a little time because of splitting but something
is obviously wrong when I have to sit and wait every time I click the mouse.
Help!!

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Message posted via http://www.accessmonster.com

From: Dorian on
What I do is to have a copy of the back-end on my local drive.
When I make updates I link to this local copy.
When deploying the changes, I just redo the links to point to the production
database.
-- Dorian
"Give someone a fish and they eat for a day; teach someone to fish and they
eat for a lifetime".


"szag via AccessMonster.com" wrote:

> I split my database recently and now I am experience terrible performance
> when designing my forms. It can take 10 seconds just to select a field and
> delete it. Or when I go into the design view of a form it may take a minute.
> I realize that it might add a little time because of splitting but something
> is obviously wrong when I have to sit and wait every time I click the mouse.
> Help!!
>
> --
> Message posted via http://www.accessmonster.com
>
> .
>
From: Jeff Boyce on
We experienced a similar massive slowdown after moving the data from our
apps to a back-end server. It turned out that the network antivirus was
newly-updated and misbehaving.

You might want to check Tony T's website for several possibilities for poor
performance ...

http://www.granite.ab.ca/access/

Regards

Jeff Boyce
Microsoft Access MVP

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Disclaimer: This author may have received products and services mentioned
in this post. Mention and/or description of a product or service herein
does not constitute endorsement thereof.

Any code or pseudocode included in this post is offered "as is", with no
guarantee as to suitability.

You can thank the FTC of the USA for making this disclaimer
possible/necessary.

"szag via AccessMonster.com" <u2885(a)uwe> wrote in message
news:a63b12bce03c5(a)uwe...
>I split my database recently and now I am experience terrible performance
> when designing my forms. It can take 10 seconds just to select a field and
> delete it. Or when I go into the design view of a form it may take a
> minute.
> I realize that it might add a little time because of splitting but
> something
> is obviously wrong when I have to sit and wait every time I click the
> mouse.
> Help!!
>
> --
> Message posted via http://www.accessmonster.com
>


From: szag via AccessMonster.com on
Sounds like great advice. Thanks!

Dorian wrote:
>What I do is to have a copy of the back-end on my local drive.
>When I make updates I link to this local copy.
>When deploying the changes, I just redo the links to point to the production
>database.
>-- Dorian
>"Give someone a fish and they eat for a day; teach someone to fish and they
>eat for a lifetime".
>
>> I split my database recently and now I am experience terrible performance
>> when designing my forms. It can take 10 seconds just to select a field and
>> delete it. Or when I go into the design view of a form it may take a minute.
>> I realize that it might add a little time because of splitting but something
>> is obviously wrong when I have to sit and wait every time I click the mouse.
>> Help!!

--
Message posted via http://www.accessmonster.com

From: szag via AccessMonster.com on
Thanks Jeff. Good link.

Jeff Boyce wrote:
>We experienced a similar massive slowdown after moving the data from our
>apps to a back-end server. It turned out that the network antivirus was
>newly-updated and misbehaving.
>
>You might want to check Tony T's website for several possibilities for poor
>performance ...
>
> http://www.granite.ab.ca/access/
>
>Regards
>
>Jeff Boyce
>Microsoft Access MVP
>
>>I split my database recently and now I am experience terrible performance
>> when designing my forms. It can take 10 seconds just to select a field and
>[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>> mouse.
>> Help!!

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Message posted via AccessMonster.com
http://www.accessmonster.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/access-tablesdbdesign/201004/1