G
Grover Park George
Almost the first thing I learned from one of my earliest Access
mentors was the "rename/copy" trick to ensure that I got the right
spelling of an object name to use elsewhere. It's become second nature
to the point where, even if I know the object name, I usually do the
rename/copy method almost out of habit.
My own naming conventions are quite traditional. I use three character
prefixes for tables, queries and reports and suffix ID for key fields.
However, I strongly believe the only crucial convention is
consistency.
George Hepworth, MS Access MVP
Please respond only in the newsgroups so that others can
read the entire thread of messages.
mentors was the "rename/copy" trick to ensure that I got the right
spelling of an object name to use elsewhere. It's become second nature
to the point where, even if I know the object name, I usually do the
rename/copy method almost out of habit.
My own naming conventions are quite traditional. I use three character
prefixes for tables, queries and reports and suffix ID for key fields.
However, I strongly believe the only crucial convention is
consistency.
George Hepworth, MS Access MVP
Please respond only in the newsgroups so that others can
read the entire thread of messages.