Pictures in a report

T

trekgoes2malaysia

What is the least memory taking method for displaying pictures on a
report. When using forms, I refer to the pathname that is stored in a
field to retrieve and display the picture. Can I do something similar
on a report?

Patrick
 
F

fredg

On Mon, 25 Feb 2008 20:05:34 -0800 (PST),
What is the least memory taking method for displaying pictures on a
report. When using forms, I refer to the pathname that is stored in a
field to retrieve and display the picture. Can I do something similar
on a report?

Patrick

Sure.
If the picture, for example, is placed in the Report Detail section,
and the Path and PictureName are stored in 2 separate fields, code the
Detail Format event:

[ImageName].Picture = [Path] & [PhotoName]

The above assumes you are using an Image control to display the
picture in.
 
T

trekgoes2malaysia

What is the least memory taking method for displaying pictures on a
report.  When using forms, I refer to the pathname that is stored in a
field to retrieve and display the picture.  Can I do something similar
on a report?

Sure.
If the picture, for example, is placed in the Report Detail section,
and the Path and PictureName are stored in 2 separate fields, code the
Detail Format event:

[ImageName].Picture = [Path] & [PhotoName]

The above assumes you are using an Image control to display the
picture in.

Thanks Fred will give it a try.
 
L

Larry Linson

What is the least memory taking method for displaying pictures on a
report. When using forms, I refer to the pathname that is stored in a
field to retrieve and display the picture. Can I do something similar
on a report?

The sample imaging databases at http://accdevel.tripod.com illustrate three
approaches to handling images in Access, and the download includes an
article discussing considerations in choosing an approach. Two of the
approaches do not use OLE Objects and, thus, avoid the database bloat, and
some other problems, associated with images in OLE Objects.

If you are printing the images in reports, to avoid memory leakage, you
should also see MVP Stephen Lebans' http://www.lebans.com/printfailures.htm.
PrintFailure.zip is an Access97 MDB containing a report that fails during
the Access formatting process prior to being spooled to the Printer Driver.
This MDB also contains code showing how to convert the contents of the Image
control to a Bitmap file prior to printing. This helps alleviate the "Out of
Memory" error that can popup when printing image intensive reports.

Larry Linson
Microsoft Office Access MVP
 

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