How can I Automate a complex update process involving 3-4 tables?.

E

efandango

Hello Cystal,

I have sent you a file in Access 2003.

regards

Eric


strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

ps, I will look at your file faster if you convert it to Access 2003
before you send it to me ... that is the version I am using most of the
time and, with what I am helping you with, it (probably) doesn't matter...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:

Road_Name_From
Road_Name_to

~~

use this same method to change Roadnames to IDs in your other tables

each place on a form where you have a textbox for the RoadName, change
it to a combobox (right-click, changeTo --> combo) and set the
properties I specified above and put code on the NotInList event

~~~~~~~~~`

once your data is using IDs and not names, then send me your db again
and I will guide you for creating the cross-reference table for
specifying the restrictions

I could do this for you but that would not teach you anything. While
you may be looking at this as a looming task, it should take no more
than a couple hours...


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
:

hi Eric,
now, to your question:

"What I want to do is have the update process say, this Waypoint also
exists elsewhere in the database, therefore a copy of the relevant road
restriction and the related sub record set for the details will be made
and assigned to those duplicates wherever they appear."

It would be more accurate to make comparisons if you were storing IDs
rather than names (I know you said you do not want to make these
changes, but consider the life of the database and how far into that
life you are right now...)

I am guessing that the Road_restrictions_Detail lists the Waypoint where
the restriction applies in the Road Restrictions table...

consider this:
If you had a Roads table with RoadID ... then the
Road_restrictions_Detail table would, in essence, be a cross-reference

Hi Crystal,

For now, I would like to deal with the main question in hand, and come back
on the various points you made about structure, coding, etc.

so what you are saying is have the best thing to do is have the various
waypoints as individual entities, like:

Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 363
South Street 261
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261
...

Instead of:
Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 1492
South Street 391
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261

Assuming that is what you mean; I guess it makes sense, and makes for a
normalised structure; right?
 
S

strive4peace

Hi Eric,

got it, thanks

in tbl_Waypoints

sort on Run_waypoint_ID
delete the 0's you have

then make a relationship from tlb_Waypoints_Master_List to tbl_Waypoints
on Run_waypoint_ID and Enforce Referential Integrity

If you want to be able to type a Waypoint that is not in the list and
automatically create a record in the master list, on frm_Waypoints, put
this code on the NotInList [event procedure] for Run_waypoint

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub Run_waypoint_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String


'if you want to convert to ProperCase
mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

s = "INSERT INTO tbl_Waypoints_Master_List(Run_waypoint) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("Run_waypoint_ID", "tbl_Waypoints_Master_List"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

Me.ActiveControl = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


in
Private Sub Run_waypoint_AfterUpdate()
add this line to the top -->
If Len(Trim(Nz(Run_waypoint.Column(2), ""))) = 0 Then Exit Sub



Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


Hello Cystal,

I have sent you a file in Access 2003.

regards

Eric


strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

ps, I will look at your file faster if you convert it to Access 2003
before you send it to me ... that is the version I am using most of the
time and, with what I am helping you with, it (probably) doesn't matter...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:

Road_Name_From
Road_Name_to

~~

use this same method to change Roadnames to IDs in your other tables

each place on a form where you have a textbox for the RoadName, change
it to a combobox (right-click, changeTo --> combo) and set the
properties I specified above and put code on the NotInList event

~~~~~~~~~`

once your data is using IDs and not names, then send me your db again
and I will guide you for creating the cross-reference table for
specifying the restrictions

I could do this for you but that would not teach you anything. While
you may be looking at this as a looming task, it should take no more
than a couple hours...


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
:

hi Eric,
now, to your question:

"What I want to do is have the update process say, this Waypoint also
exists elsewhere in the database, therefore a copy of the relevant road
restriction and the related sub record set for the details will be made
and assigned to those duplicates wherever they appear."

It would be more accurate to make comparisons if you were storing IDs
rather than names (I know you said you do not want to make these
changes, but consider the life of the database and how far into that
life you are right now...)

I am guessing that the Road_restrictions_Detail lists the Waypoint where
the restriction applies in the Road Restrictions table...

consider this:
If you had a Roads table with RoadID ... then the
Road_restrictions_Detail table would, in essence, be a cross-reference
Hi Crystal,

For now, I would like to deal with the main question in hand, and come back
on the various points you made about structure, coding, etc.

so what you are saying is have the best thing to do is have the various
waypoints as individual entities, like:

Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 363
South Street 261
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261
...

Instead of:
Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 1492
South Street 391
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261

Assuming that is what you mean; I guess it makes sense, and makes for a
normalised structure; right?
 
E

efandango

Ok, I will try that. But going back to my original question; how would I make
things so that the user can avoid having to trawl through the master records
of waypoints and create sub records for any previous (dupe) records
elsewhere; Instead, I want to add new records from 'tbl_Road_Restrictions'
and its sub-table
'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' to duplicate Waypoints (without an
intersection subrecord) in other corresponding records of 'tbl_Waypoints'
using [Run_No] as the reference/link.

regards

Eric

strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

got it, thanks

in tbl_Waypoints

sort on Run_waypoint_ID
delete the 0's you have

then make a relationship from tlb_Waypoints_Master_List to tbl_Waypoints
on Run_waypoint_ID and Enforce Referential Integrity

If you want to be able to type a Waypoint that is not in the list and
automatically create a record in the master list, on frm_Waypoints, put
this code on the NotInList [event procedure] for Run_waypoint

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub Run_waypoint_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String


'if you want to convert to ProperCase
mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

s = "INSERT INTO tbl_Waypoints_Master_List(Run_waypoint) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("Run_waypoint_ID", "tbl_Waypoints_Master_List"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

Me.ActiveControl = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


in
Private Sub Run_waypoint_AfterUpdate()
add this line to the top -->
If Len(Trim(Nz(Run_waypoint.Column(2), ""))) = 0 Then Exit Sub



Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


Hello Cystal,

I have sent you a file in Access 2003.

regards

Eric


strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

ps, I will look at your file faster if you convert it to Access 2003
before you send it to me ... that is the version I am using most of the
time and, with what I am helping you with, it (probably) doesn't matter...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:
 
S

strive4peace

Hi Eric,

I would have covered that ... but you did not replace the text fields in
'tbl_Road_Restrictions' and 'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' with numeric
ID fields ... so it did not look like you were ready for that information.

once you do this, as the user types a waypoint name, the combobox will
move to that selection -- they do not have to "trawl through the master
records" with the arrows... and, if they end up typing a completely new
name, you can use a NotInList event to add those new waypoint names to
your master list.


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


Ok, I will try that. But going back to my original question; how would I make
things so that the user can avoid having to trawl through the master records
of waypoints and create sub records for any previous (dupe) records
elsewhere; Instead, I want to add new records from 'tbl_Road_Restrictions'
and its sub-table
'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' to duplicate Waypoints (without an
intersection subrecord) in other corresponding records of 'tbl_Waypoints'
using [Run_No] as the reference/link.

regards

Eric

strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

got it, thanks

in tbl_Waypoints

sort on Run_waypoint_ID
delete the 0's you have

then make a relationship from tlb_Waypoints_Master_List to tbl_Waypoints
on Run_waypoint_ID and Enforce Referential Integrity

If you want to be able to type a Waypoint that is not in the list and
automatically create a record in the master list, on frm_Waypoints, put
this code on the NotInList [event procedure] for Run_waypoint

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub Run_waypoint_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String


'if you want to convert to ProperCase
mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

s = "INSERT INTO tbl_Waypoints_Master_List(Run_waypoint) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("Run_waypoint_ID", "tbl_Waypoints_Master_List"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

Me.ActiveControl = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


in
Private Sub Run_waypoint_AfterUpdate()
add this line to the top -->
If Len(Trim(Nz(Run_waypoint.Column(2), ""))) = 0 Then Exit Sub



Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


Hello Cystal,

I have sent you a file in Access 2003.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

ps, I will look at your file faster if you convert it to Access 2003
before you send it to me ... that is the version I am using most of the
time and, with what I am helping you with, it (probably) doesn't matter...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:
 
E

efandango

The reason I hadn't changed them (yet) was because I am still dealing with
the problem of how to deal with various suplicate Addresses that are in the
waypoint table that will constitute the eventual address master list, the
table that you call roadnames. The problem is that the full database is a
live document (unlike the cutdown version I send you) and I can't allow the
various waypoint lists to fall out of order, at the same time, If I
consolidate the dupe addresses into single-entity representations of those
addresses, I will end up with gaps in my waypoiint lists. In short the whole
thing has to be done manually and meothodically, I can't see how a query
would achieve the same result. So for now, I am trying to do just that, make
the addresses from the waypoint table spawn a tbl_Waypoints_Master_List, so
pleae bear with me while I get this done and I will come back to you.

I jiust wanted to know how the process of creating copies of the related
'tbl_Road_Restrictions' and its sub-table 'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail'
would work as much out of curiosity as it is out of need.

Though to be honest, I am confused by your answer

"once you do this, as the user types a waypoint name, the combobox will move
to that selection -- they do not have to "trawl through the master records"
with the arrows... and, if they end up typing a completely new name, you can
use a NotInList event to add those new waypoint names to your master list."

which just sounds like a description of a combo box using autoexpand and not
the answer I was expecting to the main question that began this thread.

regards

Eric





strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

I would have covered that ... but you did not replace the text fields in
'tbl_Road_Restrictions' and 'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' with numeric
ID fields ... so it did not look like you were ready for that information.

once you do this, as the user types a waypoint name, the combobox will
move to that selection -- they do not have to "trawl through the master
records" with the arrows... and, if they end up typing a completely new
name, you can use a NotInList event to add those new waypoint names to
your master list.


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


Ok, I will try that. But going back to my original question; how would I make
things so that the user can avoid having to trawl through the master records
of waypoints and create sub records for any previous (dupe) records
elsewhere; Instead, I want to add new records from 'tbl_Road_Restrictions'
and its sub-table
'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' to duplicate Waypoints (without an
intersection subrecord) in other corresponding records of 'tbl_Waypoints'
using [Run_No] as the reference/link.

regards

Eric

strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

got it, thanks

in tbl_Waypoints

sort on Run_waypoint_ID
delete the 0's you have

then make a relationship from tlb_Waypoints_Master_List to tbl_Waypoints
on Run_waypoint_ID and Enforce Referential Integrity

If you want to be able to type a Waypoint that is not in the list and
automatically create a record in the master list, on frm_Waypoints, put
this code on the NotInList [event procedure] for Run_waypoint

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub Run_waypoint_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String


'if you want to convert to ProperCase
mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

s = "INSERT INTO tbl_Waypoints_Master_List(Run_waypoint) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("Run_waypoint_ID", "tbl_Waypoints_Master_List"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

Me.ActiveControl = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


in
Private Sub Run_waypoint_AfterUpdate()
add this line to the top -->
If Len(Trim(Nz(Run_waypoint.Column(2), ""))) = 0 Then Exit Sub



Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Hello Cystal,

I have sent you a file in Access 2003.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

ps, I will look at your file faster if you convert it to Access 2003
before you send it to me ... that is the version I am using most of the
time and, with what I am helping you with, it (probably) doesn't matter...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road
 
S

strive4peace

Hi Eric,

"I can't allow the various waypoint lists to fall out of order"

Since the lists must have an order, give the users an Ordr ('Order' is a
reserved word) field that is automatically assigned by Access when
records are created, and that they have the ability to change -- or use
another method*.

"In short the whole thing has to be done manually and meothodically"

I agree that what you need to do is something methodical; ideally, you
would have a 2-dimensional way of keeping things in order.

* Another option is to fill Latitude/Longitude for each road and
intersection. If you do everything manually, believe me, that will lead
to more headaches down the road than you have now!

After more thought, I see that perhaps, ideally, you could use something
like this (and this is just a start, probably requires more thought):

Intersections
IntersectID, autonumber
- Lat, double
- Lng, double

Intersect_Waypoints
- IntersectID, autonumber
- IntSectID, long, FK to Intersections
- Run_waypoint_ID, long, FK to tbl_Waypoints_Master_List
- DirectionID, long, FK to DirectionIDs

DirectionIDs 'so it is not confused with more generic use of term
- DirectionID, autonumber
- Direction, text, 10 ' E-W, N-S, etc

store Latitude and Longitude as numbers in separate fields so that you
can calculate distances and use them for ordering records. Currently
you are storing BOTH Lat and Long in a text field... if you have this
information, you can put it to much better use!

Ideally, roads would be straight; but they are not -- this leads to more
complexity. You are probably under the gun, so to speak, by your boss
to get this done. Please understand that what you are attempting to do
is complicated.

On the form to identify Road Restrictions, you could store the beginning
intersection, the ending intersection, make sure that both are in the
Intersections and Intersect_Waypoints table and, if not, put them there.
then if necessary, make sure that the intermediate intersections are
also stored. This will make it possible to store the data once, keep it
ordered, and reuse it (the true goal of a database).

What you are doing it not easy, but certainly can be done. I am
offering ideas, not a complete solution; you are the best one to see
what you have to work with and, given possibnle methods, determine what
will work best for your situation. You must spend time studying if you
really want to get this right. The way you see it, you are on your last
legs of development; the way I see it, you are just beginning to grasp
the complexity of the problem. If you are looking for what I refer to
as duct-tape, sorry to have wasted your time.
~~~

I apologize that I have not been able to give you the exact answers you
seek. When I help someone, I first try to help them get onto the right
path with their data structure -- if the foundation isn't right, then
anything you do will be a temporary patch to make something work -- and,
once done, you may have more patches than cloth!

"not the answer I was expecting to the main question that began this thread"

It seems to me that what you have been unable to do is to see your
database from a different perspective -- I understand this; it is hard
to see the trees when you are knee-deep in alligators.

You keep coming back to the same question and I fault myself for not
being better with explanations; I just don't know any other way to put it.

I will be unavailable for the next 1-1/2 weeks. I was hoping to wrap up
my responses to you before my trip so you are not left hanging. Maybe
someone else can help.



Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


The reason I hadn't changed them (yet) was because I am still dealing with
the problem of how to deal with various suplicate Addresses that are in the
waypoint table that will constitute the eventual address master list, the
table that you call roadnames. The problem is that the full database is a
live document (unlike the cutdown version I send you) and I can't allow the
various waypoint lists to fall out of order, at the same time, If I
consolidate the dupe addresses into single-entity representations of those
addresses, I will end up with gaps in my waypoiint lists. In short the whole
thing has to be done manually and meothodically, I can't see how a query
would achieve the same result. So for now, I am trying to do just that, make
the addresses from the waypoint table spawn a tbl_Waypoints_Master_List, so
pleae bear with me while I get this done and I will come back to you.

I jiust wanted to know how the process of creating copies of the related
'tbl_Road_Restrictions' and its sub-table 'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail'
would work as much out of curiosity as it is out of need.

Though to be honest, I am confused by your answer

"once you do this, as the user types a waypoint name, the combobox will move
to that selection -- they do not have to "trawl through the master records"
with the arrows... and, if they end up typing a completely new name, you can
use a NotInList event to add those new waypoint names to your master list."

which just sounds like a description of a combo box using autoexpand and not
the answer I was expecting to the main question that began this thread.

regards

Eric





strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

I would have covered that ... but you did not replace the text fields in
'tbl_Road_Restrictions' and 'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' with numeric
ID fields ... so it did not look like you were ready for that information.

once you do this, as the user types a waypoint name, the combobox will
move to that selection -- they do not have to "trawl through the master
records" with the arrows... and, if they end up typing a completely new
name, you can use a NotInList event to add those new waypoint names to
your master list.


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


Ok, I will try that. But going back to my original question; how would I make
things so that the user can avoid having to trawl through the master records
of waypoints and create sub records for any previous (dupe) records
elsewhere; Instead, I want to add new records from 'tbl_Road_Restrictions'
and its sub-table
'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' to duplicate Waypoints (without an
intersection subrecord) in other corresponding records of 'tbl_Waypoints'
using [Run_No] as the reference/link.

regards

Eric

:

Hi Eric,

got it, thanks

in tbl_Waypoints

sort on Run_waypoint_ID
delete the 0's you have

then make a relationship from tlb_Waypoints_Master_List to tbl_Waypoints
on Run_waypoint_ID and Enforce Referential Integrity

If you want to be able to type a Waypoint that is not in the list and
automatically create a record in the master list, on frm_Waypoints, put
this code on the NotInList [event procedure] for Run_waypoint

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub Run_waypoint_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String


'if you want to convert to ProperCase
mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

s = "INSERT INTO tbl_Waypoints_Master_List(Run_waypoint) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("Run_waypoint_ID", "tbl_Waypoints_Master_List"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

Me.ActiveControl = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


in
Private Sub Run_waypoint_AfterUpdate()
add this line to the top -->
If Len(Trim(Nz(Run_waypoint.Column(2), ""))) = 0 Then Exit Sub



Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Hello Cystal,

I have sent you a file in Access 2003.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

ps, I will look at your file faster if you convert it to Access 2003
before you send it to me ... that is the version I am using most of the
time and, with what I am helping you with, it (probably) doesn't matter...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road
 
E

efandango

Hi Crystal,

I do understand what you are suggesting, and I am able to see the database
from a different perspective, I did say that I will make the further changes,
having made the initial one of basing my waypoints and the Waypoints Master
List (roads) on numerical indexes; it is simply a matter of making sure that
as I do that, I am able to keep the integrity of the Runs/Waypoint order
intact. You would have seen in my Waypoints table that I have an OrderSeq
field for this purpose. What I was reffering to manually was being able to
make sure that when I converted the various dupe (master) waypoint addresses
into single entity datafields, that they were the correct one's relative to
the original Waypoint(s) and order.

I have now managed to succesfully redo the Waypoints and Waypoints master
list so that they now relay on numerical fields and relationships. Though one
or two erroneous dupe records need looking at, the great bulk of them (6000+)
are synching properly, so it was this comment you made that I was most
relying on:

"once your data is using IDs and not names, then send me your db again
and I will guide you for creating the cross-reference table for
specifying the restrictions

I could do this for you but that would not teach you anything. While
you may be looking at this as a looming task, it should take no more
than a couple hours..."

because then I could take my time with recoding the various fields to
numerical and knowing that I had some 'engine' code to test with as I went
along, and would not need to keep coming back to you and taking up so much of
your valubale time.

kind regards

Eric



strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

"I can't allow the various waypoint lists to fall out of order"

Since the lists must have an order, give the users an Ordr ('Order' is a
reserved word) field that is automatically assigned by Access when
records are created, and that they have the ability to change -- or use
another method*.

"In short the whole thing has to be done manually and meothodically"

I agree that what you need to do is something methodical; ideally, you
would have a 2-dimensional way of keeping things in order.

* Another option is to fill Latitude/Longitude for each road and
intersection. If you do everything manually, believe me, that will lead
to more headaches down the road than you have now!

After more thought, I see that perhaps, ideally, you could use something
like this (and this is just a start, probably requires more thought):

Intersections
IntersectID, autonumber
- Lat, double
- Lng, double

Intersect_Waypoints
- IntersectID, autonumber
- IntSectID, long, FK to Intersections
- Run_waypoint_ID, long, FK to tbl_Waypoints_Master_List
- DirectionID, long, FK to DirectionIDs

DirectionIDs 'so it is not confused with more generic use of term
- DirectionID, autonumber
- Direction, text, 10 ' E-W, N-S, etc

store Latitude and Longitude as numbers in separate fields so that you
can calculate distances and use them for ordering records. Currently
you are storing BOTH Lat and Long in a text field... if you have this
information, you can put it to much better use!

Ideally, roads would be straight; but they are not -- this leads to more
complexity. You are probably under the gun, so to speak, by your boss
to get this done. Please understand that what you are attempting to do
is complicated.

On the form to identify Road Restrictions, you could store the beginning
intersection, the ending intersection, make sure that both are in the
Intersections and Intersect_Waypoints table and, if not, put them there.
then if necessary, make sure that the intermediate intersections are
also stored. This will make it possible to store the data once, keep it
ordered, and reuse it (the true goal of a database).

What you are doing it not easy, but certainly can be done. I am
offering ideas, not a complete solution; you are the best one to see
what you have to work with and, given possibnle methods, determine what
will work best for your situation. You must spend time studying if you
really want to get this right. The way you see it, you are on your last
legs of development; the way I see it, you are just beginning to grasp
the complexity of the problem. If you are looking for what I refer to
as duct-tape, sorry to have wasted your time.
~~~

I apologize that I have not been able to give you the exact answers you
seek. When I help someone, I first try to help them get onto the right
path with their data structure -- if the foundation isn't right, then
anything you do will be a temporary patch to make something work -- and,
once done, you may have more patches than cloth!

"not the answer I was expecting to the main question that began this thread"

It seems to me that what you have been unable to do is to see your
database from a different perspective -- I understand this; it is hard
to see the trees when you are knee-deep in alligators.

You keep coming back to the same question and I fault myself for not
being better with explanations; I just don't know any other way to put it.

I will be unavailable for the next 1-1/2 weeks. I was hoping to wrap up
my responses to you before my trip so you are not left hanging. Maybe
someone else can help.



Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


The reason I hadn't changed them (yet) was because I am still dealing with
the problem of how to deal with various suplicate Addresses that are in the
waypoint table that will constitute the eventual address master list, the
table that you call roadnames. The problem is that the full database is a
live document (unlike the cutdown version I send you) and I can't allow the
various waypoint lists to fall out of order, at the same time, If I
consolidate the dupe addresses into single-entity representations of those
addresses, I will end up with gaps in my waypoiint lists. In short the whole
thing has to be done manually and meothodically, I can't see how a query
would achieve the same result. So for now, I am trying to do just that, make
the addresses from the waypoint table spawn a tbl_Waypoints_Master_List, so
pleae bear with me while I get this done and I will come back to you.

I jiust wanted to know how the process of creating copies of the related
'tbl_Road_Restrictions' and its sub-table 'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail'
would work as much out of curiosity as it is out of need.

Though to be honest, I am confused by your answer

"once you do this, as the user types a waypoint name, the combobox will move
to that selection -- they do not have to "trawl through the master records"
with the arrows... and, if they end up typing a completely new name, you can
use a NotInList event to add those new waypoint names to your master list."

which just sounds like a description of a combo box using autoexpand and not
the answer I was expecting to the main question that began this thread.

regards

Eric





strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

I would have covered that ... but you did not replace the text fields in
'tbl_Road_Restrictions' and 'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' with numeric
ID fields ... so it did not look like you were ready for that information.

once you do this, as the user types a waypoint name, the combobox will
move to that selection -- they do not have to "trawl through the master
records" with the arrows... and, if they end up typing a completely new
name, you can use a NotInList event to add those new waypoint names to
your master list.


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Ok, I will try that. But going back to my original question; how would I make
things so that the user can avoid having to trawl through the master records
of waypoints and create sub records for any previous (dupe) records
elsewhere; Instead, I want to add new records from 'tbl_Road_Restrictions'
and its sub-table
'tbl_Road_Restrictions_Detail' to duplicate Waypoints (without an
intersection subrecord) in other corresponding records of 'tbl_Waypoints'
using [Run_No] as the reference/link.

regards

Eric

:

Hi Eric,

got it, thanks

in tbl_Waypoints

sort on Run_waypoint_ID
delete the 0's you have

then make a relationship from tlb_Waypoints_Master_List to tbl_Waypoints
on Run_waypoint_ID and Enforce Referential Integrity

If you want to be able to type a Waypoint that is not in the list and
automatically create a record in the master list, on frm_Waypoints, put
this code on the NotInList [event procedure] for Run_waypoint

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub Run_waypoint_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String


'if you want to convert to ProperCase
mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

s = "INSERT INTO tbl_Waypoints_Master_List(Run_waypoint) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("Run_waypoint_ID", "tbl_Waypoints_Master_List"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

Me.ActiveControl = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


in
Private Sub Run_waypoint_AfterUpdate()
add this line to the top -->
If Len(Trim(Nz(Run_waypoint.Column(2), ""))) = 0 Then Exit Sub



Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Hello Cystal,

I have sent you a file in Access 2003.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

ps, I will look at your file faster if you convert it to Access 2003
before you send it to me ... that is the version I am using most of the
time and, with what I am helping you with, it (probably) doesn't matter...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"
 
D

David Glienna (MVP)

I saw the old file, and have these comments: I opened the table in Access
2007 and used the visual designer to see the relationships.

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails aren't associated with any tables
Points, Runs, Master, and Waypoints are linked
Road Restrictions and _Details are linked

Too many unlinked tables.

I would convert into latitude/longitude based.


efandango said:
Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:

Road_Name_From
Road_Name_to

~~

use this same method to change Roadnames to IDs in your other tables

each place on a form where you have a textbox for the RoadName, change
it to a combobox (right-click, changeTo --> combo) and set the
properties I specified above and put code on the NotInList event

~~~~~~~~~`

once your data is using IDs and not names, then send me your db again
and I will guide you for creating the cross-reference table for
specifying the restrictions

I could do this for you but that would not teach you anything. While
you may be looking at this as a looming task, it should take no more
than a couple hours...


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


:

hi Eric,

now, to your question:

"What I want to do is have the update process say, this Waypoint also
exists elsewhere in the database, therefore a copy of the relevant road
restriction and the related sub record set for the details will be made
and assigned to those duplicates wherever they appear."

It would be more accurate to make comparisons if you were storing IDs
rather than names (I know you said you do not want to make these
changes, but consider the life of the database and how far into that
life you are right now...)

I am guessing that the Road_restrictions_Detail lists the Waypoint where
the restriction applies in the Road Restrictions table...

consider this:
If you had a Roads table with RoadID ... then the
Road_restrictions_Detail table would, in essence, be a cross-reference


Hi Crystal,

For now, I would like to deal with the main question in hand, and come back
on the various points you made about structure, coding, etc.

so what you are saying is have the best thing to do is have the various
waypoints as individual entities, like:

Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 363
South Street 261
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261
...

Instead of:
Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 1492
South Street 391
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261

Assuming that is what you mean; I guess it makes sense, and makes for a
normalised structure; right?

Though I am not sure how I would ge the query to resolve my original
question, but I guess the best thing is to do what you say, and cross that
bridge when I come to it... bearing in mind I want the query to update the
other various 'Runs' where the waypoint appears in terms of creating copies
of the associated 'Road_Restrictions' and the sub
''Road_Restrictions_Detail'. The reason I was reluctant to make those changes
is because I have over 5,000 instances of the waypoints divided unevenly
across over 330 Runs... but if it is ultimately the best way and results in
an elegant solution, then I will do it. For now, if you can confirm that I am
intepreting this correctly, then I will set about re-working the various
waypoints into their respective ID sets.

Though, I haven't figure out how yet because picking up on your coment about
how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end... (in short, all the data is in and save for the occasional adding of a
new Run, there won't be any more additions, though their will likely be
changes to existing Runs, Waypoints, etc.
 
E

efandango

David,

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails were originally associated with tbl_Runs. I
unhooked them when I was cutting down the number of records for a smaller
filesize in order to email the mdb; I simply forgot to re-synch them back to
the main table before I sent the file.

I am not sure what you mean by "I would convert into latitude/longitude
based". however, with regard to Lat and Lon fields, please don't let them
obscure the main issue, which is to synch assciated GetRounds with individual
waypoints across more than one Run.

regards

Eric


David Glienna (MVP) said:
I saw the old file, and have these comments: I opened the table in Access
2007 and used the visual designer to see the relationships.

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails aren't associated with any tables
Points, Runs, Master, and Waypoints are linked
Road Restrictions and _Details are linked

Too many unlinked tables.

I would convert into latitude/longitude based.


efandango said:
Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:

Road_Name_From
Road_Name_to

~~

use this same method to change Roadnames to IDs in your other tables

each place on a form where you have a textbox for the RoadName, change
it to a combobox (right-click, changeTo --> combo) and set the
properties I specified above and put code on the NotInList event

~~~~~~~~~`

once your data is using IDs and not names, then send me your db again
and I will guide you for creating the cross-reference table for
specifying the restrictions

I could do this for you but that would not teach you anything. While
you may be looking at this as a looming task, it should take no more
than a couple hours...


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
:

hi Eric,

now, to your question:

"What I want to do is have the update process say, this Waypoint also
exists elsewhere in the database, therefore a copy of the relevant road
restriction and the related sub record set for the details will be made
and assigned to those duplicates wherever they appear."

It would be more accurate to make comparisons if you were storing IDs
rather than names (I know you said you do not want to make these
changes, but consider the life of the database and how far into that
life you are right now...)

I am guessing that the Road_restrictions_Detail lists the Waypoint where
the restriction applies in the Road Restrictions table...

consider this:
If you had a Roads table with RoadID ... then the
Road_restrictions_Detail table would, in essence, be a cross-reference


Hi Crystal,

For now, I would like to deal with the main question in hand, and come back
on the various points you made about structure, coding, etc.

so what you are saying is have the best thing to do is have the various
waypoints as individual entities, like:

Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 363
South Street 261
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261
...

Instead of:
Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 1492
South Street 391
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261

Assuming that is what you mean; I guess it makes sense, and makes for a
normalised structure; right?

Though I am not sure how I would ge the query to resolve my original
question, but I guess the best thing is to do what you say, and cross that
bridge when I come to it... bearing in mind I want the query to update the
other various 'Runs' where the waypoint appears in terms of creating copies
 
S

strive4peace

Hi Eric,

The point that David is making is that you need a way to relate all your
data. Your structures and relationships need some re-thinking.

David's idea to base the data on Latitude and Longitude is good -- you
need a way to know WHICH intersections to apply to another road segment
and using Lat/Long would do that for you. You would need, of course, to
enter Lat/Long for each intersection.

The reason your question cannot be answered is because you are currently
only considering the endpoints and have no good way to associate your
data. You can use an artificial method, like having the user enter an
order but, this will turn out to be a lot more effort when lat/long can
be used...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


David,

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails were originally associated with tbl_Runs. I
unhooked them when I was cutting down the number of records for a smaller
filesize in order to email the mdb; I simply forgot to re-synch them back to
the main table before I sent the file.

I am not sure what you mean by "I would convert into latitude/longitude
based". however, with regard to Lat and Lon fields, please don't let them
obscure the main issue, which is to synch assciated GetRounds with individual
waypoints across more than one Run.

regards

Eric


David Glienna (MVP) said:
I saw the old file, and have these comments: I opened the table in Access
2007 and used the visual designer to see the relationships.

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails aren't associated with any tables
Points, Runs, Master, and Waypoints are linked
Road Restrictions and _Details are linked

Too many unlinked tables.

I would convert into latitude/longitude based.


efandango said:
Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:

Road_Name_From
Road_Name_to

~~

use this same method to change Roadnames to IDs in your other tables

each place on a form where you have a textbox for the RoadName, change
it to a combobox (right-click, changeTo --> combo) and set the
properties I specified above and put code on the NotInList event

~~~~~~~~~`

once your data is using IDs and not names, then send me your db again
and I will guide you for creating the cross-reference table for
specifying the restrictions

I could do this for you but that would not teach you anything. While
you may be looking at this as a looming task, it should take no more
than a couple hours...


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
:

hi Eric,
now, to your question:

"What I want to do is have the update process say, this Waypoint also
exists elsewhere in the database, therefore a copy of the relevant road
restriction and the related sub record set for the details will be made
and assigned to those duplicates wherever they appear."

It would be more accurate to make comparisons if you were storing IDs
rather than names (I know you said you do not want to make these
changes, but consider the life of the database and how far into that
life you are right now...)

I am guessing that the Road_restrictions_Detail lists the Waypoint where
the restriction applies in the Road Restrictions table...

consider this:
If you had a Roads table with RoadID ... then the
Road_restrictions_Detail table would, in essence, be a cross-reference

Hi Crystal,

For now, I would like to deal with the main question in hand, and come back
on the various points you made about structure, coding, etc.

so what you are saying is have the best thing to do is have the various
waypoints as individual entities, like:

Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 363
South Street 261
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261
...

Instead of:
Waypoint_Address Waypoint_ID
Main street 363
Main street 1492
South Street 391
Narrow Lane 47
South Street 261

Assuming that is what you mean; I guess it makes sense, and makes for a
normalised structure; right?

Though I am not sure how I would ge the query to resolve my original
question, but I guess the best thing is to do what you say, and cross that
bridge when I come to it... bearing in mind I want the query to update the
other various 'Runs' where the waypoint appears in terms of creating copies
 
E

efandango

Hi Crystal,

I understand the point(s) David was making, which is why i pointed out that
the unlinking of some tables was simply an error caused by my haste to post a
cut down version to yourself. But now we seem to have digressed into an area
involving geocode references, but as i suggested, they are not entirely
relevant to this particular application because it is essential to the
application that users enter the data, with very little in the way of
'intelligent interpretation' such as cross referencing geocodes, and the
like.

It is fundamental to this databases' usage that users enter data based on
fact finding as they go along each route. This is not an application where
for example, the database provides the information from a read only point of
view, it is really the opposite where users have to gather and intepret the
data , and only then can they enter it.

So, as I mentioned, there really is no need to obscure the main issue, with
a geocode cross-reference engine which is simply not required. What is
required is the ability to synch associated GetRounds with repeating
waypoints across more than one Run.


strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

The point that David is making is that you need a way to relate all your
data. Your structures and relationships need some re-thinking.

David's idea to base the data on Latitude and Longitude is good -- you
need a way to know WHICH intersections to apply to another road segment
and using Lat/Long would do that for you. You would need, of course, to
enter Lat/Long for each intersection.

The reason your question cannot be answered is because you are currently
only considering the endpoints and have no good way to associate your
data. You can use an artificial method, like having the user enter an
order but, this will turn out to be a lot more effort when lat/long can
be used...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


David,

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails were originally associated with tbl_Runs. I
unhooked them when I was cutting down the number of records for a smaller
filesize in order to email the mdb; I simply forgot to re-synch them back to
the main table before I sent the file.

I am not sure what you mean by "I would convert into latitude/longitude
based". however, with regard to Lat and Lon fields, please don't let them
obscure the main issue, which is to synch assciated GetRounds with individual
waypoints across more than one Run.

regards

Eric


David Glienna (MVP) said:
I saw the old file, and have these comments: I opened the table in Access
2007 and used the visual designer to see the relationships.

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails aren't associated with any tables
Points, Runs, Master, and Waypoints are linked
Road Restrictions and _Details are linked

Too many unlinked tables.

I would convert into latitude/longitude based.


:

Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:

Road_Name_From
Road_Name_to

~~

use this same method to change Roadnames to IDs in your other tables

each place on a form where you have a textbox for the RoadName, change
it to a combobox (right-click, changeTo --> combo) and set the
properties I specified above and put code on the NotInList event

~~~~~~~~~`

once your data is using IDs and not names, then send me your db again
and I will guide you for creating the cross-reference table for
specifying the restrictions

I could do this for you but that would not teach you anything. While
you may be looking at this as a looming task, it should take no more
than a couple hours...


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
:

hi Eric,
now, to your question:

"What I want to do is have the update process say, this Waypoint also
 
J

Jan Baird

Jan Baird is out of the country until September 20. Every effort will be
made to respond to messages, but please be patient.
 
S

strive4peace

Hi Eric,

I have spent some time with your database -- now I see that I did not
gather from your explanations exactly what you are trying to do ... I am
not ready to answer your question yet, need to still spend more time...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.AccessMVP.com/strive4peace

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



Hi Crystal,

I understand the point(s) David was making, which is why i pointed out that
the unlinking of some tables was simply an error caused by my haste to post a
cut down version to yourself. But now we seem to have digressed into an area
involving geocode references, but as i suggested, they are not entirely
relevant to this particular application because it is essential to the
application that users enter the data, with very little in the way of
'intelligent interpretation' such as cross referencing geocodes, and the
like.

It is fundamental to this databases' usage that users enter data based on
fact finding as they go along each route. This is not an application where
for example, the database provides the information from a read only point of
view, it is really the opposite where users have to gather and intepret the
data , and only then can they enter it.

So, as I mentioned, there really is no need to obscure the main issue, with
a geocode cross-reference engine which is simply not required. What is
required is the ability to synch associated GetRounds with repeating
waypoints across more than one Run.


strive4peace said:
Hi Eric,

The point that David is making is that you need a way to relate all your
data. Your structures and relationships need some re-thinking.

David's idea to base the data on Latitude and Longitude is good -- you
need a way to know WHICH intersections to apply to another road segment
and using Lat/Long would do that for you. You would need, of course, to
enter Lat/Long for each intersection.

The reason your question cannot be answered is because you are currently
only considering the endpoints and have no good way to associate your
data. You can use an artificial method, like having the user enter an
order but, this will turn out to be a lot more effort when lat/long can
be used...

Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*


David,

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails were originally associated with tbl_Runs. I
unhooked them when I was cutting down the number of records for a smaller
filesize in order to email the mdb; I simply forgot to re-synch them back to
the main table before I sent the file.

I am not sure what you mean by "I would convert into latitude/longitude
based". however, with regard to Lat and Lon fields, please don't let them
obscure the main issue, which is to synch assciated GetRounds with individual
waypoints across more than one Run.

regards

Eric


:

I saw the old file, and have these comments: I opened the table in Access
2007 and used the visual designer to see the relationships.

GetRounds and GetRoundsDetails aren't associated with any tables
Points, Runs, Master, and Waypoints are linked
Road Restrictions and _Details are linked

Too many unlinked tables.

I would convert into latitude/longitude based.


:

Hello Crystal,

I have sent you a new file, with an email message. I forgot to mention in my
last email, that I have not actually recieved any emails from yourself, i
checked to see if any were blocked, and nothing seems to be wrong at this end.

regards

Eric


:

Hi Eric,

"how far into the life of the db I am; the answer is all the way, to the
end"

I was referring to its use, not development

While I can see you have put quite a bit of time into developing it,
there is only so far you can go with duct tape and bailing wire <smile>

Please understand that designing tables is an iterative process; even
the best of us have to redo work; it is better to make your structure
strong now than face problems later

~~

both of the examples you posted are the same ... can you post the
alternative?

I notice that the Waypoints table has duplicate entries, which is why I
suggested a Roads table that would have distinct names.

It would not take as much time as you think to convert to using IDs
instead of text. If, for instance, you have a combobox where the first
column (ID) is hidden and the text shows, it is easy to add that new
text entry, for instance, to the Roads table and pull the new ID

on your form, here is an example with the properties you need to set for
a combobox that stores the ID and displays the text

combobox control

Name --> RoadID
ControlSource --> RoadID
RowSource -->
SELECT
RoadID,
RoadName
FROM Roads
ORDER BY RoadName

BoundColumn --> 1
ColumnCount --> 2

columnWidths --> 0;2
(etc for however many columns you have
-- the ID column will be hidden since its width is zero)

ListWidth --> 2
(should add up to the sum of the column widths)

RoadID will be stored in the form RecordSource while showing you
information from another table...

for the NotInList event of the combobox, here is code behind the form:

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Private Sub RoadID_NotInList( _
NewData As String, _
Response As Integer)

'assumption:
'and its first column (hidden)
'is the Autonumber record ID for the source table

Dim s As String _
, mRecordID As Long _
, mText As String

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Choose ONE of these code blocks

'--------------------------------------------------------

'if you want to convert to ProperCase
'mText = StrConv(NewData, vbProperCase)

's = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & mText & "';"

'---------------

'or, if you wish to leave it as the user entered...

s = "INSERT INTO Roads (RoadName) " _
& " SELECT '" & NewData & "';"

'--------------------------------------------------------

'comment or remove next line after this works correctly
Debug.Print s

CurrentDb.Execute s

CurrentDb.TableDefs.Refresh
DoEvents

mRecordID = Nz(DMax("RoadID", "Roads"))

If mRecordID > 0 Then
Response = acDataErrAdded

'assuming the first column of the listbox
'is the RecordID, RecordID and is a Long Integer

me.RoadID = mRecordID
Else
Response = acDataErrContinue
End If

End Sub
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


WHERE
- control Name for RoadID is also RoadID

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`

ok, so we got that ... right? and now you are probably wondering how
you are going to convert your data ... easy!

Make a copy of your database so you have no fear about messing it up (if
that is what happens)

First, make the Roads table from your names:

SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint AS RoadName
INTO tbl_Roads
FROM tbl_Waypoints
WHERE (((tbl_Waypoints.Run_waypoint) Is Not Null));

now, we will modify the Roads table to add:
- RoadID, autonumber

and we will also add a unique index:
field --> RoadName
Indexed --> Yes (No Duplicates)
Descirption --> Name of Road

~~~

now, with the unique index, we can add the road names used from other
tables without fear of duplicating what is already there...

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To) Is Not Null));

INSERT INTO tbl_Roads ( RoadName )
SELECT DISTINCT tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From
FROM tbl_Road_Restrictions
WHERE (((tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From) Is Not Null));

when you run each of these queries, Access will probably tell you it
cannot append all records -- and that is fine, the problem is that some
of them are already there -- your unique index on RoadName is protecting
you <smile>

Now, add the following fields to tbl_Road_Restrictions

- RoadID_to, Number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name To
- RoadID_from, number, Field Size --> Long, Default Value --> null,
Description --> Road Name From

ok, now we just have to update the ID fields...

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_To = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_To = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

UPDATE tbl_Road_Restrictions
INNER JOIN tbl_Roads
ON tbl_Road_Restrictions.Road_Name_From = tbl_Roads.RoadName
SET tbl_Road_Restrictions.RoadID_From = [tbl_Roads].[RoadID];

verify that IDs are filled wherever you have road names in
tbl_Road_Restrictions ... then you can delete the following fields:

Road_Name_From
Road_Name_to

~~

use this same method to change Roadnames to IDs in your other tables

each place on a form where you have a textbox for the RoadName, change
it to a combobox (right-click, changeTo --> combo) and set the
properties I specified above and put code on the NotInList event

~~~~~~~~~`

once your data is using IDs and not names, then send me your db again
and I will guide you for creating the cross-reference table for
specifying the restrictions

I could do this for you but that would not teach you anything. While
you may be looking at this as a looming task, it should take no more
than a couple hours...


Warm Regards,
Crystal

Access Basics
8-part free tutorial that covers essentials in Access
http://www.accessmvp.com/Strive4Peace/Index.htm

*
:) have an awesome day :)
*



efandango wrote:
:

hi Eric,
now, to your question:

"What I want to do is have the update process say, this Waypoint also
 

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