G Guest Mar 16, 2006 #1 Access seems like overkill to tabulate the results of a survey where most (not all) answers are yes/no.
Access seems like overkill to tabulate the results of a survey where most (not all) answers are yes/no.
J Joseph Meehan Mar 16, 2006 #2 Rich said: Access seems like overkill to tabulate the results of a survey where most (not all) answers are yes/no. Click to expand... Many possibilities For most people Excel would work well. Learning Access is a very steep learning curve.
Rich said: Access seems like overkill to tabulate the results of a survey where most (not all) answers are yes/no. Click to expand... Many possibilities For most people Excel would work well. Learning Access is a very steep learning curve.
J John Vinson Mar 16, 2006 #3 Access seems like overkill to tabulate the results of a survey where most (not all) answers are yes/no. Click to expand... Probably, but it can make it very convenient to enter and - especially - to flexibly analyze the data. It is important to design the database structure correctly though; one good example is Duane Hookum's _At Your Survey_ sample database: http://www.rogersaccesslibrary.com/Otherdownload.asp?SampleName='At Your Survey 2000' John W. Vinson[MVP]
Access seems like overkill to tabulate the results of a survey where most (not all) answers are yes/no. Click to expand... Probably, but it can make it very convenient to enter and - especially - to flexibly analyze the data. It is important to design the database structure correctly though; one good example is Duane Hookum's _At Your Survey_ sample database: http://www.rogersaccesslibrary.com/Otherdownload.asp?SampleName='At Your Survey 2000' John W. Vinson[MVP]