In the previous post, we gave many examples of how Access can really help you create a database fast and with ease. We mentioned data validation, querying, reporting, and viewing data in Excel as areas where Access is rapid and flexible. In this post I will focus on reporting.
The last post mentioned the ability to create reports, order information, and create totals with an Access report. Below I will give a brief example showing how simply,
Windows 7 Download, fast, and cleanly you can do this with Access.
For this,
Office Enterprise 2007, I've pretended to be a working parent, Margaret, who is tracking her cookie orders for her son's school class project. Margaret created a Cookies table ("Product Information") and Requests table ("Invoices") and a query combining the two. She then makes a quick-create report based on the query.
Margaret has multiple orders from her coworkers for sugar cookies and mint chocolate cookies, so she wants to group the orders by cookie type and see the number of each cookie she needs to fill her orders. For this she clicks the Group & Sort button.
This brings up Grouping and Sorting options at the bottom of her report.
After she selects to Group by "Cookie" and does a few quick drags, her form looks like the following:
Her orders are few now. But when she gets more orders, she knows she doesn't want to have to sum more than 100 orders by hand. So she creates a quick total for her Qty field and positions it next to the rest of her stock. She selects the Qty field,
Office 2007 Keygen, and then clicks the Totals button next to Group & Sort.
And here's the finished product in Print Preview:
With a few clicks and two minutes, Margaret has a nice-looking report that will help her track the new orders she will get when she heads to work tomorrow. And by going to the Print Preview,
Office 2007 Professional, she has a high-fidelity printable report to show to the other involved parents.
This example shows how quickly a nice-looking report with grouping and totals can be created in Access for those much larger data sets you may have. Of course, you need to manage and work with that data outside of reporting,
Microsoft Office 2007, and Access allows you to do numerous other tasks quickly and easily.
--Joshua Nogales
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