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Duffy
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Topic: Working db offline Posted: 26 March 2010 at 9:23am |
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Am doing school project. I have a relational Access 2002-2003 DB linked to a FrontPage 2003 website. To do queries and mail merge on my form results I have created another DB which I exporrt the form results to. I am told however that instead I must 'drag' my database offline to perform queries etc. Can someone tell me exactly how I do this please?
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dpyers
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Posted: 26 March 2010 at 12:44pm |
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With FP, you can publish the remote site to your local hard drive. Just make sure the db's are selected for publication. The other way would be to use an ftp program to copy the db/db's to your local drive.
Once on the local drive, you'd use MSAccess for queries and I'd assume Word and/or Outlook for the mail merge.
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Duffy
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Posted: 26 March 2010 at 1:18pm |
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At last! Someone who knows what I mean! What way exactly (for newbie) would I use an ftp program to copy the db to my hard drive?
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WebWiz-Bruce
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Posted: 26 March 2010 at 1:25pm |
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With an FTP program you connect to your remote webspace, you then have two windows in the FTP program, one your local harddrive the other your remote web space.
You simply drag and drop the files from one window to the other to upload and download the files.
FileZilla is a free FTP Client that you can use for FTP purposes http://filezilla-project.org/
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Duffy
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Posted: 26 March 2010 at 1:29pm |
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Thanks a million! Will give it a go
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Duffy
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Posted: 26 March 2010 at 1:46pm |
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Sorry - just had a thought - probably stupid. Does this mean I only ever publish the db from remote to local and not the other way around? Otherwise if I republished local to remote would I overwrite any new data that had been submitted while I was working offline?
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dpyers
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Posted: 26 March 2010 at 1:56pm |
Copying the file to your local drive with ftp gives you a backup copy to work with. But like cats, there's more ways to skin this. If you open the remote site with fp, you can right-click the .mdb file and select Open With... to open it with your MS Access desktop program. Similarly, you can just open the remote db directly from access by selecting Open - My Network Places and entering something like ftp://mysite.com/mydb.mdb. You'll be prompted for your site login and password.The problem of course with these two methods is that you're playing with your primary db, not a local back up. But once open in access, you can select "save As..." and save it locally. Finally, you could also just write a query to run on the web site to dump the db to a comma-delimited file, then ftp the file or right-click on it to "Save As". The file can be used to create a new MS Access db or fed directly into a Word mail merge.
Edited by dpyers - 26 March 2010 at 2:00pm
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dpyers
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Posted: 26 March 2010 at 2:52pm |
Duffy wrote:
Sorry - just had a thought - probably stupid. Does this mean I only ever publish the db from remote to local and not the other way around? Otherwise if I republished local to remote would I overwrite any new data that had been submitted while I was working offline?
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Correct. There's a way on the publish page to exclude particular files/folders from being published. When going local to remote, you don't want to publish the db because you'll overwrite the updated remote. When publishing from remote to local however, you will want to publish the db to get a backup of it. You may however not want to publish things like log files for web stats to your local PC as a year of log files can take up a lot of time to publish.
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Lead me not into temptation... I know the short cut, follow me.
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