View Single Post
  #11  
Old March 8th, 2010, 09:10 PM posted to microsoft.public.access.tablesdbdesign
Jeff Boyce
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,621
Default Data Rules Violations

Sorry, I didn't see answers to the questions ... I asked them to get
clarification.

Regards

Jeff Boyce
Microsoft Access MVP

--
Disclaimer: This author may have received products and services mentioned
in this post. Mention and/or description of a product or service herein
does not constitute endorsement thereof.

Any code or pseudocode included in this post is offered "as is", with no
guarantee as to suitability.

You can thank the FTC of the USA for making this disclaimer
possible/necessary.

"John Quinn" wrote in message
...
The legal community for the Department of Education is now requiring a
weekly
account of all the students we test and grade. I move the infor to the
SQL
database in the event of a law suit by the parents.

Thanks for getting back!

Hope this gives you an understanding of what we face in education.

John Q.

"Jeff Boyce" wrote:

John

What "historical table"? If it truly is historical info only, why are
you
"updating" it?

How do you know that there are 7?

Do you know which field(s) contain the bad info?

Does "bad" = corrupted, or does "bad" = inaccurate?

More info, please...

Regards

Jeff Boyce
Microsoft Access MVP

--
Disclaimer: This author may have received products and services mentioned
in this post. Mention and/or description of a product or service herein
does not constitute endorsement thereof.

Any code or pseudocode included in this post is offered "as is", with no
guarantee as to suitability.

You can thank the FTC of the USA for making this disclaimer
possible/necessary.

"John Quinn" wrote in message
...
I have a table of 19,000 records with about 225 fields in each record.
It
is
not an indexed table, just a table of educational transactions.

Some how when I go to update the historical table seven (7) records
have
gotten some bad info in them. I know I can copy the table to another
database and look at them one field at a time, but this will take
forever.

Does anyone know a quick method of finding the seven bad records?

Thanks in Advance

John Q



.