from your first few paragraphs below, seems your table is definitely not
normalized. you should not have fields for multiple addresses all in one
table. you should not have fields named xx1, xx2, xx3, etc - again, not
normalized. you need to house this data in separate tables, as i described.
i sent you an email at about 12:30 am U.S. Eastern Time, Tuesday. if you
don't get it, pls post back here. i looked at the skype website; looks cool,
but i don't have a headset or mic, so we'll have to communicate via the
keyboard, i'm afraid.
"Søren" wrote in message
...
Yes - you are the Tina I mentioned; thanks for the input! Basicly all of
your assumptions were right; a constituency is the geographical area where a
person is standing as a Parliamentarian Candidate - e.g. a US Senator's
constituency would be the state in which he is running for election.
Unfortunately I still have some unanswer questions...
Status quo is I have now changed the lay-out of the table structure to the
following:
tblMEP (your tblMembers) - I have removed the lookup fields but kept the
info in standard text fields (is that smart?). I have kept all the address
fields (offices, home), contact details (2 e-mails and 2 websites) in this
table as well as Constituency, Suffix, Birthsday, Notes, MemberSince. I
guess that is OK.
The table also have fields like EUInstituion, EPCommitte1, EPCommitte2,
EPCommitte3 (same for EPDelegation and OtherBodies), NationalParty,
PoliticalGroup. How do I connect these fields to the respective support
tables?
tblNational Party holds 146 entries with standard values (national party
names as spelled in the specific country) and is linked to tblMEP in a 1-n
because 1 MEP can only be connected to one National Party at a time.
tblHomeCountry holds 25 standard entries (UK, France, Denmark etc) and is
linked to tblMEP in a 1-n (only one country at a time)
tblTitle holds many standard entries and is linked totblMEP in a 1-n
because you can only be a Frau, Signora or Madame etc at one point in
time...
I have created a tblEntityType (your tblBodyTypes), a tblEntityName
(tblBodies), tbl Membership (tblMemberPositions), and I already had a
tblPosition (tblPositions). I have linked them as you suggested.
tblMembership is linked to tblMEP in a 1-n and again respectively linked
to tblEntityName and tblPosition n-1.
tblEntityName is again linked to tblEntityType in a n-1.
Now the questions is: How does it work? There are no data in the
MembershipID in tblMEP (FYI: I have already, before I posted the first
question, put all details of the 732 MEPs into the database).
I have also constructed a form based on the old design - how do I get
access to fields from the new tables? I guess I have to because now I cannot
get access to the Entity info unless I use the static unlinked fields I
still have in tblMEP - and such a solution seems a little stupid to me...
How does the link between membership type and MEP work? I mean, since each
MEP can have several connections (Member/Substitute/Chairman etc) to
different Committees, Delegations, Other Bodies, AND always has a
memberstatus like e.g. Member/Chairman/Vice-Chairman of a Political Group
AND is a Member of a National Party AND a Member of the EP... How does I
seperate all this info and get it into a form...?
Tina, if you can get me through this database labyrinth I shall buy you
are 3 star Michelin dinner next time you're in Brussels! I am reachable at
€ or you can skype me under username gravesen (if you do
not know Skype see
www.skype.com).
Thanks! - Søren
"tina" wrote:
well, i don't know if i'm the Tina you mentioned but here's my two cents
worth. right off the bat, i would get rid of the Lookup fields in the
tables. for an explanation of why, see the link below:
http://www.mvps.org/access/lookupfields.htm
another very helpful link when getting started is
http://www.mvps.org/access/tencommandments.htm
it's written tongue-in-cheek, but gives serious and very useful advice.
as
always, i recommend that you look around in the mvps.org website; it's a
fantastic resource generated by some of the best Access developers in
the
world, many of whom also donate time to the newsgroups, and it's free to
everyone.
i know zilch about the EP, and politics in general, so i had to guess
about
some things. in general, here's how I organize my data:
i start with the main subject, in this case *members* of the EP.
anything
that the main subject has only one of, such as a name, goes in the main
data
table - in this case tblMembers.
anything that the main subject *may* have more than one of, goes in a
child
data table linked to the main table. the child data table contains data
about a certain subject - such as tblMemberAddresses. of course there
may be
multiple child data tables.
any descriptive or categorizing data that has standard values, goes in a
"supporting" (lookup) table - such as a table of Countries, a table of
Cities, etc. that supporting table is used to populate the particular
field
in the data table - such as Country, in tblMemberAddresses.
below is a possible table setup. you'll have to apply the guidelines
above
to determine where i may have gone wrong due to not understanding
various
terms used in your post.
tblMembers (data table)
MemberID (primary key)
FirstName
LastName
NationalParty
Position
Title
Constituency
(i assumed that national party is the political party of the country the
member is a citizen of, such as Democratic/Republican parties in the
U.S.
if, instead, it has "standard" values, then I would use the primary key
from
a supporting table to populate the field as a foreign key.
also, if position and title have "standard" values, then i would use a
supporting table as described above. Note: i have no idea what
"constituency" refers to. if it is specific to an address, then move it
to
tblMemberAddresses. if the member may have multiple constituencies, not
specific to an address, then make a separate table for constituencies,
with
a foreign key from tblMembers.)
tblMemberAddresses (data table; 1-n relationship with tblMembers)
MemAddID (primary key)
MemberID (foreign key from tblMembers)
Street
City (possibly a foreign key from a supporting table of cities)
Zip
CountryID (foreign key from tblCountries)
Region (possibly a foreign key from a supporting table of regions)
tblCountries (supporting table; 1-n relationship with
tblMemberAddresses)
CountryID (primary key)
CountryName
tblAddressPhones (data table; 1-n relationship with tblMemberAddresses)
AddPhID (primary key)
MemAddID (foreign key from tblMemberAddresses)
PhoneTypeID (foreign key from tblPhoneTypes)
PhoneNumber (text field)
Comments
(usually, i use this table to list email addresses and websites, as well
as
phone numbers - since they're all "ways to contact the main subject".
but in
this case, you have multiple addresses. phone and fax numbers are
probably
specific to each address, which is why i used the foreign key from
tblMemberAddresses, rather than the foreign key from tblMembers.
*but*, an email address might not be specific to a certain street
address.
if each Member has only one email address, i would put it in tblMembers.
if
they may have many, that are not specific to a street address, i would
make
a separate table for email addresses, with a foreign key from
tblMembers.
the same considerations apply to website URL.)
tblPhoneTypes (supporting table; 1-n relationship with tblAddressPhones)
PhoneTypeID (primary key)
PhoneTypeName
(names such as Phone, Fax, Cell, possibly Email and/or URL, etc.)
tblBodyTypes (supporting table; 1-n relationship with tblBodies)
BodyTypeID (primary key)
BodyTypeName
(names such as Committee, Delegation, Political Group, etc)
tblBodies (supporting table; 1-n relationship with tblMemberPositions)
BodyID (primary key)
BodyTypeID (foreign key from tblBodyTypes)
BodyName
tblPositions (supporting table; 1-n relationship with
tblMemberPositions)
PositionID (primary key)
PositionName
(names such as Member, Substitute, Chairman, Vice-Chairman, etc)
tblMemberPositions (data table; 1-n relationship with tblMembers)
MemPosID (primary key)
MemberID (foreign key from tblMembers)
BodyID (foreign key from tblBodies)
PositionID (foreign key from tblPositions)
remember to *not* use Access reserved words as field names, such as
Name,
Date, etc. and recommend you use only letters and underscores ( _ ) in
your
table/field names; you can use numbers if you must, but i try to avoid
it.
hth
"Søren" wrote in message
...
Hi,
I've had a look around in some of the questions here and especially
the
ones from Tina, Allan and Rebecca - but I'm a bit stuck; I need a little
sparring and couching! I am trying to create a database with a lot of
contact information for the 732 members of the European Parliament.
Status
qou is:
I have 732 MEPs each with
- 3 addresses (2x offices in Brussels & Strasbourg and Home) including
street, city, ZIP, country, region, counstituency, phone and fax
numbers,
office locations, e-mails, websites, position, title etc;
- Uptil 12 connections (memberships) split on max 3 EP-Committess AND
max
3 EP Delegation AND 3 other bodies in EP AND a political group in the EP
AND
their National Party AND, of course, the European Parliament itself.
- Each of these connections can have different types of connections
(positions) - or the same, e.g. a MEP is always a Member of the European
Parliament, and a member OR Chariman OR Vice-Chairman of a Political
Group;
the MEP is also always a Member/Subsitute/Chairman/Vice-Chairman of at
least
2-3 Committees AND 2-3 Delegations.
Example:
the MEP is Member of the European Parliament
Member of the Green Group
Chairman of the Environmental Committee
Member of the Transport Committee
Subsitute of the Energy Committee
Vice-Chairman of the Delegation A
Member of the Delegation B
Member of another body under the EU Instituion
My setup now is
1- a MEP table which include all fields i.d. fields that only belongs
to
this table and lookup fields connected to other table.
2- tables for EU Instituion, EP Committee, EP Delegation, Other Body,
Home
Country, National Party, Political Group, Title, Position
3- two intermediate table called EP Committeeship (fields: MEP.MEPID &
EP
Committee.EPCommitteeID) and EP Delegationship (MEPID.MEPID & EP
Delegation.EPDelegationID) to create a Many-to-Many relationship; the
relationship is one-to-many from MEP to EP Committeeship and many-to-one
from EP Committeeship to EP Committee, which again have many-to-one to
Position
4- I have direct one-to-many connections between MEP and EU
Instituion,
MEP and Home Country, MEP and Political Group, MEP and National Party
All are liked via numeric autonumber ID fields with unique values (and
fieldnames) in each table e.g. PositionID is key in Position and linked
to a
numeric field with the same name in all related tables, EPDelegationID
is
key in EP Delegation etc.
I have made lookup fields in the MEP table that refers to all the
tables
mentioned above under 2.
Could someone give me a guidance through the this hurricane of
relations
and table?
Thanks very much in advance!
BR, Søren