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#1
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schedule recurring events an access database
I am trying to create an access database that will show upcoming appointments
with clients. These appointments are always recurring every month, 3 months, or 6 months. I would like to enter the appointment and client information into a table one time and then see the appointments when I open a weekly or monthly report. Also, I want to mark the appointment complete in my table after it is held so that a meeting that is scheduled but not held will automatically show on the next week's calendar. I have created several other somewhat complex databases in Access for my company, but I am having trouble with this one. Any help that you can offer on any of these points would be GREATLY appreciated!!!!! Thanks |
#2
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schedule recurring events an access database
As you found, recurring events are not the simplest thing on the planet.
The simplest approach is to create a table with fields like this: EventID primary key StartDate Date/Time date of the first appointment. Requiried. PeriodType Text "d", "m", "q", or "yyyy". Required. Freq Number how many periods between events. = 0. EventCount Number how many events in the series. Next, you need a counting table from 1 to the highest number of repeating appointments you could need (perhaps 1000?) This table has one field named (say) CountID, type Number, primary key, and you save the table as (say) tblCount. Enter record from *zero* to the highest number. The code in this link can populate the table for you: http://allenbrowne.com/ser-39.html Now create a query using both tables, but with *no* join between them in the upper pane of table design. This gives you every possible combination (a Cartesian product), which we will use to get a record for each appointment in the series. In the Criteria row of the query under CountID, enter: [EventCount] This limits the query to the right number of events for the series. Now enter an expression like this in the Field row of the query: EventDate: DateAdd([PeriodType], [CountID] * [Freq], [StartDate]) This gives you the date of each event in the series. This approach is fully normalized and quite easy to implement. The major limitation is that you cannot remove or reschedule one appointment in the series. If you need that functionality, you may be able to do that with a table of exceptions that uses an EventID and CountID and EventDate, so you can switch the n-th appointment for a particular event to a different date (or to Null for no date), and then outer join the above query with the exception table to get the alternative date. If that's not powerful enough, you can actually generate a record in a related table for each event in the series. This gives great flexibility but has several drawbacks: - Doesn't cope with unlimited series (no end date) - Harder to maintain. For example, if a change is made to the series, how to you cascade that change to all events in the series, when some appointments may be specific (out of the normal series)? -- Allen Browne - Microsoft MVP. Perth, Western Australia Tips for Access users - http://allenbrowne.com/tips.html Reply to group, rather than allenbrowne at mvps dot org. "amy" wrote in message ... I am trying to create an access database that will show upcoming appointments with clients. These appointments are always recurring every month, 3 months, or 6 months. I would like to enter the appointment and client information into a table one time and then see the appointments when I open a weekly or monthly report. Also, I want to mark the appointment complete in my table after it is held so that a meeting that is scheduled but not held will automatically show on the next week's calendar. I have created several other somewhat complex databases in Access for my company, but I am having trouble with this one. Any help that you can offer on any of these points would be GREATLY appreciated!!!!! Thanks |
#3
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schedule recurring events an access database
Thank you for the info, I will try your suggestions. (I like to punish myself
) I love using Access for data management, but is there another program that you can recommend that will do the job if I can't get this done? I like the way that calendar programs like Outlook's calendar work, but I need to perform searches and queries. Thanks Amy "Allen Browne" wrote: As you found, recurring events are not the simplest thing on the planet. The simplest approach is to create a table with fields like this: EventID primary key StartDate Date/Time date of the first appointment. Requiried. PeriodType Text "d", "m", "q", or "yyyy". Required. Freq Number how many periods between events. = 0. EventCount Number how many events in the series. Next, you need a counting table from 1 to the highest number of repeating appointments you could need (perhaps 1000?) This table has one field named (say) CountID, type Number, primary key, and you save the table as (say) tblCount. Enter record from *zero* to the highest number. The code in this link can populate the table for you: http://allenbrowne.com/ser-39.html Now create a query using both tables, but with *no* join between them in the upper pane of table design. This gives you every possible combination (a Cartesian product), which we will use to get a record for each appointment in the series. In the Criteria row of the query under CountID, enter: [EventCount] This limits the query to the right number of events for the series. Now enter an expression like this in the Field row of the query: EventDate: DateAdd([PeriodType], [CountID] * [Freq], [StartDate]) This gives you the date of each event in the series. This approach is fully normalized and quite easy to implement. The major limitation is that you cannot remove or reschedule one appointment in the series. If you need that functionality, you may be able to do that with a table of exceptions that uses an EventID and CountID and EventDate, so you can switch the n-th appointment for a particular event to a different date (or to Null for no date), and then outer join the above query with the exception table to get the alternative date. If that's not powerful enough, you can actually generate a record in a related table for each event in the series. This gives great flexibility but has several drawbacks: - Doesn't cope with unlimited series (no end date) - Harder to maintain. For example, if a change is made to the series, how to you cascade that change to all events in the series, when some appointments may be specific (out of the normal series)? -- Allen Browne - Microsoft MVP. Perth, Western Australia Tips for Access users - http://allenbrowne.com/tips.html Reply to group, rather than allenbrowne at mvps dot org. "amy" wrote in message ... I am trying to create an access database that will show upcoming appointments with clients. These appointments are always recurring every month, 3 months, or 6 months. I would like to enter the appointment and client information into a table one time and then see the appointments when I open a weekly or monthly report. Also, I want to mark the appointment complete in my table after it is held so that a meeting that is scheduled but not held will automatically show on the next week's calendar. I have created several other somewhat complex databases in Access for my company, but I am having trouble with this one. Any help that you can offer on any of these points would be GREATLY appreciated!!!!! Thanks |
#4
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schedule recurring events an access database
Outlook is the obvious one.
I'm sure there are plenty of others. It's not too daunting in Access. :-) "amy" wrote in message ... Thank you for the info, I will try your suggestions. (I like to punish myself ) I love using Access for data management, but is there another program that you can recommend that will do the job if I can't get this done? I like the way that calendar programs like Outlook's calendar work, but I need to perform searches and queries. Thanks Amy |
#5
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schedule recurring events an access database
In case you are still following this thread, here's a new article:
Recurring events - how to handle recurring events that may never end at: http://allenbrowne.com/AppRecur.html Includes a sample database to download and pull apart. The whole thing is done with queries (no code except for the interface.) Works with Access 2000 and later. -- Allen Browne - Microsoft MVP. Perth, Western Australia Tips for Access users - http://allenbrowne.com/tips.html Reply to group, rather than allenbrowne at mvps dot org. "Allen Browne" wrote in message ... Outlook is the obvious one. I'm sure there are plenty of others. It's not too daunting in Access. :-) "amy" wrote in message ... Thank you for the info, I will try your suggestions. (I like to punish myself ) I love using Access for data management, but is there another program that you can recommend that will do the job if I can't get this done? I like the way that calendar programs like Outlook's calendar work, but I need to perform searches and queries. Thanks Amy |
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