Access 2007
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Creating and Using Forms
Creating and using forms
Watch the video! (Part 1) (3:18min) (Part 2) (6:35min)
Download the example to work along with the video.
Why use forms?
In real life, a form is piece of paper you fill out so someone can collect and keep track of specific information about you. Only one record—your record—is captured with any given paper form.
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Access 2007 forms work in very much the same way.
In previous lessons, you saw that you can populate a database by entering records into the tables themselves. If the database has hundreds of records and many fields to populate for any given record, a table can be overwhelming to the person entering data. An Access form lets you enter data one record at a time, without having to see the entire table.
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An Access 2007 form also lets you know exactly what information to enter and can even tell you what that information should look like. Adding certain control components to a form—like a drop-down menu—can dramatically increase the integrity of the data that is held in a database.
A database owner wants to control the levels of access other database users have to the data; the fewer the amount of people who are interacting with the data, the lower the chances are of the data becoming compromised. Forms are one more way a database owner can limit the actions of the other users. Form properties can be set so users can only enter records or just view records.