Re: Access and Sharepoint
- From: "Ed Warren" <eowarren@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 10 Jan 2006 14:55:36 -0600
I just posted an Ms Access database on my sharepoint site, opened it with
several users. There very well might be differences in the versions of
sharepoint, versions of Ms Access, and/or security settings, startup
settings on your database and/or Sharepoint site. Example, you may be
opening the database in exclusive mode from the sharepoint site.
With the vagueness of your question, I'm sure no one can give you the good
'techinical' answer you desire.
The tenor of your response, very well may result in few if any responders
left, willing to help. None of the responders here get paid (though some
want to :<). We are giving of our own time and effort to help others use MS
Access.
"What is the meaning of life the universe and everything" Ans: 42!
Ed Warren.
"accessnovice" <u17468@uwe> wrote in message news:5a29beb515a88@xxxxxx
> MY point is being misinterpreted - I submitted a post to a forum and an
> MVP
> responded with "try it and see"
>
> so now I must respond back that I did try it and it didn't work... not
> much
> value add to my way of thinking
>
> I've seen responses on this forum that actually explained why something
> would
> or would not work (from a technical perspective), and maybe even provided
> a
> suggestion or 2
>
> didn't mean to offend - I'll keep looking for technical assitance
>
> Fred Boer wrote:
>>Dear accessnovice:
>>
>>I don't want to speak for John, but have you considered that your
>>interpretation of the phrase may be incorrect? You may simply be dealing
>>with a cultural misunderstanding. A better approach might have been to
>>give
>>John the benefit of the doubt and ask: "What do you mean by that phrase?".
>>
>>Cheers!
>>Fred Boer
>>
>>P.S....
>>
>>I've done a quick search with Google groups and found it mentioned in two
>>posts:
>>
>>Quoting a post (edited):
>>
>> There was an old saying among scientists in prewar Britain
>>that expresses in one short phrase what science is all about.
>>"Suck it and see".
>>
>>Quoting another post (edited):
>>
>>> Suck them and see.
>>
>>Is that an English English phrase? (greek_philosophizer)
>>
>>Yes. Strictly it should be "suck it and see" but we had more than one
>>object to be sucked here.
>>Means "give it a whirl".....and has no other connotations; can be used in
>>polite company!
>>
>>> "suck it and see" - nice use of a public forum
>>>
>>[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>>>>
>>>>Please respond in the newgroup and not by email.
.
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