MS Access – VBA Functions – Create Category Tag Junction Table by comparing a text field against a table of categories

Going forward there are more and more systems that have somewhat un-formated text or memo fields. It can be useful to tag fields. Here’s a collection of 2 functions with a script to pull them together designed to create a junction table.

What’s nice about it is that it could be used in lots of situations as a nightly process to tag manually input notes to help assist users navigate screeds of text.

This code is generalized and would need to be adapted for your specific table and field names

In mine you will need 4 tables
T001TableContainingFieldtobeCatetgorized – as per title it has a field called PKID and a field Called Text which is the memo field against which the SQL compares categories
T002Category – table that contains the categories that are compared against the text field
T003JunctionTable – the junction table that will contain the links between our notes table and the category table.
T004SQL – table to contain update queries – the field storing the strings is SQLstring – RunQueriesFromTable uses the SQLstring query and places the result in T003JunctionTable

The function RunQueriesFromTable is a previous function I wrote

Function CategorizeField()

'Make sure the name of the recordset is unambiguous
'Good practice to reference the actual library

Dim db As DAO.Database
Dim rs1 As DAO.Recordset
Dim rs2 As DAO.Recordset
Dim rs3 As DAO.Recordset
Dim SQLUpJunc As String
strQuote = Chr$(34)

Set db = CurrentDb
Set rs1 = db.OpenRecordset("SELECT * FROM T001TableContainingFieldtobeCategorized")
Set rs2 = db.OpenRecordset("T004SQL")
Set rs3 = db.OpenRecordset("T002Category")


'the data source can be a Table Name a query name or an sql string
'it would be possible to change the SQL to set to another set of records
'Check to see if there are any records in the set

If Not (rs3.EOF And rs3.BOF) Then
'there are no records if End of File and beginning of file are both true

rs3.MoveFirst

Do Until rs3.EOF = True

SQLUpJunc = "INSERT INTO T003JunctionTable ( FKIDT001, FKIDT002 ) SELECT T001TableContainingFieldtobeCategorized.PKID, " & rs3!PKID & " AS FKIDT002 FROM T001TableContainingFieldtobeCategorized WHERE (((T001TableContainingFieldtobeCategorized.Text) Like " & strQuote & "*" & rs3!Category & "*" & strQuote & "));"

With rs2
.AddNew
rs2!SQLstring = SQLUpJunc
rs2.Update
End With

rs3.MoveNext
Loop
Else
'MsgBox "No Records available for updating exit sub"
Exit Function
End If
'MsgBox "Looped through the records and updated table of SQL"

rs2.Close
Set rs1 = Nothing
Set rs2 = Nothing
Set rs3 = Nothing
Set db = Nothing


'remember to break an infinite loop press ctrl + break

End Function
Public Function RunQueriesFromTable(SQLSource As String)

DoCmd.SetWarnings False

Dim StartTime As Date
Dim EndTime As Date
Dim rstZ As DAO.Recordset
Dim strSQL As String

StartTime = Now()

Set rstZ = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset(SQLSource)

Do Until rstZ.EOF

strSQL = rstZ!SQLstring
DoCmd.RunSQL strSQL
rstZ.MoveNext

Loop

DoCmd.SetWarnings True

EndTime = Now()

'MsgBox "Finished ALL SQL queries! Process started at " & StartTime & " and finished at " & EndTime

End Function
Public Function CreateJunctionTable()

Call CategorizeField
Call RunQueriesFromTable("T004SQL")

MsgBox "Finished"



End Function

Simple Bat File to open multiple Web Pages in One Browser Window with alternate Tabs

Simple but can be useful

Useful if you are wanting to open multiple tabs in a browser window at the same time

@echo off
start "Simple Search" "https://planning.westlothian.gov.uk/publicaccess/search.do?action=simple&searchType=Application"
start "Google Maps " "https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@55.8625775,-3.6759593,17z"
start "WLC Spade" ;
start "idoxEDRMS Login" "http://cc-dmsapp-01:8080/IDOXSoftware/secure/IG_Main?url="

Pivoting Relationships from Many to Many – One to Many – One to One – and then Key Value – Relationships and Schemas

There are a whole host of applications in which you may wish to record the biological or legal relationships between individuals. Here is a short investigation of some of the subtleties related to the options you have to model this data.

The actual biological parent to biological child relationship is somewhat more subtle than the classic description in books would have you believe (usually these equate the parent child relationship as a one to many relationship.

Strictly speaking biological parent to biological child is a many to many relationship (which in MS Access is a recursion of 2 one to many relationships) but it is a specific version of the many to many relationship. One parent can have many (read infinite) children but one child can only ever have 2 parents – one biological mother linked to one biological father (ignoring latest developments in science). Of course a one to two relationship is still a type of of one to many relationship it is a more specific type of one to many relationship but one to many nonetheless – so to model all relationships you still need two one to many links. If you consider the unique combination of mother and father as a group in itself then you can model all relationships again as only consisting of one group of one to many relationships rather than as two one to many relationships (which we presently have defined as one one to many and one one to two relationship). To do this you would have to make a mother and father a unique pair who can have infinite number of children but a child can ONLY have one mother father pair.

Many to many relationship

To a certain extent this looks like a one to many relationship as there appears to be only two tables (albeit one being aliased). This is correct but to record a dependents relationship with both parents two separate records with separate PKIDs need to be input into the persons junction table actually making it a many to many relationship.

By viewing the parents PKIDs as a group we can convert this many to many relationship back to a one to many relationship by adding a further field into the persons junction table. Now the relationship between a dependent and its mother and father can be recorded in one record in the personsjunctiontable.

It is not initially clear but a one to many relationship where the many is a finite number (ie not infinite – in our example 2) – can be re-modelled as a one to one relationship as follows.

In fact one thing that I learnt when I started reading about relational databases is that relational not only relates to the relationship between tables but the relationship within tables.

Thus we can separate a table of columns back out into a one to many relationship by pivoting out the column names and making them a value within a field themselves linking them to a field and then adding the ability to add a value. This works because the number of columns is finite. I believe this is the thinking behind a key value database.

Looking at the tables resulting from data input you would get

What makes this particularly good is that a lot of attributes can be stored against an individual and if you forget a column name you simply add it to the field name table and it becomes an additional option in the KeyValueData table. This can be particularly good if you are not sure of the set of column names that your users may wish to use. It has the disadvantage that validation will become harder as the values are often a mix of value types and cannot be so easily tied back to a particular list as the source of the field will change according to the value of its relative field name. Here for example I could easily add Mother and Father to the table of field names but a user would simply type these in rather than having them validated as per the first three relationship structures.

MS SQL Azure – SQL to Select Distinct list of Child Records based on a Maximum or Minimum Child Field Value

Following on from the previous post I wanted to know the syntax for SQL to do the same but in SQL Azure.

SELECT * FROM dbo.T02AttendanceGame T1    
WHERE Attendance = (
   SELECT max(Attendance)
   FROM dbo.T02AttendanceGame T2
   WHERE T1.FKID=T2.FKID
);

I created the same tables that I created for the MS Access example with the same field names but within a SQL Azure database.

Here’s the same SQL but then creating a view called rather unimaginatively ‘View01’

CREATE VIEW VIEW01 AS SELECT * FROM dbo.T02AttendanceGame T1    
WHERE Attendance = (
   SELECT max(Attendance)
   FROM dbo.T02AttendanceGame T2
   WHERE T1.FKID=T2.FKID
);

MS Access – SQL to Select Distinct list of Child Records based on a Maximum or Minimum Child Field Value

So we have a table of Stadiums and a table of attendances. We would like to create a query that shows an individual child record for each stadium of the highest attendances. Quite often you seek the latest or earliest child record by grouping on the primary key of the child record but what happens if you needing to identify a child not on the latest or earliest but on a value that does not correlate with the order in which the records have been created. In such a case the primary key can no longer act as a proxy for minimum or maximum value of the required field.

To demonstrate the problem and to illustrate it I create two tables

T01Stadium with the fields
PKID
Location

and

T02AttendanceGame with the fields
PKID
FKID
Attendance
GameDate
Date
Weather

and these are the example values I entered.

and here’s the code that shows the maximum attendance in the child records

SELECT *
FROM T02AttendanceGame AS G1 INNER JOIN [SELECT FKID, MAX(Attendance) AS HAttend FROM T02AttendanceGame GROUP BY FKID]. AS G2 ON (G1.Attendance=G2.HAttend) AND (G1.FKID=G2.FKID)
ORDER BY G1.FKID;

and here’s similar code that shows the latest games played at the two stadia

SELECT *
FROM T02AttendanceGame AS G1 INNER JOIN [SELECT FKID, MAX(GameDate) AS LatestDate FROM T02AttendanceGame GROUP BY FKID]. AS G2 ON (G1.GameDate=G2.LatestDate) AND (G1.FKID=G2.FKID)
ORDER BY G1.FKID;

This is yet another very valuable structure with which to reduce the complexity of data for users who are quickly seeking to find key values in a child table when that data is coming in out of synch with the order of data entry. Individuals wishing to use this code will need to enter the MS Access SQL editor and will need to be careful as the graphics designer cannot represent this syntax. I have tested this code with MS Access 2003 as the front end and SQL Azure as the backend and I can confirm that it does work. I have not extensively tested it.

Javascript – Nubuilder Specific to save Date to DateUpdated field on Record Change (not subform)

From the admin screen go to Develop / Forms / Form of choice / Custom Code / Javascript

To place focus on the search button

function nuLoadBrowse(){
    $('#nuSearchButton').focus();
}

Function to Get System Date

function GetTodayDate() {
    var tdate = new Date();
    var dd = tdate.getDate(); //yields day
    var MM = tdate.getMonth(); //yields month
    var twoDigitMonth = ((tdate.getMonth().length+1) === 1)? (tdate.getMonth()+1) : '' + (tdate.getMonth()+1);
    var yyyy = tdate.getFullYear(); //yields year
    var currdate = dd + "-" + twoDigitMonth + "-" + yyyy;

    return currdate;
}

Function to update field called “DateUpdated” on edit- to be used with the GetTodayDate() function

function nuOnSave() {
if (nuFORM.edited == true)
    {
        $( "#DateUpdated" ).val( GetTodayDate() );
    }
    return true; 

}

MS SQL Azure – Take Complete Backup of Azure Database (Structure and Data)

SQL Azure as part of the service offers a number of differing back up options as standard – however you may wish to take additional backups which for instance you can load onto a local version of SQL Server (Express or Enterprise). Here’s a quick rundown of one method of doing this.

Firstly open up your version of SQL Server Management Studio and navigate to the instance and database that you wish to backup

Highlight the database in this case DB001 and right click -Select Tasks and Export Data-Tier Application

Choose an appropriate location to put the backup file

Review the summary of items that will be backed up and then hit Finish

There will be a run down of how the export has worked

And just a check to see the exported file in the directory

Connect MS Access 2003 to MySQL

It is an incredible feature of MS Access that it is so easy to connect to different databases and use as a Management Studio. Having a unified platform across all the different backends is very very useful. Setting up those connections is not always straight forward and as ever involves configuration – something which often evades all but the most accurate of intelligent guesswork. This is set out for MS Access 2003 but I would expect this to work on all versions of MS Access.

Use the architect version of the MySQL driver that relates to the version of MS Access that you are using. In this case MS Access 03 is 2003 so I used this.

MySQL ODBC drivers at August 2017

Install as per normal driver.

Then open up ODBC Data Source Administrator – I have two options here 32 bit and 64 bit – its not clear if there is a difference but I have been choosing the 32 bit version – Navigate to file DSN and then hit Add…

You will be presented with a Create New Data Source window – navigate down to the MySQL and here choose unicode – ANSI and Unicode are two character encodings that were historically in wide use. Ansi is very old and is used by older operating systems like Windows 98. Unicode is newer which has a vast character set and is used by Office 2003 and upwards. UTF-8 is even newer.

Select then hit the next button.

You will be presented with a Create New Data Source dialog in which you can hit the Browse button and create the name of your file dsn. Here I have already created three – 2 are SQL Azure dsns and the third is a link to my inspirunner database. A hosted account.

You should then be shown the MySQL Connector / ODBC

You absolutely must know the name of your server – the port it is listening on and the user password – once these are filled in selecting the downard arrow should allow you to select the database.

Hit test and you should see success and then hit OK.

Now simply go into MS Access 2003 as per usual right click in the tables window and select the file dsn from the location you stored it in – you should be given all the tables from which to select

VBA : Scripting in MS ACCESS to run multiple Queries consecutively

It can be necessary for many reasons to want to run queries consecutively without supervision. This was particularly necessary for me when I was doing a system transfer project. The production Oracle server was being used on a daily basis and we needed to transfer all the information across to a new system which initially was being run in parallel. Over several months myself and a colleague built up 500 queries that pulled out all of this information and placed it in a staging access database that was then loaded into a new Oracle backend. The queries didn’t just export the data they did a significant amount of transformation as the source and target databases had different structures. By being able to script the queries we had created we could take the information out of the source database at short notice. Generally in 2 hours. As we progressed further through the project we would get into the habit of running script of queries periodically as we saw fit.

Generally we did this by creating user defined functions that scripted the queries we wished to run.
This is an example of the format that we used for these functions.
DoCmd.SetWarnings False is important as without it you have to stay at your computer to hit annoying OK buttons

Public Function RunQueries()

DoCmd.SetWarnings False
DoCmd.OpenQuery ("Query01")
DoCmd.OpenQuery ("Query02")
DoCmd.SetWarnings True
MsgBox "Finished"

End Function

VBA Code : Run a Function and Link Functions together ( or Scripting in MS Access)

MS Access can be used as an extremely powerful scripting environment that can tie together manipulation of data using VBA functions and SQL.

Before you can really use this power however you need to know three things
1.Where to put functions
2.How to run them
3.How to string multiple functions together (or script them)

Here is a simple user defined function that we will use for demonstration purposes.

Public Function DisplayCompleteTime()
Dim X As Date
X = Now()
MsgBox "Finished Function at " & X
End Function

1.Where to put Functions?
There is more than one place to place functions. They can be placed in forms, in modules or in class modules. Here I describe how to place them in a module in a MS Access 2003 database called ScriptDatabase the menu path of how you get to the module section varies from Access version to access version but they are very very similar.

Open the Database window

Click on Module and then Click on New a new modal pop up screen should appear

Take your Function and place it in the module
I like to type Option Explicit at the start of every function.

Using the menus save the module – I saved my module prior to taking the snapshot of the screen – if you haven’t done this it will automatically ask you to save the module on exit.

2. Running a Function
OK so you have a function in a module which is saved but you want to run it.
Go back into the module with your function and navigate the menus View / Immediate Window.

How the immediate window displays is a bit unpredictable sometimes it comes up as a modal sometimes it is placed within the module screen and squeezes other sections out either way is should be a blank area with flashing cursor at the beginning.

Now to run your function or functions within the Immediate Window type a question mark followed by the function you wish to run in our case DisplayCompletionTime then simply press return

?DisplayCompleteTime

on return you should get something like this

Congratulations you can now run any function from the immediate window#

3. How to run multiple Functions consecutively

Do same as step 1 but this time type in the following

Public Function MultipleLinkedFunctions()

Call DisplayCompleteTime
Call DisplayCompleteTime
Call DisplayCompleteTime

End Function

as per 2 open the immediate window and then type in ?MultipleLinkedFunctions and press return.

Hitting return will display the complete time this is run three times because you are using a function that asks the function to display three times.

Congratulations you have just run a script in MS Access.

Upload Shape Files into SQL Azure using OGR2OGR – Explanation of MS SQL Azure Connection String to be placed within OGR2OGR Command Line

Lets say you have a SQL Azure Server with the following parameters

SQL Azure Instance : azureinstance1
Database name within Instance : TouristDB1
Your User Name is : tom
Password is : Edinburgh

The SQLAzure connection string would be
MSSQL:Server=tcp:azureinstance1.database.windows.net;Database=TouristDB1;
Uid=tom@azureinstance1.database.windows.net;Pwd=Edinburgh;

and the full OGR2OGR to import Command Line Instruction for a shape file called Monuments.shp would be..

ogr2ogr -overwrite -f MSSQLSpatial "MSSQL:Server=tcp:azureinstance1.database.windows.net;Database=TouristDB1;
Uid=tom@azureinstance1.database.windows.net;Pwd=Edinburgh;" "C:\Monuments.shp"

VBA Function to Create Table of Import strings using OGR2OGR targeting a SQL Server

Do you have many shape files you wish to import into a local SQL Server Database so that you can display them in QGIS or serve them on Geoserver?
Here’s a short function I wrote that will take a table called T0001OpenStreetMapLayers with fields PKID/Name/Directory/Type/Flag – and produce OGR strings that can then be used to load them into a local SQL Server / SQL Express or SQL Azure

For this to be useful you will need
A version of QGIS
A local SQL Server copy (in this case SQL Server Express)
A database within your copy called OpenStreetMap
All shape files in the same directory
You will also need to figure out how to get all those shape files into the table T0001OpenStreetMapLayers table
A starting database with 2 tables
T0001OpenStreetMapLayers with populated fields PKID/Name/Directory/Type/Flag
T0002OGRStrings blank table with fields PKID/CommandLine – This is where all the Command Line Strings will be stored

Public Function CreateTableOGR2OGRString()

Dim rs1 As DAO.Recordset
Dim rs2 As DAO.Recordset
Dim db As DAO.Database
Dim O2O As String
Dim LCounter As Integer
Dim strQuote As String
Set db = CurrentDb
strQuote = Chr$(34)


LCounter = 1
While LCounter < 3000
LCounter = LCounter < 3000

Set rs1 = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("SELECT T0001OpenStreetMapLayers.PKID, T0001OpenStreetMapLayers.Name, T0001OpenStreetMapLayers.Directory, T0001OpenStreetMapLayers.Type, T0001OpenStreetMapLayers.Flag FROM T0001OpenStreetMapLayers WHERE (((T0001OpenStreetMapLayers.Type)=1) AND ((T0001OpenStreetMapLayers.Flag)=0 Or (T0001OpenStreetMapLayers.Flag) Is Null));")
O2O = "ogr2ogr -append -f MSSQLSpatial " & strQuote & "MSSQL:server=DESKTOP-JECT7QO\SQLEXPRESS;database=OpenStreetMap;trusted_connection=yes" & strQuote & " " & strQuote & rs1!Directory & rs1!Name & ".shp" & strQuote & ""


rs1.Edit
rs1!Flag = 1
rs1.Update
rs1.MoveNext
rs1.Close

Set rs2 = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("T0002OGRStrings")
With rs2
.AddNew
rs2!CommandLine = O2O
rs2.Update
rs2.Close
End With
Wend
End Function

For SQL Azure target databases replace the yellow connection string with something resembling;

MSSQL:Server=tcp:azureinstance1.database.windows.net;Database=TouristDB1;
Uid=tom@azureinstance1.database.windows.net;Pwd=Edinburgh;

There are multiple methods of finding the name of your SQL Instance – Ignoring the fact that you won’t be able to connect to it if you don’t know it – Within SSMS you can right click on the instance and look to properties but the name itself is usually in the instance path of SSMS as well.

MS SQL Azure to MS Access – Using VBA to Dump Azure Tables into MS Access Tables

The first thing you need to get sorted when moving to SQL Azure is having the ability to get your information out and safe if needs be. When experimenting with MS Azure and for applications that don’t have sensitive information it is nice to have that information available in an easily accessible format. Here are a series of functions that will copy Azure Tables linked to database into local MS Access tables with the prefix ZCOPY.

The starting point in this should be an MS Access database that should be linked to your SQL Azure Database. Only those tables that are linked will be copied. Remember the 2GB limit on Access.

I think I have got all the functions here that are required to make it work and include the complete module at the bottom but first I will breakdown the modules and list describe what each of the functions do.

First create a table to store the list of tables in the Azure Database

Public Function CreateTableT0001AzureTablesGlobal()
 
     Dim dbs As Database
     Set dbs = CurrentDb
 
        dbs.Execute "CREATE TABLE T0001AzureTablesGlobal " _
        & "(PKID AUTOINCREMENT, " _
        & "AzureTableName CHAR CONSTRAINT PKID " _
        & "PRIMARY KEY);"
   
End Function

Now Create a Function that will hold the SQL that takes the tables and makes them locally.

Public Function CreateTableT0002SQL()
 
     Dim dbs As Database
     Set dbs = CurrentDb
 
        dbs.Execute "CREATE TABLE T0002SQL " _
        & "(PKID AUTOINCREMENT, " _
        & "SQL MEMO CONSTRAINT PKID " _
        & "PRIMARY KEY);"
 
   
End Function

A function that allows for stepping through the table

Public Function AddByteColumn(TblName As String, FieldName As String)
'Just use byte data type as only going to use this for a flag

DoCmd.RunSQL "AlTER TABLE [" & TblName & "] ADD COLUMN " & FieldName & " BYTE;"

End Function

Step through the Linked Azure Tables and poupulate table T001 with their names

Public Function CreateandPopulateListofDBOTableNames()

'These will typically be the names of the SQL Server tables this should work both with SQL Server and SQL Azure

Dim db As DAO.Database
Dim tdf As DAO.TableDef
Dim rstList As DAO.Recordset

'Call CreateTableT0001AzureTablesGlobal

Set rstList = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("T0001AzureTablesGlobal")
Set db = CurrentDb

For Each tdf In db.TableDefs
    ' ignore system and temporary tables and tables starting with T - personal choice option
    If Not (tdf.Name Like "MSys*" Or tdf.Name Like "~*" Or tdf.Name Like "T*") Then
       With rstList
       .AddNew
       rstList!AzureTableName = tdf.Name
       rstList.Update
      End With
    End If
    
Next

Set tdf = Nothing
Set db = Nothing

End Function

The next function is required to strip out additional spaces in names

Public Function FindXReplaceY(FixTable As String, FixColumn As String, X As String, Y As String) As Variant

Dim strSQL As String

strSQL = "UPDATE [" & FixTable & "] SET [" & FixTable & "].[" & FixColumn & "] = REPLACE([" & FixColumn & "]," & Chr$(34) & X & Chr$(34) & "," & Chr$(34) & Y & """);"

DoCmd.RunSQL strSQL

End Function

We can now write the VBA that will write the make table SQL that once run will put one make table query into the maketableSQL table for each Azure table.

Public Function CreateMakeTableSQL()

On Error GoTo Err_CreateMakeTableSQL
Dim rstSQL As DAO.Recordset
Dim rstSQLx As DAO.Recordset
Dim dbc As DAO.Database
Dim SQLStringAdd As String
Dim LCounter As Long

Set dbc = CurrentDb

LCounter = 1
While LCounter < 9000
LCounter = LCounter + 1
Set rstSQL = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("SELECT T0001AzureTablesGlobal.PKID, T0001AzureTablesGlobal.AzureTableName, T0001AzureTablesGlobal.XFLag1 FROM T0001AzureTablesGlobal WHERE (((T0001AzureTablesGlobal.XFLag1) Is Null));")

SQLStringAdd = "SELECT * INTO COPY" & rstSQL!AzureTableName & " FROM " & rstSQL!AzureTableName & ";"

Set rstSQLx = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("T0002SQL")
With rstSQLx
.AddNew
rstSQLx!SQL = SQLStringAdd
rstSQLx.Update
rstSQLx.Close
End With

With rstSQL
rstSQL.Edit
rstSQL!XFLag1 = 1
rstSQL.Update
rstSQL.MoveNext
rstSQL.Close
End With

Wend

Exit_CreateMakeTableSQL:
    Exit Function

Err_CreateMakeTableSQL:
Select Case Err.Number
 Case 3021
   Resume Exit_CreateMakeTableSQL
  Case Else
  Resume Exit_CreateMakeTableSQL
  End Select
 
End Function

And finally Run all the queries

Public Function RunQueriesFromTable2(SQLSource As String)

DoCmd.SetWarnings False

Dim StartTime As Date
Dim EndTime As Date
Dim rstZ As DAO.Recordset
Dim strSQL2 As String

StartTime = Now()

Set rstZ = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset(SQLSource)

Do Until rstZ.EOF

strSQL2 = rstZ!SQL
DoCmd.RunSQL strSQL2
rstZ.MoveNext

Loop

DoCmd.SetWarnings True

EndTime = Now()

MsgBox "Finished ALL SQL queries! Process started at " & StartTime & " and finished at " & EndTime

End Function

And a script to pull all of this together

Public Function GetAzureScript()

DoCmd.SetWarnings False
Call CreateTableT0001AzureTablesGlobal
Call CreateandPopulateListofDBOTableNames
Call FindXReplaceY("T0001AzureTablesGlobal", "AzureTablename", " ", "")
Call FindXReplaceY("T0001AzureTablesGlobal", "AzureTablename", Chr(10), "")
Call AddByteColumn("T0001AzureTablesGlobal", "XFLag1")
Call CreateTableT0002SQL
Call CreateMakeTableSQL
Call FindXReplaceY("T0002SQL", "SQL", " ", "")
Call FindXReplaceY("T0002SQL", "SQL", Chr(10), "")
Call FindXReplaceY("T0002SQL", "SQL", "SELECT*INTOCOPY", "SELECT * INTO ZCOPY")
Call FindXReplaceY("T0002SQL", "SQL", "FROM", " FROM ")
Call RunQueriesFromTable("T0002SQL")
DoCmd.SetWarnings True

End Function

The complete module

Option Compare Database
Option Explicit

Public Function GetAzureScript()

DoCmd.SetWarnings False
Call CreateTableT0001AzureTablesGlobal
Call CreateandPopulateListofDBOTableNames
Call FindXReplaceY("T0001AzureTablesGlobal", "AzureTablename", " ", "")
Call FindXReplaceY("T0001AzureTablesGlobal", "AzureTablename", Chr(10), "")
Call AddByteColumn("T0001AzureTablesGlobal", "XFLag1")
Call CreateTableT0002SQL
Call CreateMakeTableSQL
Call FindXReplaceY("T0002SQL", "SQL", " ", "")
Call FindXReplaceY("T0002SQL", "SQL", Chr(10), "")
Call FindXReplaceY("T0002SQL", "SQL", "SELECT*INTOCOPY", "SELECT * INTO ZCOPY")
Call FindXReplaceY("T0002SQL", "SQL", "FROM", " FROM ")
Call RunQueriesFromTable2("T0002SQL")
DoCmd.SetWarnings True

End Function

Public Function CreateandPopulateListofDBOTableNames()

'These will typically be the names of the SQL Server tables this should work both with SQL Server and SQL Azure

Dim db As DAO.Database
Dim tdf As DAO.TableDef
Dim rstList As DAO.Recordset

'Call CreateTableT0001AzureTablesGlobal

Set rstList = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("T0001AzureTablesGlobal")
Set db = CurrentDb

For Each tdf In db.TableDefs
    ' ignore system and temporary tables and tables starting with T - personal choice option
    If Not (tdf.Name Like "MSys*" Or tdf.Name Like "~*" Or tdf.Name Like "T*") Then
       With rstList
       .AddNew
       rstList!AzureTableName = tdf.Name
       rstList.Update
      End With
    End If
    
Next

Set tdf = Nothing
Set db = Nothing

End Function

Public Function FindXReplaceY(FixTable As String, FixColumn As String, X As String, Y As String) As Variant

Dim strSQL As String

strSQL = "UPDATE [" & FixTable & "] SET [" & FixTable & "].[" & FixColumn & "] = REPLACE([" & FixColumn & "]," & Chr$(34) & X & Chr$(34) & "," & Chr$(34) & Y & """);"

DoCmd.RunSQL strSQL

End Function

Public Function CreateTableT0001AzureTablesGlobal()
 
     Dim dbs As Database
     Set dbs = CurrentDb
 
        dbs.Execute "CREATE TABLE T0001AzureTablesGlobal " _
        & "(PKID AUTOINCREMENT, " _
        & "AzureTableName CHAR CONSTRAINT PKID " _
        & "PRIMARY KEY);"
 
   
End Function

Public Function CreateTableT0002SQL()
 
     Dim dbs As Database
     Set dbs = CurrentDb
 
        dbs.Execute "CREATE TABLE T0002SQL " _
        & "(PKID AUTOINCREMENT, " _
        & "SQL MEMO CONSTRAINT PKID " _
        & "PRIMARY KEY);"
 
   
End Function

Public Function AddByteColumn(TblName As String, FieldName As String)
'Just use byte data type as only going to use this for a flag

DoCmd.RunSQL "AlTER TABLE [" & TblName & "] ADD COLUMN " & FieldName & " BYTE;"

End Function

Public Function CreateMakeTableSQL()

On Error GoTo Err_CreateMakeTableSQL
Dim rstSQL As DAO.Recordset
Dim rstSQLx As DAO.Recordset
Dim dbc As DAO.Database
Dim SQLStringAdd As String
Dim LCounter As Long

Set dbc = CurrentDb

LCounter = 1
While LCounter < 9000
LCounter = LCounter + 1
Set rstSQL = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("SELECT T0001AzureTablesGlobal.PKID, T0001AzureTablesGlobal.AzureTableName, T0001AzureTablesGlobal.XFLag1 FROM T0001AzureTablesGlobal WHERE (((T0001AzureTablesGlobal.XFLag1) Is Null));")
SQLStringAdd = "SELECT * INTO COPY" & rstSQL!AzureTableName & " FROM " & rstSQL!AzureTableName & ";"

Set rstSQLx = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("T0002SQL")
With rstSQLx
.AddNew
rstSQLx!SQL = SQLStringAdd
rstSQLx.Update
rstSQLx.Close
End With

With rstSQL
rstSQL.Edit
rstSQL!XFLag1 = 1
rstSQL.Update
rstSQL.MoveNext
rstSQL.Close
End With

Wend

Exit_CreateMakeTableSQL:
    Exit Function

Err_CreateMakeTableSQL:
Select Case Err.Number
 Case 3021
   Resume Exit_CreateMakeTableSQL
  Case Else
  Resume Exit_CreateMakeTableSQL
  End Select
 
End Function

Public Function RunQueriesFromTable2(SQLSource As String)

DoCmd.SetWarnings False

Dim StartTime As Date
Dim EndTime As Date
Dim rstZ As DAO.Recordset
Dim strSQL2 As String

StartTime = Now()

Set rstZ = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset(SQLSource)

Do Until rstZ.EOF

strSQL2 = rstZ!SQL
DoCmd.RunSQL strSQL2
rstZ.MoveNext

Loop

DoCmd.SetWarnings True

EndTime = Now()

MsgBox "Finished ALL SQL queries! Process started at " & StartTime & " and finished at " & EndTime

End Function

MS Access VBA Function (Part 5) – Run SQL Queries from a table

Clearly there is a problem with generating 66,000 queries and ramming each of them into the Query Database Window. Yes you got it, an MS Access database can only hold circa 32,000 objects (32,768 to be exact). I had been writing the query definitions to the system query definition table and this was making an elegant but pointless alphabetically ordered telephone directory out of the query database window before bombing out at the database limit. Defining programmatically more and more queries to be written to the query definition window was a revolution that ended as quickly as it had begun. A maximum limit I had previously never hit in all of the databases I had ever created, I hit in 1 hour. But how to run query lists longer than 32,000? Do I really need to break everything into separate databases with each complying with the 32,000 object limit? I felt there must be a better solution.

Then it hit me – I shouldn’t write the queries to the database window. Keep the queries in a table and call the queries from a function. That way the queries aren’t considered as objects in your natural sense to MSAccess but are run as queries when triggered from VBA. That way the limit on objects in a single database is the limit of data I can hold in a table. By linking to other tables that limit may even approach 2GB. That’s enough queries to keep me going for quite some time.

This is what I came up with

Be warned running thousands of queries takes time you might need to run this overnight or over several days hence why I have included a start datetime and end datetime to be shown in the message box on completion it is interesting to see how long 100s or 1000s of queries take to run. My queries can now potentially perform trillions of calculations all unattended by me.

Now I just want to run lots and lots of queries!!!

Public Function RunQueriesFromTable(SQLSource As String)

DoCmd.SetWarnings False

Dim StartTime As Date
Dim EndTime As Date
Dim rstZ As DAO.Recordset
Dim strSQL As String

StartTime = Now()

Set rstZ = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset(SQLSource)

Do Until rstZ.EOF

strSQL = rstZ!SQL
DoCmd.RunSQL strSQL
rstZ.MoveNext

Loop

DoCmd.SetWarnings True

EndTime = Now()

MsgBox "Finished ALL SQL update queries! Process started at " & StartTime & " and finished at " & EndTime

End Function

MS Access VBA Function (Part 4) – Write queries to a table

This is really great for address matching – take a clean source of information and create a set of update queries looking for strings that will be run on a table with less than clean data.

Public Function CreateTableofSQL()

Dim rst1 As DAO.Recordset
Dim rst2 As DAO.Recordset
Dim db As DAO.Database
Dim SQLString As String
Dim LCounter As Long
Set db = CurrentDb


LCounter = 1
While LCounter < 3000</code>
<code>LCounter = LCounter + 1</code>


<code>Set rst1 = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("SELECT TestTest.XStreetname, TestTest.XFlag, TestTest.Length, TestTest.XStreetname2, TestTest.XFlag FROM TestTest WHERE (((TestTest.XFlag) Is Null Or (TestTest.XFlag) = 0)) ORDER BY TestTest.Length, TestTest.XStreetname2;")</code>

<code>SQLString = "UPDATE T002BCAPR SET T002BCAPR.XStreetNameQuery = '" & rst1!XStreetname2 & "' WHERE (((T002BCAPR.LOCADDRESS1) LIKE '*" & rst1!XStreetname2 & "*'));"</code>

<code>
rst1.Edit
rst1!XFlag = 1
rst1.Update
rst1.MoveNext
rst1.Close

Set rst2 = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("T008SQL")
With rst2
.AddNew
rst2!SQL = SQLString
rst2.Update
rst2.Close
End With
Wend


End Function

MS Access VBA Function (Part 3) Address Matching – Find X Replace Y

A useful function for replacing characters or strings in a single field. This can be used in advance of address matching to increase the chances of getting matches in fields that have been collected through a UI with little or no validation.

Function FindXReplaceY(FixTable As String, FixColumn As String, X As String, Y As String) As Variant

    Dim strSQL As String

    strSQL = "UPDATE [" & FixTable & "] SET [" & FixTable & "].[" & FixColumn & "] = REPLACE([" & FixColumn & "]," & Chr$(34) & X & Chr$(34) & "," & Chr$(34) & Y & """);"
    
    DoCmd.RunSQL strSQL
    

End Function

And this is an example script that calls the above function to replace some special characters

Public Function RunFindXReplaceY()

DoCmd.SetWarnings False

    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "'", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "@", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "~", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "#", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "!", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "£", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "$", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "^", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "&", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "*", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "(", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", ")", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "-", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "+", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "=", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "?", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "|", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "\", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "/", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "{", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "}", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "[", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "]", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "`", " ")
    Call FindXReplaceY("TableNameVariable", "FieldNameVariable", "¬", " ")

DoCmd.SetWarnings True

End Function

MS Access VBA Functions (Part 2) Address Matching – UK Postcode String Finder

UK Postcode extractor

Function GetPostCode(Optional AddressText As Variant) As String
Dim AddrTextLength As Integer, TempText As String, TempPicture As String
Dim PostCodePics(10) As String, PictureItemNum As Integer
Dim n As Integer, x As Integer

GetPostCode = "" ' default response if no postcode detected
If IsNull(AddressText) Then
Exit Function
End If

PostCodePics(1) = "XXNSNXX" ' alternative formats of postcodes
PostCodePics(2) = "XXNNSNXX" ' where X = alpha, S = space
PostCodePics(3) = "XNNSNXX" ' and N = numeric
PostCodePics(4) = "XNSNXX"
PostCodePics(5) = "XXNNXX"
PostCodePics(6) = "XXNNNXX"
PostCodePics(7) = "XNNNXX"
PostCodePics(8) = "XNNXX"
PostCodePics(9) = "XXNXNXX"
PostCodePics(10) = "XXNXSNXX"

AddrTextLength = Len(AddressText)

If AddrTextLength < 5 Then
Exit Function
End If
If AddrTextLength <= 9 Then
TempText = Trim(AddressText)
Else
TempText = Trim(Right(AddressText, 9))
End If

PictureItemNum = 0
TempPicture = "" ' build a picture of the format of current text
For n = 1 To Len(TempText) ' detect the type of each character
x = InStr(1, "1234567890 ", Mid(TempText, n, 1))
If x > 0 And x < 11 Then TempPicture = TempPicture & "N"
If x = 11 Then TempPicture = TempPicture & "S"
If x = 0 Then TempPicture = TempPicture & "X"
Next

For n = 1 To 10 ' compare the format of the current text
x = Len(PostCodePics(n)) ' against each of the post code pictures
If Len(TempPicture) >= x Then
If Right(TempPicture, x) = PostCodePics(n) Then
PictureItemNum = n
GetPostCode = UCase(Right(TempText, x))
Exit For
End If
End If
Next

If PictureItemNum > 4 And PictureItemNum < 10 Then ' insert space in the middle if not present
GetPostCode = Left(GetPostCode, Len(GetPostCode) - 3) & " " & Right(GetPostCode, 3)
End If

End Function

MS Access VBA Functions (Part 1) Address Matching – Add and Drop Fields

Here are a series of Functions that can be used to help in matching addresses between a dataset that is good (eg Assessors Street File) and a dataset that could be improved – eg a Customer Relationship Management System.

ADD and DROP Fields

Function AddCharColumn(TblName As String, FieldName As String)

DoCmd.RunSQL "AlTER TABLE [" & TblName & "] ADD COLUMN " & FieldName & " CHAR(100);"

End Function

Function AddIntegerColumn(TblName As String, FieldName As String)

DoCmd.RunSQL "AlTER TABLE [" & TblName & "] ADD COLUMN " & FieldName & " INTEGER;"

End Function

Function AddDoubleColumn(TblName As String, FieldName As String)

DoCmd.RunSQL "AlTER TABLE [" & TblName & "] ADD COLUMN " & FieldName & " Double;"

End Function

Function DropColumn(TblName As String, FieldName As String) As Variant

DoCmd.RunSQL "ALTER TABLE [" & TblName & "] DROP COLUMN " & FieldName & ";"

End Function