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I have this code - which seems to work OK for a few records,
but is painfully slow when many (more than 20 or 30) records are updated. It works on a standard Export table from Access to Excel (Assuming ID in column 1) 'reference to ADO 2.8 Dim rs As ADODB.Recordset Dim RowCounter As Long Dim ColumnCounter As Integer Sub UpdateRecords() Const TheDBname = "C:\Access_FrontEnd.mdb" For RowCounter = 2 To Cells(1, 1).CurrentRegion.Rows.Count For ColumnCounter = 2 To Cells(1, 1).CurrentRegion.Columns.Count rs.Open "SELECT * FROM [TheQry]WHERE ((([TheQry].ID)=" & Cells(RowCounter, 1).Value & "));", "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=" & TheDBname & ";", adOpenDynamic, adLockOptimistic, adCmdText rs.fields(Cells(1, ColumnCounter).Value).Value = Cells(RowCounter, ColumnCounter) Next ColumnCounter rs.Update rs.Close Next RowCounter Set rs = Nothing End Sub Question 1 - TheDBname - is an Access query - (linked to another Access database) Would it be faster to do a SQL statement on the database instead of using a linked access query? Question 2 Instead of opening a recordset for each record (row), would it be faster to open all of the records with one query? Queston 3 Sometimes my database gets corrupt. Is there a better approach (using ADO)? Is it worth while to switch to DAO? If so - an example of code? Thanks in advance your your help. Any insight would be greatly appreciated. |
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