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![]() My experience with a lot of users is that (unless one is in accounting) the progression of learning MS Office is Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Access. Sometimes users get to Excel and say, "Wow, what a great way to store data for future use and I can do all sorts of calculations on it," and it ends there. They accumulate a bunch of data and they can sort it and search through it but they can't efficiently query it or produce reports easily. I have had to switch a lot of users from an Excel "database" to Access when they really wanted to get serious about a real db. Excel is a spreadsheet program Flat file dbs are ok for address books and small amounts of data. As was first mentioned, if you think you'll need to use a spreadsheet, learn Excel. If you think you'll be doing presentations, learn Powerpoint. If you think you'll be developing databases, learn Access. However, I have found that if you don't use it immediately after you learn it you will be wasting your time unless you want it on a resume. The key is use it! Bob Phillips Wrote: Hi Rodney, I think that is my point. Excel is NOT a database, however hard many people try and make it (including MS in 12?), and a flat file is a flat file. It might be able to manage tasks that were originally done by flat files or even databases, but it still is not one. A database as I was taught has files/tables whatever, and a some form of structure. So to me, a flat file database is an oxymoron. -- HTH Bob Phillips (remove nothere from email address if mailing direct) "Rodney" wrote in message ... G'day Bob, Excel is a flat file database, when used as such, as opposed to a "Relational Database, eg: Access A flat file database is described by a very simple database model, where all the information is stored in a plain text file, one database record per line. Each record is divided into fields using delimiters or at fixed column positions. The data is "flat", as in a sheet of paper, as compared to a more complex model such as a relational database. I use MSWorks for smaller files, but that will only take 32,000 records, so for larger volume, I have to sneak over to Excel. The benefits of MSWorks include a learning curve of about 10 minutes to be up and running, and for small jobs, like organising Local Cricket database, record collections, and so forth. HTH | What is a flat file database? Sounds like a contradiction to me. -- jahoobob |
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