Friday, February 27, 2026

When Combining Query Results Turns Into a Headache in Microsoft Access - QQ #81

Ever felt like a genius while stacking a dozen union queries together, only to discover later you've created a hair-pulling maintenance mess? You're not alone. Combining data in Microsoft Access - especially when you start getting clever with queries - can look fantastic at first and then quietly set you up for major headaches down the road. Today, I'm going to walk you through why some shortcuts look smart at first, where they typically backfire, and how to structure your database sanity for the long run. We'll also hit some other common Access questions straight from the trenches, like forms behaving badly, joins that seem to have a mind of their own, and head-scratchers about imports and data corruption. Let's get into it.

Let's kick off with a classic scenario: you've got a dozen tables, all with the same fields, and at some point, someone says, "Hey, can we just pull all that data together in one report?" The knee-jerk reaction might be to toss together a union query. Sure, it gives you a combined list, and for small datasets or one-off lists, that trick is fine. But when you start adding grouping, sorting, and calculations - especially stacked over 13 tables - things can get hairy. If you find yourself nesting GROUP BY inside union queries, it's really time to pump the brakes.

Here's why: in Access, union queries are great for merging similar datasets - think employees, vendors, and sales reps when you want one big people list. But they're a pain when you need to perform more complex operations. The moment you want to summarize, aggregate, or sort on fields that aren't neatly aligned in every table, you'll start running into reserved word collisions and cryptic syntax errors. "Name," "Type," "ID" - these innocent-sounding labels can make your query explode and the error messages are never as helpful as they pretend to be. You'll see the notorious "not part of an aggregate function" error as soon as you try grouping by anything that isn't handled right.

What's the sane solution? Staging tables. Instead of running wacky union gymnastics every time, just create a temporary (or staging) table. Append data from all your individual sources into that one spot, then run your summaries and sorts as needed. Maintenance becomes so much easier. Need to add table number 14? Just append that too - zero stress. Not only does this approach cut down on bugs, it's also easier for future you (or someone else) to understand, troubleshoot, and build upon. If you want to see all the nitty-gritty on how to set up such staging tables, check out the video above for the walkthrough.

Now, let's talk quirky forms and join logic - because if you've ever wondered why changing join types didn't seem to affect your Access results, you're far from alone. Take this common story: a user noticed that his player list was showing names even when there was no associated card data. The reason? Outer joins. With a left outer join, Access will show every record from one table, whether there's a matching record in the second table or not. Want to see only players with card data? You need an inner join. And here's a gotcha: the query builder's settings override what you see in the Relationships window. Changing relationships there does not change existing query joins - the query itself calls the shots. Double-click the join line in the query design view and set it directly. For a deeper dive, my Access Beginner and Expert courses are packed with join troubleshooting tips.

A quick word on zero-length strings, spaces, and nulls, because this subtlety will sneak up on people. A zero-length string is literally an empty string - a conscious blank, like when you ask someone for a middle name and they have none. A single space character, which is totally different, is like someone hitting the spacebar once. And null doesn't mean blank at all; it means "unknown, wasn't asked, maybe empty, maybe not." This distinction matters: Access stores and recognizes all three separately. Don't let your fields get cluttered with hidden blanks or nulls thinking they're all the same. Dig into my dedicated videos for real-life examples, and brace yourself - null math gets wild.

Let's move on to importing from Excel - especially when you're stuck with real-world spreadsheets full of actual names or descriptions rather than handy ID numbers. The best practice is: dump that data into a staging table first. Then, use update queries to match up foreign keys (IDs from related tables) before finally appending everything into your real tables. This lets you validate, clean, and trace your data before it hits your core system, keeping your database cleaner and your hairline intact (or at least not more receded than it already is).

On the subject of keeping things healthy, let's talk network setups and data corruption. Access databases are good team players in a small, stable local office. But as soon as you put your backend on a flaky Wi-Fi, a VPN, or try opening it across the internet, it's open season for corruption. Database connections can drop unpredictably, leaving half-finished writes and messy files. Good hardware - wires, switches, solid infrastructure - makes a world of difference. But if you keep running into corruption, that's your sign to consider SQL Server. SQL Server acts as a gatekeeper, never leaving your main file exposed, and users work through the server so dropped connections won't corrupt your data. Trust me, you don't want to learn this the hard way.

When is it time to redesign that legacy Access database from the Windows 3.1 days? The answer is: whenever your app starts feeling sluggish, overloaded, or you simply can't trace which chunk of code does what anymore. Rebuild intentionally based on what you actually use today - not the feature set you needed in 1997. Take stock, map your needs, and build with the benefit of experience. You'll wind up with a much tighter, more modern system and probably eliminate more bloat than you think possible.

Let's jump to another common question: Is Access still relevant? Absolutely. Microsoft's investing in the Power Platform and Azure, but Access remains the fastest, easiest way to build powerful desktop applications. Its role as a front end for SQL Server and Azure SQL is stronger than ever. You can start with a stand-alone Access database, then, as your business grows, migrate up to a SQL Server or even a hybrid cloud setup. And thanks to Access's rapid application tools, you don't lose your existing effort. My roadmap includes a lot of training on exactly this integration, so stay tuned if you're thinking about scaling up.

Let's talk about reports for a second. Are they still worth using if you never print a page? For sure. Reports shine when you need structured, polished output - whether that's for PDF exports, email summaries, dashboards, or "pretty" data layouts. Data sheets and forms work for day-to-day operations, but reports let you control exactly what users see and how it's formatted. And if you're trying to split a long text field across two columns, that's not natively supported - multi-column layouts handle records, not field-wrapping. You could pull it off by splitting your text into smaller chunks, but you'd need a little VBA trickery (and probably a temp table). If you want to learn more about those workarounds, check out the video above and watch for future tutorials.

For anyone thinking you can "secure" your database by simply renaming it with an ACCDR extension to hide the tables - bad news. ACCDR just launches Access in runtime mode, with the simplified interface, but does nothing for securing your data. If you want to truly protect your design and code, you need an ACCDE. For real back-end data security, SQL Server is the only way to go. Table renaming and interface tweaks are just mild annoyances for anyone who knows their way around Access.

Curious about running Access on a tablet? If you've got a full Windows tablet (think Microsoft Surface), you're good to go. But if we're talking iPad or Android? Sorry, Access doesn't run there natively. You can remote desktop into a Windows PC, or (with more ambition) move your data to SQL Server and create a web or platform-agnostic front end. And here's the biggie: even with a Windows tablet, don't use Access over Wi-Fi for anything mission-critical - wireless connections and Access databases are a corruption party waiting to happen. SQL Server solves that too. See a pattern?

On a lighter note, appreciate all your feedback on dark mode. Most users prefer it - it's easier on the eyes for those late-night coding sessions. If you want to send complaints, just remember to fold them into sharp corners first. Jokes aside, I read every comment and truly value your input.

Finally, let's set the record straight: Access can work as a full stand-alone solution (back and front end on a simple file share), as a rapid front end for enterprise-grade SQL Server or cloud data, or as part of a hybrid with web and mobile components. The trick is knowing what fits your business, your infrastructure, and your team.

So, what's the real lesson today? When it comes to combining data, keep it simple and maintainable - use temp tables instead of tangled union queries for larger processes. Split up your logic, don't be afraid to break things into smaller, saved queries, and take advantage of staging areas to clean and validate your data before it ever touches the core. That's how you build an Access database that stands the test of time and change.

As always, feel free to drop your questions or stories below. Let me know what obstacles you're facing and how you plan to use these best practices in your own systems. For the deep dives, walk-throughs, and more tips, check the embedded video above. And don't forget to check out the other resources and links I mention in the video description for further learning.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Crawl. Walk. Run.

When I was teaching my son to drive, there were moments when I just said, "Do it this way. Trust me." Not because I didn't have a reason. I had plenty of reasons. But explaining reaction time, blind spots, braking distance, and the fact that half the drivers on the road are texting while eating a taco is not what you do while a brand-new driver is merging onto a busy road. Sometimes the lesson isn't a lecture. Sometimes the lesson is, "Keep both hands at 9 and 3. Start braking sooner than you think. Trust me."

Teaching beginner skills in driving, piano, and Access databases

I used to run into the same thing when I taught piano years ago. I'd tell a beginner, "Start with your right thumb on middle C." Why? Because just do it. There are theoretical reasons. Hand positioning. Muscle memory. Efficient movement across the keyboard. But on Day One, they don't need a dissertation on biomechanics and music theory. They need a starting point that works. Later, when they've played a few songs, the why becomes obvious.

That's exactly what happens in my beginner Access classes.

Sometimes I say, "This is the way we're going to do it. Trust me." And occasionally someone thinks I'm being mysterious or holding something back. I'm not. I'm compressing thirty years of experience into a simple rule so we can keep moving forward without falling into a rabbit hole.

Take field names. I tell beginners: no spaces in your field names. Could I explain how [Order Total] turns into a bracket jungle in SQL and VBA? Could I show you how forgetting those brackets breaks your code and how dynamic SQL strings become a pain in the butt to debug? Absolutely. But if I stop in Beginner 1 to unpack parsing rules and name resolution, I'll lose half the class before we even build our first form. So the rule is simple: no spaces. Later, when you're writing advanced queries, you'll suddenly think, "Ohhhh. That's why."

Same thing with Lookup fields in tables. Access makes them look friendly. Helpful, even. But they hide what's really going on under the hood and can cause confusion when you start building queries. Explaining that properly requires understanding relationships, joins, and how Access stores the underlying key value. So early on, I just say, "Don't use Lookup fields in tables. We'll handle that with proper relationships and combo boxes." Trust me.

Every table gets a primary key. Yes, even your tiny two-table database. The deeper conversation involves indexing, performance, referential integrity, and updatable recordsets. That's not Day One material. Day One material is: every table gets a primary key. Period.

And don't name your field Date. Or Name. Or any other reserved word that seems harmless until Access decides to interpret it as something else and your query starts acting like it's possessed by a mischievous tribble.

This is all part of how I teach. Most reference books are depth-first. They'll give you everything there is to know about tables in one giant chapter. Every property. Every data type. Every obscure option you may never use. Then they move on to queries and do the same thing. That's great if you're using it as a reference manual. It's not great if you're brand new and just trying to build something that works.

I prefer a breadth-first approach. A little bit about tables. Then a little about queries. Then a form. Then a report. Then we circle back and go deeper. Crawl. Walk. Run. You can't appreciate composite keys until you've actually built something simple and felt the limitations. You can't understand why I'm picky about naming conventions until you've written enough code to see how small decisions ripple outward.

Even Starfleet works this way. They don't hand a brand-new ensign the warp core schematics and say, "Here, memorize every plasma conduit." They teach fundamentals. Procedures. Protocol. Later, when Geordi starts talking about phase variance in the EPS grid, it makes sense because the foundation is there. If Captain Picard says, "Make it so," you don't demand a 20-minute explanation while the Romulans are decloaking. You execute, and you understand the nuance later.

When I say, "We'll cover that in a future lesson," I'm not dangling an apple in front of you. I'm building scaffolding. Your brain needs structure before it can handle the details. If I try to teach every nuance of field-level properties for long integers in the first hour, you won't retain it. You'll just be overwhelmed.

So yes, sometimes you'll hear me say, "This is the way we're doing it. Trust me." That's not ego. That's pattern recognition earned over decades of building databases, fixing broken ones, and answering the same painful mistakes over and over again.

There's a time for nuance. There's a time for deep dives. And there's a time to keep your hands on the wheel, your thumb on middle C, and just follow the process.

Crawl. Walk. Run.

And I promise, we'll get to the warp core later.

LLAP
RR

P.S. See also: Covered in a Future Lesson

Thursday, February 26, 2026

How To Create Queries And Views In SQL Server SSMS And Use in Microsoft Access

Brace yourself, because today we're cracking open the world of queries and views in SQL Server - no more hiding behind the Access wizard. It's time to see how SQL Server lets you filter, sort, and analyze data directly on the server, saving your PC from pulling in a gazillion records it doesn't need. This unlocks major power for working with big databases or even those classic Access setups that are starting to feel a little creaky with tons of records.

First things first: connect to your database in SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS). You'll notice some things look pretty familiar if you're coming from Access, but there are enough differences that you need to get oriented so you don't walk into a pit of rookie mistakes. Click on New Query in SSMS, and don't miss out on the ability to toggle the zoom with your mouse wheel - handy if, like me, your eyes are a bit older than you want to admit.

SSMS comes equipped with a graphical query editor - think of it as the closest thing to Access's design grid. You can right-click and choose "Design Query in Editor" to bring up the familiar table-and-fields view. Checking the boxes for fields like CustomerID, FirstName, LastName, CustomerSince, or CreditLimit starts to build your query visually. Down below, you'll see SQL building itself automatically as you select fields. It's a little different from Access: here, the fields are listed vertically, not horizontally, and that flips your AND/OR logic! In Access, it's AND across rows, OR down; in SSMS, it's the other way around - AND down, OR across. Once you get used to that, it's smooth sailing.

Want to create an alias for a field? Easy. Set "FirstName" to "FN" by adding an alias, and SSMS adds it as "FirstName AS FN." Unlike Access, where you'd do it as "FN: FirstName," get used to this new syntax. Filtering and sorting fields is also familiar; just set them like you would in Access, but be aware that SSMS gives you actual sort order numbers - so it's not the field's position that decides which sort comes first, but the number you set under Sort Order. Makes sense after a few rounds.

If you want to filter names, put in a value like "Richard" for FirstName, and SSMS will automatically convert it to the right SQL with an N prefix and single quotes. The N just means the field type is NVARCHAR. You can also string together OR conditions (across columns) and AND conditions (down rows), just the opposite to Access - don't get tripped up!

Now, when you run the query, don't let SSMS's little quirks scare you. A red X in the corner? Most likely that's just SSMS's IntelliSense hinting "you might have an error," but if the Messages area says "Query executed successfully," you're good. True SQL errors are shown in the Messages tab and will actually stop your result from appearing.

If you want to jump back into the graphical designer after making changes to your SQL, make sure you select the SQL text you want to edit before right-clicking and choosing "Design Query in Editor" - otherwise, you'll think the designer lost your work, and you'll have a mild heart attack for nothing.

One cool SSMS feature: you can have multiple SQL statements in one window. This lets you execute several queries at once and see separate result tabs. When experimenting, I recommend using the TOP keyword, like TOP 10, to limit how much data you pull down - especially important when you're working with tables containing tens of thousands (or millions) of records. Otherwise, your query might hang for ages while it tries to send every last record across the network. Once you're satisfied it's working, you can remove TOP and get the full dataset.

In SSMS, when you hit Ctrl+S to save your query, realize it saves as a local .SQL file on your computer, not in the database itself. So, "queries" in SSMS are just files - if you want something stored on the server, you'll use a view. You can copy your SQL, right-click the "Views" area in SSMS, create a new view, and paste your statement directly. The graphical designer here is nearly identical to the query editor, so you can build from scratch or from your existing query.

It's worth mentioning that when you save a view with both the TOP keyword and ORDER BY, SQL Server will warn you that ORDER BY inside a view doesn't control the final output's sort order. That's by design - the ORDER BY works in combination with TOP when the view is created, but consuming code (like Access or another query) shouldn't rely on it for sorting. Always sort in your final SELECT statement if you care how your data appears to users.

Now, about my naming conventions: I use a "Q" suffix for views that correspond to queries, which helps me easily tell them apart from tables in Access once I link them. Some folks prefer "V" for views - do what feels right for you. Save your view, get rid of the unnecessary ORDER BY or extra fields you don't need, and now you've got a view (like CustomerQ) sitting right on the server, ready to do the heavy lifting.

Let's bring this full circle with Access. Once your view is ready, go to Access and link to that view via External Data > New Data Source > From Database > SQL Server > Link. Pick your Data Source Name (DSN), select the view, and now it shows up in your Access tables list, usually editable as long as your view isn't too complex. The beauty is that Access now pulls in only the records and fields selected by the view, instead of sucking down the entire customer table just to filter it locally.

This is a huge shift: instead of Access pulling massive data chunks across the network and filtering locally (which destroys performance as your database grows), SQL Server now handles the filtering and sorting, and sends just the finished result set to Access. If your view only selects active customers, that's all Access gets. Fewer records over the wire means a faster, more reliable, and professional setup that won't grind to a halt as your business grows.

As you keep building, make it a habit to push as much logic and filtering into your views as possible. Access is now the presentation layer - the pretty interface - while SQL Server does all the heavy computation. Later in the series we'll go deeper into pass-through queries, dynamic parameters, and advanced view design, so you'll be able to make your database apps faster than ever. Just keep that "server does the work, Access presents the results" mindset, and you'll be ahead of the pack.

A quick word about those squiggly lines that sometimes pop up in SSMS (IntelliSense telling you "invalid object name" even though the thing exists): don't panic! Sometimes it gets out of sync; a quick Ctrl+Shift+R typically helps, but it's mostly cosmetic. Same goes for case sensitivity - you don't usually have to worry about it. If it gets on your nerves, you can always toggle IntelliSense off.

To wrap up: today you learned how to create queries with SSMS's GUI, save them as views on the server, and connect them to Access for blazing fast results. Get used to thinking in views and letting SQL Server do the number-crunching, so you can build scalable, pro-level databases with ease. If you want to watch me walk through every click, the video above covers every detail.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

How To Use Subreports In Microsoft Access To Put Multiple Reports On One Printable Page

Trying to squeeze multiple reports onto a single, professional-looking, printable page in Microsoft Access can feel a lot like trying to herd cats - usually frustrating, often chaotic, and rarely as simple as it sounds. But if you've ever needed to present multiple sets of data (like orders, contacts, or various lists) together for the same customer, you're in luck: sub-reports are here to save the day. They let you merge different information streams into one organized, unified report without the copy-paste madness.

Why bother with sub-reports? Well, if you're stuck compiling multiple reports by hand just to give your boss a one-page customer summary, Access can make that process effortless and much more professional. Sub-reports let you include different, even totally unrelated tables and queries into a single parent report, each displayed neatly in its own section but linked wherever appropriate - like by customer ID. Once you get the hang of these, you won't ever want to go back to copy-pasting into Word again.

Let's dive right into how sub-reports work and when you should use them. If you've already mastered the basics of Access (like creating tables, building basic reports, and designing queries), you're ready for this. If not, check out my invoicing and report grouping videos first - they'll set the stage.

Most beginner Access users handle simple one-to-many relationships - say, orders and their details - by joining tables in a query and then building a report off that. All the order info goes in the header, while each detail item drops into the detail section. No sub-reports needed, no complex grouping required. This will handle most situations where all data is tightly related via a single, clean parent-child connection.

But what if you want to display several lists, each potentially unrelated to the others but all linked to the same customer? For example, you might want to show a customer's orders and their contact notes side by side, even though those tables aren't related to each other - just to the customer. This is where sub-reports really shine. Each list (orders, contacts, favorite ice cream flavors, whatever) lives in its own report, and you simply drop those reports into a master parent report as sub-reports.

Here's how to get started: begin by designing your sub-reports first. Let's say you've got an order query showing customer, date, and total. Turn that query into a small report (the "order sub-report") that shows only the necessary fields. Make it compact - remember, you might want these side by side in your final layout. The same goes for contacts: grab your contact data, design another simple report (the "contact sub-report"), and focus only on the essential fields.

Don't fuss too much with making them look perfect right away - just get the structure and fields in place. If you see a bunch of pound signs (###) on dates in print preview, that's just Access telling you the field isn't wide enough; tweak the formatting as needed (e.g., use the Short Date format to make dates fit, and adjust alignment for aesthetics).

Once you've got your sub-reports, set up the parent report. Usually, you'll already have a customer report - simplify it by removing extra details, so there's room for the sub-reports. Drop your contacts sub-report into the left half and your orders sub-report on the right. Titles and formatting can make it more readable, but don't overcomplicate things at this step.

The magic of sub-reports comes in how Access automatically links them based on shared fields such as CustomerID. When you insert a sub-report, check its properties: the "Link Master Fields" and "Link Child Fields" properties should match the field that connects the parent and child data - in this case, CustomerID. If you use differently named fields (like SalesRepID, ServiceTechID, etc.), you may need to adjust these properties manually to set the correct relationship. If data isn't showing up, double-check your field names and relationships.

Here's a pro tip: make sure both your sub-reports and their containing sections have the Can Grow and Can Shrink properties set to Yes. If not, Access will waste space for empty reports or leave giant gaps when a sub-report has no records for a customer. With those settings enabled, your final output will adjust dynamically, keeping everything tidy.

Watch out for report width issues - sometimes dropping in a sub-report will make your main report too wide, causing print or export problems. Always check your print preview and adjust the widths of both your report and sub-reports as needed.

Thinking about nesting sub-reports inside other sub-reports? It's possible, and it works - just don't get carried away. Two levels is usually plenty for real-world use; more than that, and Access might start slowing down.

If you want to go above and beyond, you can get even fancier: conditional sub-reports, dynamic switching with combinations of VBA, or handling blank results gracefully so your report never has awkward empty sections or headers. For these advanced tricks (and all the VBA code details), watch the full video above and check out my higher-level training and code vault for members.

In the end, the main takeaway is this: use sub-reports in Access to combine multiple related or unrelated lists onto one report. You'll save tons of time, impress your boss, and never have to cut-and-paste into Word again - unless, of course, you really like herding cats.

Questions or comments? Let me know how you plan to use sub-reports in your own Access projects down below. As always, for the step-by-step walk-through (and all those little details), check out the video embedded above.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

The Dragon in My Garage

This topic has come up a few times in the comments section of the Captain's Log, so I felt it was time to write a proper article about it.

Article about invisible dragons and evidence in claims

Imagine I invite you over to my garage and, with as much seriousness as a late-night History Channel host, announce: "Behold, my invisible dragon!" Of course, you can't see it. Or hear it. It floats, so you can't touch it. Its fire doesn't even burn, so, sorry, no s'mores. But trust me - it's there. The fun question: do you believe me, or do you need more than my enthusiasm as proof?

Carl Sagan, one of my all-time science heroes and a master of skeptical curiosity, coined this exact scenario. His point - aside from giving garage tours a new twist - is that untestable claims can't be meaningfully distinguished from pure fiction. If someone invents rules that make their claims impossible to prove or disprove, it's indistinguishable from simply making things up. I love Sagan's dragon because it so perfectly strips a claim down to its bare logic: either you can show it, or you can't. (No magic wands, cloaks of invisibility, or plot twists required.)

I have lost count of the tech support calls where clients assure me, "The bug only happens when there's a full Moon... but you'll never catch it in action." I once had a customer ask why their Access database "mysteriously" crashed on Tuesdays at 2 a.m., supposedly due to a "ghost in the server room." That ghost would have gotten along well with Sagan's dragon - both being remarkably shy around evidence.

This gets to what philosophers and logicians call the burden of proof. If I claim my Access database automatically fixes bad data because elves live in the backend, it's not your job to debunk elves in general. It's on me to provide solid, testable proof - say, an elf leaving change logs in the Event Viewer. The late and great Christopher Hitchens boiled it down even further: "What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." This isn't just snark; it's the guardrail that keeps tech, business, and life from spiraling into endless debates about invisible dragons, elves, or divine bugs. (Though "summoning elves" would definitely liven up most user-group meetings.)

In the "Devil's Due" episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, an entity named Ardra claims to be the devil (not the job I'd want, honestly) and tries to hoodwink the entire planet with special effects and sleight of hand. Captain Picard isn't impressed with her smoke and mirrors - he demands real proof, not just flashy illusions and dramatic entrances. Had Ardra tried the invisible dragon routine on the Enterprise, Data would have started scanning for thermal emissions before you could say, "Set phasers to skeptical."

And yet, so many online debates - especially on social media - still play the game backward. Someone drops a bombshell claim, demands the world prove them wrong, and then produces nothing but squid ink and Reddit memes. It happens in politics ("prove there wasn't fraud!"), business ("my startup will totally disrupt the industry, just wait!"), even in Access user groups ("Access corrupts databases randomly, trust me, my cousin said so!"). It's magical thinking, dressed up as common sense - like insisting your pet hamster is an undercover agent, but refusing to show his badge.

And of course, there's the classic principle that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. If I tell you I have five dollars in my pocket, that's entirely plausible - you probably wouldn't expect me to produce a bank statement to prove it. But if I claim I can fly like Superman, suddenly the bar for evidence is much, much higher - at the very least, you're going to want to see me actually take off. I've written about this before, but it's well worth repeating here: the more remarkable or outlandish a claim, the stronger and more convincing the proof needs to be before we treat it as anything but a story.

With apologies to Douglas Adams, who once suggested always bringing a towel, maybe we should all bring a little Sagan-style dragon detector to every conversation. Ask for evidence. Ask for ways to test it. If the answer is "you just have to believe," feel free to change the subject - or at least keep one hand on your wallet.

So, do you have your own invisible dragon story - something you've been asked to believe with zero evidence? And more importantly, how do you (politely) ask for the proof?

LLAP
RR

Connecting to SQL Server from a Microsoft Access Database

If you're looking to supercharge your Microsoft Access application by connecting it to SQL Server, you're in the right place. This approach brings the best of both worlds: the power and reliability of SQL Server to safely store your data, plus the easy-to-build interface and forms of Access. Let's walk through the process step by step, and cover some important gotchas, so you can link your SQL Server tables directly into Access and work with live server data - just like you're used to with a split Access database.

You might have spent a lot of time inside SQL Server Management Studio so far, doing all your table-building and setup. That's great, but as an Access developer, you live and breathe Access. So now comes the fun part - actually connecting these two tools so Access becomes a live front end and SQL Server does the heavy lifting on the back end.

The key thing to remember is this: SQL Server stays the system of record. That's where your actual data is safely stored. Access simply provides a way to view and edit that data. We're not importing our tables into Access - instead, we're linking to them, so every change is live, and you see real-time results. If you've split an Access database before, this works the same way, only now the back end is SQL Server rather than another Access file.

When you link tables in Access, you're just creating pointers that reference your SQL Server tables. It's like giving Access a map to where the data lives. Opening up a linked table in Access means you're looking directly at the data inside SQL Server. Be careful not to confuse linking with importing: importing brings over a static snapshot and doesn't stay synchronized, whereas linked tables always point to the live data.

To get started, open up your Access database (I'm using my trusty free TechHelp template for this). Head to the External Data tab, and choose New Data Source > From Database > From SQL Server. You'll want to select "Link to the data source by creating a linked table." This will launch a wizard to help you establish your connection.

Here comes a crucial piece: Access and SQL Server talk through something called ODBC (Open Database Connectivity). You need to pick or create a Data Source Name (DSN), which is essentially a little file that stores all your connection settings. There are two main flavors: file DSNs (little .dsn files you can copy/share easily) and machine DSNs (saved in the Windows config of a particular computer). For most small offices or personal setups, file DSNs are usually the easiest to wrangle, because you can move them between computers.

If you don't see your DSN listed, just hit New to create one. Now, the key step here is picking the right driver so Access and SQL Server speak the same language. You'll likely see multiple options - "SQL Server," "ODBC Driver 17 for SQL Server," and "ODBC Driver 18 for SQL Server." Here's your pro tip: use Driver 17 if you want the smoothest experience! The plain "SQL Server" entry is older and not recommended for modern setups, and Driver 18, while tempting (it's newer), tends to enforce strict security and may bring up annoying security prompts if you're just testing things out. Driver 17 gives you all the compatibility you need, without the headaches.

After choosing your driver, you'll be prompted to name your DSN file. Use any name that makes sense to you. I usually pick something that tells me which server I'm pointing to - like "Kirk SQL Express." Next, you'll set up which server to connect to. Don't count on the Browse button to work reliably; it usually doesn't. Type in either the server's name or its IP address - whatever you've used before in SQL Server Management Studio.

For authentication, choose Windows authentication unless you know you're set up for SQL Server authentication. Now comes a common pitfall: before you finish, make sure to set the "default database" to the one actually holding your tables. If you skip this, you'll connect to the system master database and just get a sea of "sys" system objects instead of your real tables! Use the dropdown on the connection wizard to select your actual database.

If you do miss this step, don't sweat it - just run through the wizard again and make a new DSN. It doesn't hurt to practice, and you can always clean up DSNs later.

Once you've created the DSN with all the right info, select it in Access and hit OK. The Link Tables dialog pops up, showing you all available tables in your database (ignore anything starting with "sys" - those are system tables). Find your actual user table, something like DBO.CustomerT, and select it.

If your table uses modern SQL Server data types, you'll probably get a warning about the DateTime2 data type. SQL Server's DateTime2 supports fractional seconds, and Access now offers a "DateTime Extended" type to handle this. If you're using Access 2016 or newer, it's fine to enable this support by clicking Yes. Just be aware: if anyone's using Access 2013 or older, say No to ensure backward compatibility, but you'll lose out on those fractional seconds. In modern environments - definitely say Yes!

The connection will finish, and you'll now see your live SQL Server table as a linked table in Access, complete with the "DBO_" prefix. You might want to rename linked tables to something simpler, but personally, I find the DBO prefix reminds me these are SQL Server objects, which is handy when you're writing queries or code. It also signals to you (and your future self) when you need to handle things like connection string quirks or special syntax in your VBA or queries.

Let's test our handiwork. Open your linked table in Access, make a change to some data, and close it. Then check that change inside SQL Server Management Studio. If you see the change reflected there instantly, congratulations - you're working live over the connection! This is exactly what linking tables is all about.

On the topic of DSNs: once your tables are linked, Access actually stores all the connection info internally. You don't need to keep the DSN file around unless you want to link more tables later. You can use Windows' built-in ODBC Data Source Administrator (search "ODBC" in the Start menu) to view, edit, or remove DSNs. If you want, you can rename or tidy up your DSN files in your Documents folder - or even distribute copies to other users if you're setting up more workstations.

Before wrapping up, let's clarify some sticky points so you don't trip over common beginner mistakes:

First, SQL Server's DateTime2 corresponds to Access's DateTime Extended data type. They work together, but they're not technically identical. DateTime2 lets you store higher-precision dates on the server. DateTime Extended enables Access to round-trip that high-precision data, so you won't get data loss or weird rounding errors.

Second, when picking ODBC drivers, use Driver 17 or 18 for modern setups; avoid the legacy "SQL Server" driver. And if your SQL Server is running on a named instance, remember to specify it, like "Kirk\SQLExpress" - sometimes just the server name is enough, but sometimes you need the whole thing depending on your network setup.

Today you learned how to bridge your Access front end with SQL Server, bringing in live, linked tables that deliver all the robustness of SQL Server with the user-friendly experience of Access. Play around with it, try making some forms or queries - as far as Access is concerned, a linked SQL Server table works almost just like a local one. And if you get stuck, re-check those DSN or driver choices.

For the complete, step-by-step demonstration, be sure to watch the video embedded above. Got questions? Drop a comment - I love hearing what you want to learn in future lessons.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Monday, February 23, 2026

Microsoft Account v Local Account For SQL Server And Microsoft Access

Let's talk about one of those behind-the-scenes bits that can either save your sanity or drive you up the wall when connecting Microsoft Access to SQL Server: how your Windows logon identity controls authentication, security, and database permissions. If you've ever hit a brick wall trying to make Access behave on a network - especially with SQL Server in play - knowing who Windows thinks you are (and how SQL Server sees you) is absolutely essential. Plus, we'll walk through how to switch your Windows user from a Microsoft account to a good old-fashioned local account, so things get a whole lot simpler and a lot less mysterious.

The way you log into Windows directly impacts how SQL Server authenticates you. Most folks don't think about this when they're wrestling with database connection headaches, but the reality is the user account you use for Windows is the identity SQL Server will trust - at least, when you're using Windows authentication (which, trust me, is the way to go in most small office setups). That means that if your Access front end pulls data from SQL Server, that data access is as clean (or as messy) as your Windows login setup. Makes you want to pay a little more attention during Windows setup, right?

Let's get right to the root of the confusion. When you use SQL Server authentication (with separate SQL usernames and passwords), Access can store those credentials right in the front-end file as part of the connection string. This isn't some deep secret; if someone knows what they're doing, those credentials can be extracted. Not ideal if you care about security and not just crossing your fingers. So, for small networks or offices - even without a domain controller - Windows authentication is smarter. It means SQL Server trusts your Windows logon, and you're not scattering passwords all over the place in Access front ends.

Here's where most people stumble: If you're logged into your PC with a Microsoft account (that's the thing Windows "strongly encourages" you to use now - usually your email address), connections start getting messy. This is because Windows authentication is cleaner and more predictable if you stick to a local account, especially in situations where you're just running a peer-to-peer network. No clouds. No syncing headaches. Just Windows on your machine, SQL Server on another, and a clear identity both can agree on.

Don't worry, switching from a Microsoft account to a local account won't vaporize your programs or files. Your desktop will look just as messy as before, and Access or SQL Server won't lose anything. You're simply changing how you log in. But, before you do this, a little bit of housekeeping advice: you might get prompted to re-sign into OneDrive, Windows Store apps, Edge, or Office. Syncing stuff like themes or bookmarks might stop until you sign back in. If you've got Bitlocker, make sure your recovery key is backed up. For most business users, these are small trade-offs for the much bigger security and manageability win.

Ready to make the switch? Here's the streamlined process (note: this is for Windows 11, but it's nearly identical on Windows 10):

Go to Start then Settings (pin this on your taskbar if you haven't). Click on Accounts, then find Your info. Look for the option labeled "Sign in with a local account instead." Windows will try to scare you off this path by warning about lost sync features, but click through - these are just temporary hurdles. You'll need your current password, and then you'll set up your local account username and password (put a hint in, too). Save your work, sign out, and then log back in - either by reboot or just signing out/in. Voila! Your account is now a predictable, local user, and Access/SQL Server connections will be a whole lot simpler from here on out.

Here's what this means in practice: when you connect to SQL Server using Windows authentication, SQL Server knows you by your Windows user - machine name and all. No passwords need to be stored anywhere in Access. As long as that username and password exist on both your Access machine and your SQL Server machine, you'll be able to set up individual permissions, control who sees what, and troubleshoot problems without pulling your hair out over mysterious authentication errors. And, if you ever need to verify how SQL Server "sees" your login, there's a nifty way to check (see the video above for this trick).

Can you use Microsoft accounts? Sure, they're supported. But things get weird. Your logon turns into an email address string that's longer and less intuitive. More importantly, in environments where Windows is handling identity translation (especially across machines), the cloud-based mapping of Microsoft accounts brings extra unpredictability. On small networks without a formal IT department, that layer of mystery is the last thing you want to chase down.

For most small businesses, peer-to-peer setups, or learning environments, stick with local accounts. You'll spend less time debugging impossible login errors and more time building your database. If you're running a domain and have IT staff, you're already living large - no worries there. And later on, I'll show you how to make even more advanced (and secure) SQL Server connections from Access using VBA - without embedding credentials anywhere.

So, to sum up: make your authentication straightforward, predictable, and secure by using Windows authentication with local Windows accounts. If you ever run into weird credential issues and you're still on a Microsoft account, you already know what I'm going to tell you - simplify your life and switch to local accounts!

That's everything for now on how your Windows logon ties into SQL Server permissions. Want the full hands-on walk-through? Check out the embedded video above. As always, let me know how this worked for you or if there's a specific topic you want covered in future lessons.

Live long and prosper,
RR