Monday, July 6, 2026

Why Is Microsoft Access Not Available For Mac?

Microsoft Access has been around on Windows for what feels like forever, and yet if you're a Mac user, you're still out of luck when it comes to a native version. A lot of people wonder why Access never made its way over to macOS, especially when Word, Excel, and PowerPoint have happily lived on both platforms for years. Considering how many businesses and individuals get locked into the Windows ecosystem because of Access, it's a pretty reasonable question.

This isn't just about checking one more box on the Microsoft Office for Mac installer. Access is a different beast entirely compared to Word or Excel. While Word is just a really powerful word processor and Excel is the champion of spreadsheets, Access is a full-blown database development platform under the hood. If you know Access, you know it's got tables, queries, forms, reports, VBA code, macros, and a ton of little moving parts living together in every database file. It's not exactly your average Office app.

The biggest hurdle comes down to technology. Access was built from the ground up around Windows plumbing - stuff like the Jet and Ace database engines, COM automation, ActiveX, VBA integration, the whole Windows API, and a pile of Windows-only drivers and libraries. Microsoft can port Word and Excel to Mac because those apps don't depend as heavily on Windows-only tech. Access, on the other hand, would need a massive rewrite from scratch. They can't just hit "recompile" and get a working Mac version, not even close.

Meanwhile, there's a business side here too. Access thrived in the Windows business environment. By the time Macs started showing up in large numbers at work, there were already solid contenders on the Mac side, like FileMaker Pro, which Apple eventually bought. So if you're Microsoft, you do the math: huge cost to rebuild, comparatively tiny Mac market of diehard Access users, and a world where most businesses already run Windows when they need Access. It's just not an attractive investment.

Some folks will tell you Microsoft kept Access Windows-only on purpose, just to keep businesses on Windows PCs. Let's be honest, that probably didn't hurt, but the technical and market realities were really what made the difference. If it was low-hanging fruit, we'd have it already.

Fast forward to today, and the story gets even more clear. Microsoft is pouring more effort into cloud-based stuff like Power Apps, Azure, and Dataverse. These platforms work everywhere, Mac or PC. Instead of spending a fortune rewriting Access for Mac, they focus on tools that run in any browser or on any device. Access for Windows is still alive and well (new features are even coming out), but asking for a native Mac version at this point is a long shot.

So what are your options if you're a Mac user who needs Access right now? Virtualization is the trick. Tools like Parallels Desktop and VMware Fusion let you run a full Windows environment right alongside macOS, and by all accounts from the Access community, they work great for running Access. You'll need a separate Windows license and a copy of Access, but it's the best way to get the full experience. Remote Desktop into another Windows machine is another common workaround, especially if you have a work PC sitting somewhere or a cloud-hosted Windows box to connect to from your Mac.

But if you're holding out hope for a real, native Mac version of Access? At this point, don't. It's just not likely to happen. The technical barriers are high, the business case is weak, and honestly, there are solid workarounds these days for people who truly need Access on a Mac.

If you want to see how all this looks in action - plus a few more tips for running Access on a Mac - check out the embedded video for the full walkthrough and discussion.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Celebrate America's 250th Independence Day With Fun Facts and Humor in 2026

It's not every day you get to celebrate a quarter of a millennium of freedom, but that's exactly what's happening in 2026. America's hitting the big 2-5-0, and if you're a fan of history, fireworks, or just looking for a good excuse for a backyard barbecue, this is a milestone worth marking. Sure, every Independence Day comes with its own traditions, but let's face it, you don't get to throw a semi-quincentennial party every year (try saying that after your second root beer float).

Let's start with that word - semi-quincentennial. It might sound like something a Roman emperor shouted at you in Latin class, but it actually just means 250 years. "Semi" is half, "quin" is five, and "centennial" is 100. So if you ever find yourself at a trivia night or you want to impress your friends at the grill, now you can explain why we aren't just calling it "America's Big Birthday Bash."

Think about where we've come from since 1776. In 250 years, America has fought wars, survived a depression or two, landed on the moon, and let's not forget - brought air conditioning to the masses. If there's one invention we can all be especially grateful for each Fourth of July, it's definitely that. There's also the little device you're probably reading this on right now - one that can access the entirety of human knowledge, but let's be honest, mostly gets used to watch silly videos and debate with strangers online. Ah, progress.

What's always worth celebrating, though, are the ideals that started it all: liberty, self-government, and the freedom to speak your mind (even if what you have to say is just a hot take about potato salad). After all these years, those values are still as important - and sometimes as controversial - as ever.

If you're like me, you might be tempted to recycle a few jokes from last year's celebration. Why waste a perfectly good one-liner about fireworks, loud Labradors, or your British friends who still haven't quite forgiven us for 1776? Speaking of which, if you do have British pals watching, be kind to them - it's a tough week for their pride and their tea supply.

But let's talk safety and etiquette for a second. Fireworks are as American as apple pie and questionable fashion choices, but I can't encourage you enough to be respectful. Military vets, pets, and parents of young kids in your neighborhood will all thank you for saving the artillery show for reasonable hours. Here in my part of Florida, the rules are pretty clear: light 'em up on the Fourth, not on the Third (or at three in the morning unless you want your popularity to drop faster than a dud sparkler). Remember, there's always that guy who can't wait to celebrate early - and the only thing he's blowing up is his reputation as the neighborhood nuisance.

Of course, you also need to make sure you're buying legit fireworks. Just because you found a "boom stick" on a card table in a gas station parking lot doesn't mean it's a wise investment. Shop smart, treat your fingers kindly, and don't forget to leave out cookies and milk for Captain America (because why should Santa get all the snacks?). And maybe give a nod to Will Smith and Jeff Goldblum while you're at it - after all, they did save us from the aliens, right?

At the end of the day, America's 250th Independence Day is a celebration of freedom - and of those who fought to secure it, long before any of us were around. We may not always agree with everything happening in the country, but the fact that we're free to voice those opinions is worth a party all on its own.

So enjoy your fireworks, your hot dogs, and your family time. Be safe, be considerate, and most importantly, have a great Fourth - no matter what side of the pond your ancestors came from.

And if you want some extra tips, fun facts, or just want to catch a few recycled jokes, check out the embedded video for the full rundown.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Power Apps for Microsoft Access and SQL Server: Build a Mobile Front End

Ever wish you could pull up your trusty Microsoft Access database on your phone without having to rebuild everything from scratch? That's a pretty common request, and let's be honest, nobody wants to reinvent the wheel (or their Access app) just to get some mobile action. Good news: you can actually build a simple mobile front end using Microsoft Power Apps with your existing Access database. The trick is to let SQL Server do the heavy lifting in the background.

As much as folks sometimes panic about "replacing" Access, that's absolutely not what's happening here. Access stays right where it is as your desktop front end. We're just storing your data in SQL Server so Power Apps can play with it too. That way, you get to keep the database you know and love, but your data is accessible from just about anywhere - your phone, tablet, even your website (if you want to go that far). When you're done, you'll be able to whip out your phone, launch a Power App, and see your familiar data, while everything on your desktop keeps working just as it always did.

So, why move your data to SQL Server in the first place? Well, if all you really want is remote access to your same old Access database, you could just use Remote Desktop or a hosted Windows solution. Shoot, most of the time when I'm traveling, I just leave my computer on at the office and remote in. It works, but it's not for everyone - maybe you don't want to leave your computer running nonstop, or perhaps you need something that feels more like a true mobile app.

When you need more flexibility, moving your tables up to SQL Server becomes the clear winner. SQL Server acts as a reliable, central store for your data. Not only can Access connect to it seamlessly (if you relink your tables), but so can other applications - including Power Apps, reporting systems, and custom web apps you might build in the future. One database, any number of front ends, and your users get to work however they like best.

You've also got options like SharePoint or Microsoft's Dataverse (especially if you're deep into the Power Platform or Dynamics 365). I still lean towards SQL Server, simply because it's industry standard, rock solid, and works with pretty much everything.

Now, let's get to the fun part - building the Power App. Here's the basic plan:

1. First, make sure your Access data lives in SQL Server. If you need help with that, I've got free lessons that walk you through setting up an account (Winhost is great), creating your database, moving your tables, and relinking everything back to Access so it still behaves just like always. Get that done first; it's painless and the foundation for everything else.

2. With your data online, hop over to make.powerapps.com. Sign in with your Microsoft account, hit "Create," and choose "Canvas app from blank." Pick the "Phone" layout (unless you want to get fancy with responsive apps, which is a whole separate adventure). This approach feels very similar to Access's form designer - you've got a blank canvas, you put controls wherever you want, and you get to design exactly the UI you need.

3. Next, get your SQL Server data connected. Add a new data source and search for SQL Server. Heads up: SQL Server is a premium connector, so you'll need a Power Apps license (the price changes, but plan on about $20 a month at the time of writing). There's a free trial and a developer plan too if you just want to get your feet wet.

4. Enter your SQL Server connection info (from your host), tell it which tables or views to use, and voila - your Power App now has access to your Access data, via SQL Server, right on your phone. Honestly, the hardest part of this is just getting those connection strings right. Once it's connected, adding forms and fields is easy, and feels like second nature if you've ever built Access forms.

Quick warning: Power Apps is designed for internal business apps, not public websites. Every user needs a Microsoft account and appropriate permissions. If you wanted a public-facing interface, you'd probably want a custom web app instead. But for your employees or trusted users, Power Apps is excellent.

Third-party tools like Retool and Appsmith exist too, and I've seen people use them to great effect, but Power Apps is a no-brainer if your world already revolves around Microsoft 365.

You don't need to be a master programmer here. Power Apps handles a ton of the heavy lifting for you - drag and drop, link to your tables, set up some logic, and you've got a perfectly serviceable mobile view of your back-office data in an afternoon.

The bottom line: Migrating your Access tables to SQL Server doesn't mean giving up Access. You're gaining the ability to connect to all kinds of front ends. Power Apps is a great way to get started building lightweight mobile (and web) applications without leaving the Microsoft ecosystem or losing all your work in Access.

If you want to see me go through the process step by step, the video below walks you through the entire process, shows the screens, and gives you a good look at the pitfalls and little tips I've picked up from experimenting with Power Apps and Access integrations. Check it out if you want to see the whole thing in action.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Microsoft Access Users: Protect Your Mission Critical PC Before Your Next Office Update

If your business relies on Microsoft Access to keep things running smoothly, stability is the absolute king. While those snazzy new features are tempting, nobody wants their whole operation grinding to a halt halfway through a workday just because of an unexpected Office update. If you've got invoices piling up or a warehouse full of folks with nothing to do because Access is suddenly acting up, that's not a minor inconvenience - that's money flying out the window.

Let's be honest: most of us just want our systems to keep working. But here's the kicker - recent changes in how Microsoft releases Office updates might be putting even your "stable" PCs at a bit of risk if you're not paying attention.

So here's the inside scoop. A lot of Access developers (me included) were caught off guard recently when Office updates hit the mainstream "Current Channel" and made Access crawl. VBA code that used to zip along was now slower than molasses. And no, these weren't just the beta testers or folks living dangerously on Insider Previews; this was happening to regular users just doing their thing.

Turns out, Microsoft has been using a small pool of regular users on the Current Channel as "guinea pigs" for testing Release Candidate builds. Nobody sent out an application form - you might just be one of these lucky testers without even knowing it! Reasonable from their engineering perspective (they need to catch bugs on weird real-world setups), but probably not what you want for your mission critical business computer.

So what can you do to protect yourself, your data, and your sanity? It boils down to understanding the different update channels:

Current Channel is the default for Microsoft 365. You'll get new features and fixes fast, but this is also the channel Microsoft uses for behind-the-scenes validation testing. If you value stability over shiny toys, maybe think twice.

Current Channel Preview is for folks who want to live on the edge and catch bugs early (and maybe enjoy some chaos along the way). Not one I recommend for production machines you rely on daily.

Beta Channel is for the true daredevils who want features before they're even properly baked. You'll get plenty of bugs. Fun for testing, terrible for business-critical systems.

Monthly Enterprise Channel - now this is your best friend if Access is running your business. This channel gets updates once a month (usually on Patch Tuesday), and things have had more time to settle. According to Microsoft, it's not used in the same way for Release Candidate testing, so you're less likely to get hit by experimental surprises. This is what I'd use for anything mission critical, and honestly, I let a couple of days pass after Patch Tuesday before clicking update, just in case something nasty sneaks through.

As for "Semi-Annual Enterprise," don't even worry about that one - it's being retired. Monthly Enterprise is now the stable long-term pick.

My two golden rules: back everything up regularly, and control when updates are installed. I don't let Office update itself automatically on important PCs. Instead, I install updates manually at a quiet time, after making a backup, and I always jot down the last good build number. That way, if something goes sideways, it's a lot easier to roll back. (And yes, rolling back is possible - I walk through how in the video if you need the nitty gritty.)

Switching channels isn't rocket science, but you do have a few options depending on your setup. Most regular users can use a registry file from reputable sources (like the folks at Access Forever) to easily flip Office to the Monthly Enterprise channel. There's also a more advanced Office Deployment Tool for IT admins managing lots of computers, and even command line options if you want to get fancy. Again, details and walk-throughs for each are in the video and on Access Forever's website, so you aren't left guessing.

The takeaway here: if Access is mission critical, prioritize stability. Put your main machines on Monthly Enterprise, back up everything, and do your updates on your own terms - not when Microsoft feels like it. Keep a separate PC, laptop, or virtual machine for testing new builds if you like living on the cutting edge, but don't gamble with your business's daily operations.

And hey, the Access Team is still cranking out cool new features (like soon-to-drop improvements with combo boxes and continuous forms). Just make sure you're the one deciding when those new features get to meet your critical systems.

Want to see exactly how to check your channel, set it, and recover from a bad update? I've got the full demo and walkthroughs in the embedded video above. Give it a watch for all the nitty gritty details.

Stay in control, keep those backups up to date, and let someone else discover the bugs first. Your business (and your blood pressure) will thank you.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Monday, June 29, 2026

Microsoft Access Database Normalization Without the Computer Science Degree - QQ 97

If you have ever felt overwhelmed by all the textbook rules about database normalization - first normal form, second normal form, six millionth normal form - you are not alone. This week, let's clear the fog around normalization and chat about what really matters when building solid Microsoft Access databases, no degree in computer science required. Plus, it was quite the week in the world of Access: forum questions, surprising little usability changes, SQL Server debates, troubleshooting rabbit holes, and the old Access vs. web debate all made an appearance (and yes, a tech story or two snuck in). So grab your cup of coffee, and let's dive into the latest round of interesting problems and shop talk from the Access community.

I'll start with the topic people love to complicate: database normalization. Everyone loves to toss around academic buzzwords, but honestly, for 95 percent of everyday Access developers, you do not need to memorize formal definitions. Let's boil it down to what actually matters when you're building tables.

First rule of building tables: every table should represent only one thing. Customers are customers, orders are orders, products are products - don't mix and match. Keep your customer data (name, address, and so on) in one table, and relate everything else back to it as needed. Which leads to the next classic mistake: duplicating information. If you catch yourself copying customer info onto every order or invoice, it is time to rethink those relationships. Store it once and relate, do not repeat.

If you find yourself adding "phone number 1," "phone number 2," and so on into a table, that's a clear sign you need related tables - a table for phone numbers, email addresses, or whatever categories keep growing. Personally, if you get past three of anything, it is time to split them out. This is especially true if you come from the world of Excel, where copying data everywhere is standard. Proper database design with relationships is what makes Access powerful in the first place - everything else is just icing.

For the perfectionists out there, yes, sometimes you break the rules on purpose. Want to keep a snapshot of a shipping address on each order? That's a valid reason to denormalize - there are always exceptions, but most people are better off learning the basics and playing by them until there's a good reason not to.

Moving on, I spotted a subtle but sweet little UI change in the latest Microsoft 365 subscription builds of Access: when you copy a table, it now names it "TableName - Copy" instead of "Copy of TableName." Not a big deal, but these tiny quality-of-life improvements make my day. Consistency with Windows file naming is always welcome. Speaking of small improvements, wide forms are finally in the works for Access beta users - so if you've been itching for forms wider than 22 inches, your prayers are about to be answered. You can grab the beta to try it now or wait a bit for the feature to go mainstream, depending on how adventurous you're feeling.

There were also a few great questions from the forums. One was about migrating tables to SQL Server: do you have to replace your Access queries with SQL Server views? Nope. Linked tables play nice - your Access queries will keep working just fine 99 percent of the time, even across backends. You can take it slow, moving one table at a time, tweaking and optimizing later rather than all at once. When everything is stable, that's when you think about squeezing out speed with views and pass-through queries in SQL Server. Patience here pays off in smooth migrations and fewer headaches.

Technical glitches always come up, and sometimes the answer is frustratingly simple. A member had a CDO email issue pop up after a Windows update. We ran the usual gauntlet of account settings, passwords, and authentication fuss… and then restarting Access fixed it. It sounds silly, but often, the classic "turn it off and back on again" solves a host of mysterious problems. So before you go down a troubleshooting rabbit hole, close all your Access databases, restart Office, and - very important - fully restart Windows (not just sleep mode). Backups first, of course. Save yourself some gray hairs.

For those dabbling with SQL Server: computed columns are a handy feature, but keep your main business data tables clean. Formatting (like concatenating first and last name) belongs in your queries or views. Tables should store data, not display logic. There are always edge cases for performance or indexing, but for display and neatness, keep those computations out of your main tables.

Another interesting exploration: someone wanted to open YouTube videos from Access while bypassing ads with an ad blocker. As an independent creator relying on those ads, let me just say: please do not. The embedded browser control in Access isn't the same as your full browser, so browser extensions and blockers don't carry over. There's no supported way to sneak around it anyway, and, honestly, if you want ad-free YouTube, just get Premium. Keeps creators afloat and gives you the good stuff interruption-free.

Here's a troubleshooting classic: a user's report wasn't showing the letter body. The likely culprit? The report is trying to pull data from a form that is not open or from a dirty (unsaved) record. If you have ever hit print after editing a record and got nothing, that's usually the cause. Make sure you save forms before generating reports - sometimes just refreshing the data does the trick.

For folks curious about macros and VBA: you can use Access's built-in tool to convert macros directly into VBA. It is a great stepping stone for anyone starting with macros and wanting to dip their toes into real code. Quick tip: when you convert a macro, Access adds robust error handling which is handy, especially if you plan on deploying your database to less-experienced users. While I prefer straight VBA for complex automation, macros are a great training ground and sometimes the only way to add buttons to certain places in the interface.

Someone else asked if you can pass tempvars from Access directly to SQL Server. Not directly - tempvars only live in Access. What you can do is grab the value of a tempvar and send that along as a parameter in a pass-through query or stored procedure. Tempvars are just local variables, so once you pull the value, SQL Server is none the wiser about where it came from.

Of course, the old debate of Access versus web applications came up (again!). Honestly, whether Access forms look "professional" is a design choice, not a technology limit. You can make Access look as clean or as cluttered as you like. The critical question is: what problem are you solving? If you need rapid development for local PC users, nothing beats Access for speed. But if your users need browser access - on Macs, phones, or tablets - then sure, build a web front end and connect it to the same SQL Server backend. You do not have to toss out Access; use it where it makes sense and supplement with web parts as needed.

Occasionally, I get requests to build complex, industry-specific databases (like pathology labs or insurance). Here's the thing: the Access part is easy. The tricky part is learning your business and data. Once you know your processes, the fundamentals of tables, relationships, queries, forms, and reports apply to almost any industry. If you know your business, you can apply Access skills to fit the puzzle together.

There were a few more troubleshooting chats - one user struggled with a check register calculation. The usual advice applies: double-check your formulas (credit minus debit), make sure your fields are bound correctly, and always review your spelling. Experience says 99 percent of "broken" queries are really typos or accidental misbindings. And if a video has tens of thousands of views with no revolt in the comments, chances are the formula works, and it is a minor mistake with the implementation.

Final tip of the week: if you want to learn VBA, recording macros in Word or Excel and reading the generated code is a great learning technique. While Access does not have a macro recorder, converting macros to VBA gives you a peek under the hood and helps you bridge the gap from drag-and-drop to real coding.

That's a wrap for this week's adventures in Access. We covered the practical side of normalization, weighed the Access-versus-web debate (spoiler: you can use both), talked SQL Server migrations, shared simple troubleshooting wisdom, and touched on some cool improvements coming soon. For all the gritty details and the full round of questions and screen demos, check out the embedded video above.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

How to Use Macros in Microsoft Access

Ever found yourself wishing you could make a single button in your Microsoft Access database run a whole sequence of actions? Automate reports, open several forms, run queries, and more - without needing to learn how to write VBA code? That is exactly where macros come into play. If you are looking to make your database a little smarter but have no intention of turning into a full-blown programmer, let's talk about how Access macros can make your life easier.

Most of us who use Access fall into one of two camps: those who want to go deep and learn VBA to build full-blown applications, and those who just want to knock out repetitive tasks quickly without diving into code. If you are in that second group - the unofficial Access wrangler in your office, the department manager, the small business owner, or, let's be honest, the person who inherited Steve's database when Steve retired - macros are definitely for you.

Here is the lowdown: a macro in Access is just a list of actions that run one after another. Imagine giving Access a checklist: open this form, run that query, pop up a message box, print a report, export some data - whatever you need. You build that list visually, by picking actions from a dropdown. No coding in sight. Just pick, stack, and let Access do the work for you.

This idea of "macros" often throws people who come from Excel or Word, because over there, macros are recorded - click Record Macro, do your thing, hit stop, and you get a bunch of VBA code. Access does not work that way. There is zero recording, and you are not going to end up staring at a wall of VBA. Instead, you pick actions from a menu and put them in order. It is almost funny that Microsoft chose the same word for two such different features.

Macros in Access are for the regular humans - those of us who have a job to do, want to automate it, and have better things to do than click through the same five forms every single morning. Think of the things you do all the time: run a weekly report, prep a mailing list, open a handful of forms and run a set of queries as soon as you start your day. These are exactly the kinds of tasks a macro can help with.

Sure, there is the built-in command button wizard in Access which is great for simple stuff. Want one button that opens a form or prints a report? The wizard has got you covered. But as soon as you want a button to do multiple things - run several queries in sequence, export some data, show a message, then open a report - macros step up to the plate. Now you are free from being limited to just one action at a time.

So what does this actually look like? Open the Macro editor in Access (Create tab, Macros and Code group), and you'll see a list of available actions like opening forms, running queries, showing messages, and more. Want to open your Customer form? Just pick "OpenForm" and select the form. Want to add a message box that pops up? Drop in "MessageBox" anywhere in your list with the text you want viewers to see. The interface is simple. You can reorder your actions, drag and drop commands, and experiment until you get the workflow you want.

One tip: the order of your actions really matters. If you want a warning message to pop up before anything else happens, that "MessageBox" command should be at the top of your list. Want to open two forms? Stack two "OpenForm" actions and rearrange them if you need the second one on top. If you want to clean up, add or remove actions, everything is a click away - undo is your friend. And remember, not every mistake can be solved with Undo; sometimes closing without saving is the better move.

When you are happy with your macro, save it and hook it up to a button on your main menu form. Use the command button wizard (under Miscellaneous actions) and set it up to run your macro. Give it a friendly label like "Open Customers Macro" and now your users get an easy, guided way to kick off some automation without ever having to dig through the database's guts. Less time spent teaching people where to find things, more time spent on real work. If you want to go a step further, you can even add macros to the Quick Access Toolbar at the top - just drop them into the toolbar via the "More Commands" menu and you have one-click access for yourself or everyone who uses the database.

One of the most powerful (and slightly underappreciated) features: the AutoExec macro. AutoExec is a specially named macro that runs automatically every time your database opens. Back in the day, this was your way to set up the database startup experience. Even though modern Access lets you pick a startup form, AutoExec still shines when you need to check whether you are running in a Trusted Location (which determines if VBA will even run) or want to run a sequence of checks before your main menu appears. If your database is sitting somewhere "untrusted," AutoExec can pop up a message to your users telling them how to fix it - way before VBA tries and fails to load your forms.

Macros are not just for beginners, by the way. Even after you have learned VBA, you will occasionally find that the best or even only solution for a particular automation is a macro. You might use one for startup checks, batch processing, or to set up forms when you know users might not have code enabled. They are a great addition to the toolbox rather than a replacement for programming. When you need to do something like clear out a temp table, append two different sets of customers, then open a mailing list report - all in sequence - macro actions make that a breeze. Just drag and drop your queries and report actions in the macro and you are done. Need to tweak the process? Just adjust the queries or change the macro sequence. No redesign needed.

If you are interested in getting a bit more advanced, macros can do a whole lot more: conditional logic, parameter prompts, submacros, business rules, audit logging, and more. There is also a natural progression from macros to VBA if you ever decide you need even more power and flexibility in your database. But for a lot of daily business needs, macros do the job - and make you look like a database wizard in front of the boss (or at least the hero who saves everyone a dozen clicks a day).

The bottom line: macros make it easy to automate the repetitive stuff in Access so you can focus on bigger and better things. They will not replace VBA, but they are a fantastic tool to have whether you are brand new to databases or have been around the block a few times. If you want to see the whole step-by-step process or dig into more advanced techniques, the video above covers the full walkthrough - so check that out for all the hands-on details.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

How To Undo Record Changes In Microsoft Access

Ever found yourself in that classic Microsoft Access moment - you are cruising through records, making updates, and then, three customers later, realize you messed up a record way back? Wouldn't it be nice if Undo in Access worked like Control Z in Word and let you gracefully rewind through all your changes?

Let's dig into exactly what Undo can (and cannot) do for you inside Microsoft Access. Spoiler alert: it is not as straightforward as in Word or Excel, but you do have some options - and if you want to get fancy, you can even build something better yourself with a little bit of development magic.

The first thing to understand is that Undo in Access works at the field and record level. As soon as you start typing in a form, the record goes "dirty" - Access's way of telling you data is being edited (watch for that little pencil icon). At this stage, if you want to bail out, you have a couple of options: smash Control Z, hit the Undo button, or simply tap Escape to back out of your changes. Pretty much all will cancel out what you started typing.

It gets more interesting when you edit several fields in a record. Once you've hopped around to different fields and start hitting Undo, you'll notice Access usually undoes just the field you're on - or, if you push it, the entire record. You cannot step back through each field's edits one-by-one like you might expect from Word. There's this odd "second Undo" behavior where, on pressing Undo twice, it sometimes looks like nothing happened. What's really going on is that Undo first reverts your edit in the field, then a second time moves you out of edit mode, and only after that will a third Undo zap the whole record. Yeah, it's weird, but that's how Access rolls.

Now, what if you've already moved off that record? Once you save and shift to the next record, your Undo options shrink fast. Access kindly gives you one "get out of jail" Undo on the last record you changed, but after that - you're out of luck. If you've changed multiple records and only spot your goof several records later, there's no stepping back through history like in Word. Access's focus is being a database, not a document editor, so it just does not keep a giant Undo stack for you.

And don't rely on Redo to save the day, either. Redo in Access is pretty flaky. Sometimes it lets you redo a change if you're still on the right record and field, but a lot of the time - especially after moving around - it just doesn't work. So, if Undo/Redo is part of your workflow, you'll want to stay mindful of these quirks.

If you want to class things up, you can make your own Undo button right on your form. All it takes is attaching a small VBA command like Me.Undo to a button. There's another command (DoCmd.RunCommand acCmdUndo) for folks stuck on ancient Access versions, but Me.Undo is the way to go moving forward. Don't get excited about a Redo command, though - it simply does not exist in VBA.

Now, for folks who want the real deal - a multi-level Undo history - Access does not hand it to you on a silver platter. You can build your own system, but it's a bigger project. The concept is: log every change to a record in a separate table, recording which record and field was changed, the old value, the new value, and maybe a timestamp. With that info, you could create your own Undo (and even Redo) buttons that move back and forth through changes. If that sounds appetizing, there are videos and examples on my site showing how to build a full change log and step through those changes manually using some simple VBA.

This all boils down to: Access will let you Undo a field while you're typing, or the whole record before you save. Once the record's saved and you wander off, you get a single "oops" Undo for that last record - after that, you're on your own. If you want robust multi-level Undo like a word processor, be prepared to get your hands dirty with some change logging and form buttons.

If you are interested in a full walkthrough on building a true multi-level Undo/Redo system in Access (without losing your sanity), let me know in the comments. I love building this kind of stuff and might just make a deep-dive video on it. Either way, keep an eye on those dirty records and don't be afraid to bail out with Undo when you need it.

As always, you can check out the video above for a hands-on demo and to see these little quirks in action. Questions? Comments? Future video ideas? Sound off - I read them all.

Live long and prosper,
RR