Topic awaiting preservation: Help reading Access db from web (Page 1 of 1) |
|
---|---|
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 05-30-2004 16:56
Greetings all. At work we use an Excell spreadsheet for tracking time on projects. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 05-31-2004 02:07
You can acheive the same thing with php, you dont need ASP to do this. What you will need on your server is support to run the php files, which is what you need to set up, then the rest should be pretty straight forward. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-01-2004 07:25
I do have a LAMP server at work that I set up with red hat 9, however this will be storing valuable project cost data, my boss wants to keep this on windoze behind the glass wall where it can be backed up daily. Currently our IT department does not officially endorse anything but Bill Gates blessed products. I have never used Access before, and I want the db to be searchable and pull up stats by project, user or both. Once I import the Excel file into Access, what GUI do I use to search through the data? This is why I was thinking a web based interface might work. I would like to use a web interface for the data input instead of the Excel spreadsheet, however I am not proficient enough to make the web based time sheet perform the percentage calculations that the Excel file does. If all I needed to do was just track the hours, this would be a piece of cake. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 06-01-2004 09:56
With MS Access you can create forms, or a visual basic interface, which will 100% more flexible then doing it the web way. I have a database i have nearly completed for someone that is quite big, does everyone from a full order system, complete employee timesheet system which each employee uses to log times, quote, invoice tracking, full job tracking include individual part/assembly database, even an internal messaging system! |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-02-2004 03:41 |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 06-02-2004 06:03
Well if you havnt done any other programming before is one of the easier one to learn, ive done c++/c etc before which if anything make it harder - because i want to do the things you can do in those in vb but alot of it u cant! - heh. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-02-2004 21:08 |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 06-03-2004 00:17
Do you have MS Office? If so and it is a version with MS Access then you do not need to purchase VB separately, its built into MS Access, its actually VBA i think its slightly different. And there are plenty of tutorials on the net to cover pretty much all areas to do everything - im 100% self taught with the help of the internet (i.e no schooling on it) so anyone can do it |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-03-2004 00:32 |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-03-2004 04:53
OK, I think I'll try this from another angle. I can write a PERL script that will write to a flat file database. Then I could import the flat file (csv) into MS Access and let Access do the calculations. I do know how to get to the step of importing the csv file, the rest will be a learning experience. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 06-03-2004 05:39
U can import the excel sheet straight into an excel table |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-03-2004 16:44 |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-03-2004 17:37
Did you mean that I can import an excel file straight into access? |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 06-04-2004 02:32
Sorry i havnt had a chance, you can import an excel file straight in yes. I think all you have to do is create a button and go through the wizard. Then you just click the button, choose your excel file and it puts it in a table. Something like that anyhow. The hard bit for me was collating the data with existing data and sorting out the garbage . |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 06-06-2004 02:39
Oh by the way wavmixer - ctrl-g opens the visual basic part. The way it works is similar to javascirpt etc.. kinda. You can put buttons/fields in etc and they are events, so on those events you tell it what to do in the code (there is a bunch of already coded stuff to choose from tho, such as importing your file). You can also call custom functions/ modules from within that. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-17-2004 23:58
OK, here is what I came up with. I started with DBMan and tweaked a bit until I came up with my revision . I have set up a test account username=test password=test. This is not the actual working DB, just a clone hosted on my domain. I then imported the csv file into Access and now have a working Access database. Now what the heck do I do with it? I want to be able to run a query by employee name, project or whatever combination my boss may wish to do. I don't see anyplace in Access to set this up. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 06-18-2004 13:16
Ok firstly why do you want the website part at all? isnt this just for your LAN? |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Sunny SoCal |
posted 06-19-2004 06:23
My boss wants a web based time sheet to replace the current Excel spreadsheet we have been using. He also wants to be able to track costs by project and/or employee. Mine is not to question why. Mine is but to do, not try. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Australia |
posted 06-19-2004 10:19
I dont understand why he wants the web based one, its a waste since its sooo much easier to do with access. I would try convince him if i were you.... imo a good employee is one who does question why just FYI :P.. I always tell my bosses what they need to do and why, as long as you know why and can back it up then it shouldnt be too hard to convince them. |