A
aaron.kempf
man..
i really really like designing tables in ADP 2000.
I mean-- it lets you put the defaults for a table.. just like you would
set datatypes-- with cut and paste (and it's one step per field;
instead of 3 steps per column)
I really wish that this design view was an option in Access 2003.
I mean-- it's SOOOOOOO much nicer than the version in 2002 and 2003.
I obviously live and die by the stored proc designers in XP and 2003--
those are the best thing since sliced bread
but the table design in 2000 is pretty powerful..
couldn't we make a mode for Enterprise Manager (sql 2005 workbench i
mean) where we could design tables like this?
i just think that it's all about giving us more powerful tools-- that
are customizable for our own needs.
i have had the pleasure to have some wide tables in the past.. like
100-200 fields (really useful for storing complex data); and this would
be really really nice-- and it would help us to keep better tabs on our
data.
-aaron
i really really like designing tables in ADP 2000.
I mean-- it lets you put the defaults for a table.. just like you would
set datatypes-- with cut and paste (and it's one step per field;
instead of 3 steps per column)
I really wish that this design view was an option in Access 2003.
I mean-- it's SOOOOOOO much nicer than the version in 2002 and 2003.
I obviously live and die by the stored proc designers in XP and 2003--
those are the best thing since sliced bread
but the table design in 2000 is pretty powerful..
couldn't we make a mode for Enterprise Manager (sql 2005 workbench i
mean) where we could design tables like this?
i just think that it's all about giving us more powerful tools-- that
are customizable for our own needs.
i have had the pleasure to have some wide tables in the past.. like
100-200 fields (really useful for storing complex data); and this would
be really really nice-- and it would help us to keep better tabs on our
data.
-aaron