Proofreading and Access 2003

J

John W. Vinson

Why is Word better than Access when I use several languages?

Ummm...

Context?

Perhaps because Word is a word processor, designed to handle words of
language, and Access is a relational database development environment designed
to handle arbitrary data; perhaps because of Microsoft corporate priorities.

John W. Vinson [MVP]
 
G

gu1934

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gu1934


John W. Vinson said:
Ummm...

Context?

Perhaps because Word is a word processor, designed to handle words of
language, and Access is a relational database development environment designed
to handle arbitrary data; perhaps because of Microsoft corporate priorities.

John W. Vinson [MVP]
Thank you John! I know the difference between Word and Access, but that does not help me. Microsoft ought to fix that problem!
gu1934
 
J

John W. Vinson

Thank you John! I know the difference between Word and Access, but that does not help me. Microsoft ought to fix that problem!

I guess I don't understand specifically what the problem is. What can you do
in Word which you cannot do (and would expect to be able to do) in Access?

John W. Vinson [MVP]
 
G

gu1934

--
gu1934


John W. Vinson said:
I guess I don't understand specifically what the problem is. What can you do
in Word which you cannot do (and would expect to be able to do) in Access?

John W. Vinson [MVP]
Hi John!

In Word you can spell check i several languages at the same time but in
Access every word in another language is unknown = an error.

I am working with a big database with several languages. Than the
proofreading will be very complicated and slow.

My language is Swedish and I use English, German and other languages in my
database file with over 14 000 records.

gu1934
 
J

John W. Vinson

In Word you can spell check i several languages at the same time but in
Access every word in another language is unknown = an error.

I'll try to pass on this complaint. Have you reported it to Microsoft as a
bug? Any response?

John W. Vinson [MVP]
 
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