question disappear

  • Thread starter יריב החביב
  • Start date
×

יריב החביב

Hello,

I wrote a question by the name "form - too long for open" (or somthing like
this)

at 02/07/2008 (or near) and even got a few answer's, but now i dont see it.

where is the question ?


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תודה רבה

----------------
This post is a suggestion for Microsoft, and Microsoft responds to the
suggestions with the most votes. To vote for this suggestion, click the "I
Agree" button in the message pane. If you do not see the button, follow this
link to open the suggestion in the Microsoft Web-based Newsreader and then
click "I Agree" in the message pane.

http://www.microsoft.com/office/com...-8965-9495763c3ada&dg=microsoft.public.access
 
×

יריב החביב

thank you chris,

but it was few day's a go,

and it had few answer's, and new question
 
×

יריב החביב

thank's again chris,

you gave a very importent lesson on date's

except that i have not find my question, yet.

--
תודה רבה


Chris O'C via AccessMonster.com said:
Ok. Thanks. I see you found your question.

Just to let you know, to most of the people answering questions in the
English groups, 02/07/2008 means Feb. 7, 2008. The US reverses months and
days in dates so it's in mm/dd/yyyy format. Be careful of that in your
Access queries, because Jet uses US date formats even if your PC localization
is for a different country.

Chris
Microsoft MVP


יריב החביב said:
thank you chris,

but it was few day's a go,

and it had few answer's, and new question
Unanswered questions expire off the server after awhile so people don't have
to weed through tons of posts with little or no value. If you (or an MVP)
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
where is the question ?
 
J

JulieS

You might try using Google groups. The url (tinyurl) below is a link
to all messages posted by your email address in the access newsgroups.

http://tinyurl.com/6l98mx

Julie

in message
thank's again chris,

you gave a very importent lesson on date's

except that i have not find my question, yet.

--
???? ???


Chris O'C via AccessMonster.com said:
Ok. Thanks. I see you found your question.

Just to let you know, to most of the people answering questions in
the
English groups, 02/07/2008 means Feb. 7, 2008. The US reverses
months and
days in dates so it's in mm/dd/yyyy format. Be careful of that in
your
Access queries, because Jet uses US date formats even if your PC
localization
is for a different country.

Chris
Microsoft MVP


???? ????? said:
thank you chris,

but it was few day's a go,

and it had few answer's, and new question
Unanswered questions expire off the server after awhile so
people don't have
to weed through tons of posts with little or no value. If you
(or an MVP)
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]

where is the question ?
 
J

John W. Vinson

Hello,

I wrote a question by the name "form - too long for open" (or somthing like
this)

at 02/07/2008 (or near) and even got a few answer's, but now i dont see it.

where is the question ?

You can use http://groups.google.com to find an archive of past questions.
It's not absolutely complete but it stores data far longer than Microsoft's
server.

Use the Advanced Search option and select microsoft.public.access as the name
of the newsgroup to search.
 
×

יריב החביב

THANK YOU !

I found it !!!
--
תודה רבה


JulieS said:
You might try using Google groups. The url (tinyurl) below is a link
to all messages posted by your email address in the access newsgroups.

http://tinyurl.com/6l98mx

Julie

in message
thank's again chris,

you gave a very importent lesson on date's

except that i have not find my question, yet.

--
???? ???


Chris O'C via AccessMonster.com said:
Ok. Thanks. I see you found your question.

Just to let you know, to most of the people answering questions in
the
English groups, 02/07/2008 means Feb. 7, 2008. The US reverses
months and
days in dates so it's in mm/dd/yyyy format. Be careful of that in
your
Access queries, because Jet uses US date formats even if your PC
localization
is for a different country.

Chris
Microsoft MVP


???? ????? wrote:
thank you chris,

but it was few day's a go,

and it had few answer's, and new question
Unanswered questions expire off the server after awhile so
people don't have
to weed through tons of posts with little or no value. If you
(or an MVP)
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]

where is the question ?
 
J

JulieS

You're welcome. Glad to have helped.

Julie

???? ????? said:
THANK YOU !

I found it !!!
--
???? ???


JulieS said:
You might try using Google groups. The url (tinyurl) below is a
link
to all messages posted by your email address in the access
newsgroups.

http://tinyurl.com/6l98mx

Julie

in message
thank's again chris,

you gave a very importent lesson on date's

except that i have not find my question, yet.

--
???? ???


:

Ok. Thanks. I see you found your question.

Just to let you know, to most of the people answering questions
in
the
English groups, 02/07/2008 means Feb. 7, 2008. The US reverses
months and
days in dates so it's in mm/dd/yyyy format. Be careful of that
in
your
Access queries, because Jet uses US date formats even if your PC
localization
is for a different country.

Chris
Microsoft MVP


???? ????? wrote:
thank you chris,

but it was few day's a go,

and it had few answer's, and new question
Unanswered questions expire off the server after awhile so
people don't have
to weed through tons of posts with little or no value. If
you
(or an MVP)
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]

where is the question ?
 
T

timetc1

Thanks, that worked! I recovered a couple expired posts using
http://groups.google.com.

As an additional option, if you can't find an old post on Google Groups, you
might want to just try doing a regular search on Google or Yahoo.

I had a post that expired on the forum AND also didn't show up on
http://groups.google.com, however, when I searched on Google using the
subject line from my microsoft forum post, a company website picked up the
thread and used it on their site.

Wish there were a more direct way to access old posts directly in the forum
itself, but this worked for me.
 
A

Arvin Meyer [MVP]

If using a newsreader with the NNTP protocol instead of a browser, you can
download and save messages, even as text if you prefer. As an added benefit,
it is substantially faster to load, read, and search. You are then no longer
at the mercy of someone else's server.
 
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