| bio | website | |
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| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 5 months |
| seen | May 9 at 23:10 | |
| stats | profile views | 2 |
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Apr 17 |
comment |
look for missing datetime records in database Thanks - I realize I overcomplicated this in my mind. Creating a table of minutes & running a join on my timestamp makes perfect sense! |
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Apr 17 |
accepted | look for missing datetime records in database |
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Apr 17 |
asked | look for missing datetime records in database |
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Mar 29 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Apr 9 |
asked | upgrading sql server 2000 database to sql server 2012 |
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Mar 28 |
accepted | Acceptable size for MS Access Database? |
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Mar 28 |
revised |
Acceptable size for MS Access Database? deleted 10 characters in body |
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Mar 28 |
asked | Acceptable size for MS Access Database? |
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Jan 10 |
asked | Print filter parameters on a report |
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Jan 10 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Jan 10 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Jan 10 |
accepted | If A is next to B, how to automatically assert that B is next to A |
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Jan 10 |
comment |
If A is next to B, how to automatically assert that B is next to A This works for what I need... just one note: I made the two select statements be "FROM PackageNextTo" .... this data is being stored in another table because one package may be next to zero or more packages. |
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Jan 10 |
revised |
If A is next to B, how to automatically assert that B is next to A noted that Access requires a PK and will automatically autoincrement if necessary. |
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Jan 10 |
comment |
If A is next to B, how to automatically assert that B is next to A The ID in Table PackageNextTo is an AutoIncrement required by Access. Not something I'm actually using in coding anything. |
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Jan 9 |
awarded | Editor |
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Jan 9 |
revised |
If A is next to B, how to automatically assert that B is next to A added 14 characters in body; edited tags |
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Jan 9 |
asked | If A is next to B, how to automatically assert that B is next to A |
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Jan 5 |
comment |
Multiple values in lookup fields For my example, our students are not all "pure" --- One person can identify as both White and Asian, for example. |
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Jan 5 |
asked | Multiple values in lookup fields |