If you have a table on a web page and the table is well structured for a database, you can use it as a table of your database. That is, you can import it in Microsoft Access. Like a normal text file, a typical HTML document can contain anything. This means that you should not attempt to import just any HTML file into your database. When in doubt, you should first check it. A good candidate to be imported should have all the necessary tags of an HTML table: table, tr (for the records), and td (for the columns). As long as the table is well created inside of the document, Microsoft Access can identify, analyze, and decide whether it is ready to be imported. To import an HTML file in Microsoft Access, on the Ribbon, click External Data and, in the Import section, click the More button and click HTML Document. The steps to follow are the same for a text document.
You can transfer a Microsoft Access table and its data to a web page and you have many options. If you are using an application such as Microsoft FrontPage or Microsoft Expression Web, you can copy and paste. To do this:
Some other applications do not support copy and paste. An alternative is to export the table to HTML. To save a table as HTML, in the Navigation Pane:
This would open the Export - HTML Document dialog box indicating the folder where the file will be saved, followed by the name of the file itself and its .html extension. Eventually, when the file has been saved, it would be complete with all the normal HTML tags. If you want the file to directly be part of a web site or a web project, you can change the path to point to your web folder. If you are only interested in the table, let the file be saved. Then, open the code of the document, which you can do with any text editor such as Notepad, copy only the code of the table and paste it in the desired section of your actual web page.
Microsoft Access does not provide its own native means of connecting a database to the Internet, but it can be used as a server database accessed from the web. To make this happen, you can do everything manually or you would use an external application such as Microsoft Visual Studio, CodeGear Delphi.NET, Microsoft Expression Web, or many other applications. You can create an ASP application, a PHP web site, an ASP.NET project, etc.
There are various ways you can use Microsoft Word with a Microsoft Access database. The simplest way consists of copying and pasting. To transfer a database table, in the Navigation Pane of Microsoft Access, you can right-click a table and click Copy. In a Microsoft Word document, you can paste in the desired section. The whole table, including its columns and all the records, would be created in the document. Instead of the whole object, first open a table in Microsoft Access, select only some columns and/or some records, copy them, and then paste them in a Microsoft Word document. As opposed to copying from a database table and pasting to a table, you may want the reverse. That is, you can copy a table from a Microsoft Word document. To do this, in Microsoft Word, select the table in a document and copy it. Start a table in Microsoft Access and paste in the Add New Field box.
Mail merging allows you to use data on your database to create letters, labels, envelopes, and other documents that require external data originating from another document. When performing a mail merge, you usually do not need all the fields that are part of a table. To start a mail merge, in the Navigation Pane:
This would open the Microsoft Word Mail Merge Wizard: ![]() And click OK. Microsoft Word would open. In the Mail Merge window, if you want to create a letter to be sent out, accept the Letters radio button and click Next. In the second page of the wizard, you will have the choice of creating a new Microsoft Word document or using an existing document. If you want to create a new document, click or accept Use the Current Document. If you click Start From Existing Document, you will be asked to specify the document, in which case you should click Open, select the document, and click Open: ![]() After this, the Mail Merge window would come back to the Use Current Document option. Click Next: Select Recipients. To insert other types of items, in the Mail Merge window, you can click the Address Block link, the Insert Address Block dialog box would come up. The Insert Address Block dialog box is made of various sections. It allows you to specify a type of greeting and other pieces of information to be inserted in the document. After making the selection(s), you can click OK. After creating the document and adding the necessary fields to it, you can preview and review it. To do this, in the Mail Merge window, click the Next: Preview Your Letters link. When you do this, the letter appears with the value(s) of the first record. To review the document with the other values, in the Mail Merge window, you can click the previous ![]() ![]() After reviewing the document, in the Mail Merge window, you can click the Next: Complete The Merge link. You can then save, print, and manage the document. In the same way, you can create labels or envelopes.
If you don't have Microsoft Office Word 2010, skip this section
There are unlimited types of files you can import in a Microsoft Access database, including files created from known Microsoft Office applications and files from any other type of application, as long as the document has been prepared appropriately. To import a dBase table, a Paradox table, or a Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet, in the Import section of the External Data tab of the Ribbon, click More and click the type of file you want to import: ![]() Depending on the type of file, a wizard would come up and guide you.
If you had created an address book in Microsoft Office Outlook, you can use it to create a table in your database. You would import it. When you do this, Microsoft Access is able to recognize all the fields you would have used in the address book and create the table columns. To import an address book, on the Ribbon, you can click External Data and, in the Import section, click More -> Outlook Folder. This would open the Get External Data - Outlook Folder dialog box with the top radio button selected as the default. In most cases, you can accept it and click OK. This would start the Import Exchange/Outlook Wizard with some of the folders from your Microsoft Outlook installation. You can expand a node and select the desired object: ![]() After selecting the object, the file, or the address book, click Next. The next pages of the wizard would assist you in identifying the columns of the list and complete the table.
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Thursday, June 6, 2013
Data Import and Export
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