|
-
Jun 17th, 2005, 05:53 PM
#1
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
How to auto load(on start) a form in access 2000?
Hi guys. I have some forms in my access database and i want load one of it automatically
when i double click on my access.mdb . I be happy if some one teach me how i can do that.Thanks
-
Jun 17th, 2005, 06:08 PM
#2
Re: How to auto load(on start) a form in access 2000?
Create a macro called autoexec. In that macro set the action to "OpenForm" and the form name to your form you
want to auto startup. Also, set the window mode to normal or maximized depending on your needs.
VB/Office Guru™ (AKA: Gangsta Yoda™ ®)
I dont answer coding questions via PM. Please post a thread in the appropriate forum. 
Microsoft MVP 2006-2011
Office Development FAQ (C#, VB.NET, VB 6, VBA)
Senior Jedi Software Engineer MCP (VB 6 & .NET), BSEE, CET
If a post has helped you then Please Rate it! 
• Reps & Rating Posts • VS.NET on Vista • Multiple .NET Framework Versions • Office Primary Interop Assemblies • VB/Office Guru™ Word SpellChecker™.NET • VB/Office Guru™ Word SpellChecker™ VB6 • VB.NET Attributes Ex. • Outlook Global Address List • API Viewer utility • .NET API Viewer Utility •
System: Intel i7 6850K, Geforce GTX1060, Samsung M.2 1 TB & SATA 500 GB, 32 GBs DDR4 3300 Quad Channel RAM, 2 Viewsonic 24" LCDs, Windows 10, Office 2016, VS 2019, VB6 SP6 
-
Jun 18th, 2005, 07:54 AM
#3
Frenzied Member
Re: How to auto load(on start) a form in access 2000?
On the Tools menu, select Startup and set the properties you want. This won't prevent a user from Shift-Enter bypassing that, but works for us.
Yes, I know this isn't the best way go about it, but it works for our small company. You really don't want to grant any more rights to users than you have to..
Tengo mas preguntas que contestas
-
Jul 6th, 2005, 10:43 AM
#4
New Member
Re: How to auto load(on start) a form in access 2000?
the only real way i can remember to stop ppl using the shift key to bypass startup macros is to create a digital certificate and disbale the shift keys
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
Click Here to Expand Forum to Full Width
|