Drew Wutka
DWUTKA at marlow.com
Tue Apr 1 14:22:22 CST 2003
True, but VBA is not a theme park, nor is it a ride. Access is NOT Word, and Word is NOT Excel. With your analogy, the theme park would be the Office Suite. Each ride would be an individual applications (such as Word or Access), and VBA would be the forces involved that make the rides interesting (gravity, electricity, etc.) The forces are the same. Just like in VBA, you aren't using a different runtime for VBA in Access versus VBA in Excel right? You are just using a different default object model. Drew -----Original Message----- From: Susan Harkins [mailto:harkins at iglou.com] Sent: Tuesday, April 01, 2003 10:20 AM To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com Subject: Re: [AccessD] VBE Drew, when you visit Disneyworld, you can ride dozens of rides, but none of them are the same -- even though you're still in Disneyworld. :) Susan H. > I know that, Drew. The point is that the object model is entirely > different, so aren't writing the same code at all, regardless of which > VBE you use. > > Charlotte Foust _______________________________________________ AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com