John Colby
jwcolby at ColbyConsulting.com
Thu Jan 19 12:53:42 CST 2006
OK oh hero, now is it possible to update the named range through a query? I tried saving the working select query, then opening that and modifying the data but that definitely does not work. Is this part of the "patent lawsuit" changes or am I just doing something wrong? If a "Update" syntax would work that would be fine. I am running code anyway, not manually updating the data as I was trying to do in the test above. As I mentioned, I have a template with the named ranges all set up. I would like to be able to update that spreadsheet (append data into it) rather than have to build up a new spreadsheet. I can create the spreadsheet but then I would need the syntax to create named ranges so I can get the data later - using the syntax I just got from you. John W. Colby www.ColbyConsulting.com -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Gustav Brock Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2006 12:44 PM To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com Subject: Re: [AccessD] Syntax for seeing named range in excel Hi John You miss the Excel header. Two options exist: SELECT NameOfField1, NameOfField2 FROM [Range] AS T IN '' [Excel 5.0;DATABASE=c:\windows\temp\some.xls;]; In the second syntax the trick is the brackets. They can be omitted in this example but are mandatory if you deal with filenames containing spaces. This should be changed to: SELECT NameOfFiels1, NameOfField2 FROM [Excel 5.0;DATABASE=c:\windows\temp\some.xls;HDR=YES].[Range] AS T; >>> jwcolby at ColbyConsulting.com 19-01-2006 18:14:42 >>> Does anyone know the syntax in an SQL statement for seeing a named range in an excel spreadsheet? I have a spreadsheet DocumentRequestTemplate.xls, which has a sheet xlsReqForDocuments which has a named range Sec_DocWithHdr, Sec_DocNoHdr etc. I assume that the syntax would look something like SELECT * from SEC_DocWithHdr IN DocumentRequestTemplate.xls Doing this gets me "unrecognized database format" however. Anyone know what the real answer is? John W. Colby www.ColbyConsulting.com -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com