Heenan, Lambert
Lambert.Heenan at chartisinsurance.com
Thu Dec 29 11:56:23 CST 2011
Chester, Your criteria string used by FindFirst is the problem. But first some comments about referencing fields in a recordset. There are several ways (i.e. several valid syntaxes) to reference a specific field in a recordset (which can point to a table or a query) 1/ By the ordinal value of the field, i.e. its position in the list of fields in the recordset. Your use of the expression "RS8.Fields(1)" is an example. It resolves to the value of the first field in the recordset. The big disadvantage of this syntax is that it is not "reader friendly". When reading the code you (or anyone else) would probably have to go back to the table/query to find out what Fields(1) actually is. 2/ By using the field name as an index to the fields collection of the recordset. e.g. RS8("SomeFieldName") This is more readable as the field name in the quotes tells you what data is being referenced. 3/ BY directly using the Recordset and field names. e.g. [RS8]![SomeFieldName] The square brackets are optional if the object names do not have spaces, but I always use them. I personally prefer to use method 3 as it is then possible in code blocks to use the With / End With construct, which allows you to skip the recordset name in multiple statements... With RS8 ![SomeFieldName] = AValue ![AnotherField] = AnotherValue .FindFirst "SomeOtherField=" & Avalue If Not .NoMatch Then ' We found it ' Do something End If ... Etc. End With So, returning to your question, how to use FindFirst. "RS8.Fields(1)=RS9.Fields(1)" does not work as a criteria string because it is literally saying: "find the first record where the field(1) value is equal to the literal string "RS9.Fields(1)", but you actually want to find the record where the *value* of RS8.Fields(1) is equal to the *value* of RS8.Fields(1). If you change the criteria string to this... RS8.FindFirst "RS8.Fields(1)=" & RS9.Fields(1) Then it will work, providing Fields(1) is not a text or a date value. The above syntax works for other data types, but for TEXT you have to enclose the value you are searching for in quotes. Either a combination of single and double quotes like this... "RS8.Fields(1)='" & RS9.Fields(1) & "'" Or all double quotes like this.... "RS8.Fields(1)="""" & RS9.Fields(1) & """" Those are a little difficult to read, especially seeing "'" for what it is with a proportional font. So I use a little function to wrap the text in quotes... Function Quote(aString) As String Quote = """" & aString & """" End Function And using that I can then write... "RS8.Fields(1)=" & Quote(RS9.Fields(1)) Or my preferred syntax "[RS8]![SomeFieldName]=" & Quote([RS9]![SomeOtherField] Searching for date values is similar, but a different delimiter is used, the # sign. So if RS9.Field(1) was a date value, the search criteria would have to be "RS8.Fields(1)=#" & RS9.Fields(1) & "#" HTH Lambert -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Kaup, Chester Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 12:27 PM To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving Subject: [AccessD] FindFirst This is my first try using this command and I need some help. Here is what I have. Does it work only on tables? Thanks. Set RS8 = MyDb.OpenRecordset("qry Produced Gas CO2 Analysis") Set RS9 = MyDb.OpenRecordset(strSQL) RS8.FindFirst "RS8.Fields(1)=RS9.Fields(1)" Chester Kaup Engineering Technician Kinder Morgan CO2 Company, LLP Office (432) 688-3797 FAX (432) 688-3799 No trees were killed in the sending of this message. However a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced. -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com