[AccessD] Examples In Best Coding VB.net

Bill Benson bensonforums at gmail.com
Sun Oct 23 11:44:50 CDT 2016


Thanks. I also picked up SSMS.

On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 12:37 PM, Dan Waters <df.waters at outlook.com> wrote:

> According to MS that is correct.
>
> I went to the download site for SSE 2016 and Windows 7 is NOT one of the
> required operating systems.
>
> For your purposes go ahead and download SSE 2014.  I've been using the
> 2008 R2 version and have never 'missed' any features.  I think that most of
> the advances in SS for a long time have been of interest to DBA's rather
> than developers.
> Download SSE 2014 from here: http://www.microsoft.com/en-
> us/download/details.aspx?id=42299.  Get the version named ExpressAdv -
> this has everything.
>
> LocalDB is typically used by developers when they want to temporarily save
> data on a user's PC to improve overall performance.  Learn Express first -
> then if you need it you can learn LocalDB which by then would be easy.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: AccessD [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of
> Bill Benson
> Sent: Sunday, October 23, 2016 6:28 AM
> To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
> Subject: Re: [AccessD] Examples In Best Coding VB.net
>
> Looks like I cannot install SSEE in my win764 system, was informed
> incompatible. "You will be able to download the media but not install."
> When I clicked the link for more information I was taken to a page that
> seemed to me, I fulfill the requirements (system, OS, and memory). I have
> hp laptop with Intel i7 3.687U CPU 2.10 GHz running windows 7 64-bit. I
> went to this page and it looks like SSEE 2014 SP1 is the last version that
> would work with my system.
>
> http://www.fmsinc.com/MicrosoftAccess/SQLServerUpsizing/express/index.html
>
>
>
> On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 7:15 AM, Bill Benson <bensonforums at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> > This thread piqued my interest to again try to learn alternatives to VBA.
> > Initially I intend to do/learn database programming more than Visual
> > Studio Tools type things (Office automation). When I go look for SQL
> > Server Express I get an option for LocalDB or more robust full
> > version(s); If I am only trying to convert a few small access
> > databases for testing with VB.NET and/or C#, would LocalDB be the way
> > to learn most efficiently? I was a little put off by the words running
> > only in "user mode". Advice appreciated.... btw for time sake I will
> > pick LocalDB and "hope" it can be either removed later and the more
> > robust version added thereafter, or upgraded in place, if someone says
> > here I am better off with the robust versions.
> >
> >
> >>>
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