But (i) in any properly-organised multi-user Access application each user
will have their own copy of the front-end file and (ii) even if the user
can't rename the file 'cos someone else has it open, they can still copy
it
in order to rename and rummage around in the copy.
Obviously this demands a degree of clever-dickery on the part of the user,
but then only clever-dick users are likely to want to rummage around in
the
design anyway, so clearly it's exactly this kind of user that the OP is
concerned about. In an environment where the users are uninterested or
unable to look beneath the shortcut on their desktop, you've got nothing
to
worry about anyway.
So why not go an extra stage and make it an accde file? You could even
rename that to accdr if you really thought it was worth it!
n.b. in my experience, because of bugs in Access 2007, it is actually
*essential* to deploy as an accde, but that's another story.
Naming the file with the accdr extension is effective in many
environments
because when that clever person tries to rename it, he can't because
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that's needed to get it to open in "full mode" is to rename in back to
ACCDB!