S
Steven
MS Access XP:
I have a stand-alone machine running W2K and office XP SP
2.
I have created an Access application one this machine and
fully tested it. When I rolled this app out to my
customer, whose machine is on the network the application
crashes. The network is running W2K and office XP SP 2.
The application runs okay for a little while, I.E 3mins,
and then gives out an error Ms Access has performed and
illegal operation. With a check box to repair and restart,
and send error report buttons, I’m sure you all know what
I mean. Compacting and repairing brings up the same error.
Accessing the switchboard manager brings up the error, and
clicking on local tables does too. It’s as if the file
corrupts itself. Because if I transfer the copy back from
the network to the stand-alone machine, it errors on there
too. The VBA in the app seems to run without any errors.
And certain parts of the program still run. It seems to be
something with the local tables.
Does anybody have any Ideas? I am running out of things
to try.
Regards
Steven
I have a stand-alone machine running W2K and office XP SP
2.
I have created an Access application one this machine and
fully tested it. When I rolled this app out to my
customer, whose machine is on the network the application
crashes. The network is running W2K and office XP SP 2.
The application runs okay for a little while, I.E 3mins,
and then gives out an error Ms Access has performed and
illegal operation. With a check box to repair and restart,
and send error report buttons, I’m sure you all know what
I mean. Compacting and repairing brings up the same error.
Accessing the switchboard manager brings up the error, and
clicking on local tables does too. It’s as if the file
corrupts itself. Because if I transfer the copy back from
the network to the stand-alone machine, it errors on there
too. The VBA in the app seems to run without any errors.
And certain parts of the program still run. It seems to be
something with the local tables.
Does anybody have any Ideas? I am running out of things
to try.
Regards
Steven