#Name? appears in the text box.
How would I guarantee the Form1 is open ?
I ended up putting a tab control on another form -"Form3" and putting
Form1
on one tab and Form 2 on another tab. Would this make any difference on
how I
would refer to the controls on either tab.
I each form is on a tab are they considered Open?
John Spencer said:
That looks correct to me IF Form1 is open and if Form1 has a subform
control
named Subform1 which has data.
What error are you getting?
JoeA2006 said:
Thanks. For the time being how would I reference a textbox on a subform
from
another form .
I used this as a control source for a text box on form2
=Nz(Forms![Form1]![subform1].Form!txtAmount,0)
but I keep getting an error
:
And to answer your specific question.
Yes, Access forms and report layouts have a maximum height and width
of
approximately 22 inches. By the way there is also a maximum number of
controls that can be placed on a form or report layout - if I recall
correctly that is 754 controls.
Look up Specification in the online help for more limits.
Rick B's suggestion of using a tabbed form is the way to go.
Especially
if
you combine the tabbed control with subforms.
"Rick B" <Anonymous> wrote in message
Why not just make it a tabbed form? Place different type of data on
different tabs.
--
Rick B
I am building a large form that goes past 22" in height. When I
tried
to
change to property to increase the height Access displayed a
message
that
said the "number was too large". Do access forms have a max height?
I went ahead and built another form but I need to know how to
reference
text
fields on the first form for calculations.
What is the best way to handle displaying large forms?