CricketBeautiful
Forum God
I am a Zark.
0 fics uploaded
Registration Date: 04-04-2004
Posts: 1211
|
|
Hope so -- hubby's learning it starting the 16th, leaving me alone with the kids for Thursday evenings. But, first he's got to learn MS-Access.
Seeing as he does Pro-IV and Oracle already,...
But the MS-Access for Dummies book doesn't describe how to actually get data into the database, just how to do the reports.
Duhhh,...
Come to think of it, I think I played around with it back in 1988, just a few simple reports so I could see if they were using the fields consistently.
The local college has a reputation for having, ah, folks who don't meet the pre-reqs, in their courses, so it'll be interesting. His coworkers usually finish their homework during the lessons. Still, it'll keep him moving, so he actually finishes the learning, and the company pays for it unless he screws up.
Maybe he'll be able to use his family calendar program as an assignment.
Good luck to all!
__________________
Between stimulus and response there is a space.
In that space is our power to choose our response.
In our response lies our growth and our freedom.
- Viktor E. Frankl
|
|
10-09-2004 13:40
|
|
CricketBeautiful
Forum God
I am a Zark.
0 fics uploaded
Registration Date: 04-04-2004
Posts: 1211
|
|
Many thanks, for the offer, Cep.
Seems there is a chapter or two on getting the data in, once he actually read the relevent chapters, which didn't have decent titles (or maybe he was just too ready to assume the worst -- he's got no love for any MS product).
(Reminds me of my programming course in univerisity -- one of my classmates didn't know why he got a low mark one time -- he got the algorithm part right, he thought. Turn out (this being Fortran), no one had actually pointed out that a program needs four parts: housekeeping, data in, data manipulation, data out. He never printed the result of all his calculations! Didn't help that the prof was taling about input files and the TA in the lab was talking about input from the keyboard. Half of us slept through that class, the other half had nightmares about it.)
Right now, OneBit's a bit miffed that the course looks like it will be about Access and MS's patented flavour of SQL, rather than SQL itself. And he'll need Visual Basic. His coworker took Access and VB there already, and they'll be sitting together, and their company has no problems with them installing the stuff at work so they can do homework there during lunch.
Oracle, he's dabbling in -- not enough time to really learn it, and one of his coworkers is pretty good at it, but they do want to move to it for the next product. But, he's Hell on Wheels in Pro-IV and C. (Yeah, I'm proud of the guy.)
I'm not too worried about him having problems -- he picks up languages and concepts quickly. It's more that he'll spend more time learning VB and Access than the SQL he's taking it for. He's got three weeks to decide to quit and still get his money back.
Cheers!
__________________
Between stimulus and response there is a space.
In that space is our power to choose our response.
In our response lies our growth and our freedom.
- Viktor E. Frankl
|
|
13-09-2004 17:29
|
|
CricketBeautiful
Forum God
I am a Zark.
0 fics uploaded
Registration Date: 04-04-2004
Posts: 1211
|
|
And, we're in luck. Well, he is. Clear cut case of he likes the instuctor, the course, and all the rest of it.
Turns out the instructor has 20 years of database experience, including Oracle, and 5 of instructing, including daytime courses. Only reason it's on Access is that Oracle has a funny educational license -- more for night classes. So, he teaches the Oracle version in the day, and the Microsoft Sequel Server version at night. The only reason Access was a requirement was that's the most commonly used relational database, but any one will do. He says he moves fast, but fully expects the assignments to finished with half an hour to go of class / lab time.
So, good for hubby. Not so good for me -- solo bedtime with two kids for the next four months. Not impossible, not even worth whining about, but I've had it easy for ages, so I'll just have to get strict with myself about keeping the bedtime moving (and not dozing off just before toothbrush time like I did tonight).
Meanwhile, I'm busily hoping that Buffy and friends in the southern US are doing okay. They were expecting power outages, so we won't hear from them for a while, even if the winds miss them.
__________________
Between stimulus and response there is a space.
In that space is our power to choose our response.
In our response lies our growth and our freedom.
- Viktor E. Frankl
|
|
17-09-2004 02:11
|
|
[1]
2
next »
-->
Members browsing this thread: none
|
Pages (2):
[1]
2
next »
|
|
|
|
|