I am trying to update a table using variables in VBA for Access. The statement is below.
DB.Execute "UPDATE tblSearchersList SET '" & vSearcherDay & "' = " & VHours & "
WHERE Member= '" & Me.cboMember.Column(1) & "'AND [Mission] = '" & Me.Mission & "'"
tblSearcherList is table to update
vSearcherDay is a variable that combines the letter "d" with a number, et(1,2,3,4,5) depending on other query
VHours is a decimal number (number of hours)
Member is a text value from Form Field Me.cboMember.Column(1)
Mission is a text value from form field Me.Mission
I get Runtime error 3061 - Too few parameters expected 2.
Hope I can get some help with this as I have been fighting it for awhile and am losing the battle.
Thanks
New code is this:
Sorry bout the comments thing. I am new and didn't quite know how to do this.
DB.Execute "UPDATE tblSearchersList SET " & vSearcherDay &_
" = " & VHours & " WHERE Member= '" & Me.cboMember.Column(1) & "' &_
" And [Mission] = '" & Me.Mission & "'"
I am quite embarrassed about this but I had the Member field name wrong. Should've been
MemberName instead. I really do appreciate all the quick help I got and will do better next time. It works perfectly. Thank you all.
Don't use apostrophes around field name. Instead
SET '" & vSearcherDay & "' = " &
do
SET " & vSearcherDay & " = " &
Related
Can you please help me? I was trying to figure it out for about 2 hours but I still have some error in the syntax.
I have the following code with String variables which I need to pass into the SQL query in VBA script, but I am keep getting some syntax errors.
DoCmd.RunSQL "Delete * From " '" & [tableName] & "' & " Where (" '" & [tableFieldName] & "' & " = " & '" & [tableRecord] & "')"
Thank you very much for some advice.
I think you were going for this:
DoCmd.RunSQL "Delete From [" & TableName & "] Where [" & tableFieldName & "] = '" & tableRecord & "'"
Where I assume TableName, tableFieldName and tableRecord are variables??
I have a textbox in a form. I use this textbox to write "Codes" and then I save it in the table in the database through the SQL insert statement, but the code doesn't accept to run and gives me an error message:
Run-Time error '3075'.
type of database: Access database
type of field data: LongText
What the problem and how to pass all same problems when I need to save codes inside the database field.
When I try to save the code without (') it's working!
I use this SQL Statement:
CurrentDb.Execute "Update Tbl_Codes Set [LP_ID]= " & Me.txtID & ",
[Code_Title]='" & Me.txtTitle & "'" _
& " ,[Code_Des]= '" & Me.txtDes & "',[Code_Key]= '" & Me.txtKey & "',
[Notes]= '" & Me.txtNotes & "'" _
& " Where [ID]= " & Me.txtID1 & ""
And I want to save this Code:
DSum("Field1";"Table";"Field2= '" & Value & "'")
Please change your code as follows. You need to escape single quotes by doubling them up. A simple replace will work for your.
CurrentDb.Execute "Update Tbl_Codes Set [LP_ID]= " & Replace(Me.txtID,"'","''") & ",
[Code_Title]='" & Replace(Me.txtTitle,"'","''") & "'" _
& " ,[Code_Des]= '" & Replace(Me.txtDes,"'","''") & "',[Code_Key]= '" & Replace(Me.txtKey,"'","''") & "',
[Notes]= '" & Replace(Me.txtNotes,"'","''") & "'" _
& " Where [ID]= " & Me.txtID1 & ""
DSum("Field1";"Table";"Field2= '" & Replace(Value,"'","''") & "'")
Good Morning,
I am doing some work for a colleague and he wants a form creating where he can change to column that is looked at through a combo box as well as the criteria
I have tried the following
=DLookUp(" & [Combo8] & ","Product Guidelines","PC = '" & [Combo2] & "'")
but get an error, if i hard code the expression to one of the columns it works fine but when it's set to look at the combo box it doesn't work, I have tried several variants of the code but have no ran out of ideas
Please can someone help
Thank you
Look closely at your code. You are passing the literal string " & [Combo8] & " (including spaces and ampersands) as first parameter to DLookup.
Try
=DLookUp([Combo8], "Product Guidelines", "PC = '" & [Combo2] & "'")
or if the content of Combo8 has spaces,
=DLookUp("[" & [Combo8] & "]", "Product Guidelines", "PC = '" & [Combo2] & "'")
or maybe even with quotes around it:
=DLookUp("""[" & [Combo8] & "]""", "Product Guidelines", "PC = '" & [Combo2] & "'")
The syntax would be:
=DLookUp("[FieldNameToLookUp]","[Product Guidelines]","PC = '" & Me![Combo2] & "'")
as you probably don't have a field named Combo8.
If Combo8 holds that name, it would be:
=DLookUp("[" & Me!Combo8 & "]","[Product Guidelines]","PC = '" & Me![Combo2] & "'")
I made a SQL statement in the add/update button in the query wizard I changed it back to SQL view to see how the program made me the code and when I copy and paste the same error on the If statement of the btnAdd it throws me a syntax error, but how?
here is the entire code:
Private Sub cmdAdd_Click()
'In the button add we have two options
'1. Insert
'2. Update
If Me.txtID.Tag & "" = "" Then
CurrentDb.Execute "INSERT INTO tblClients ( ClientID, ClientName, Gender, " & _
"City, [Address (Fisical)], [Cellphone/Telephone] ) " & _
"SELECT " & Me.txtID & ",'" & Me.txtName & "','" & Me.cboGender & "', '" & Me.cboCity & "','" & Me.txtAddress & "','" & Me.txtCellphone & "'"
Else
'Otherwise the data will be updated
CurrentDb.Execute "UPDATE tblClients SET tblClients.ClientName = [me]. [txtName], tblClients.Gender = [me].[cboGender], tblClients.City = [me].[cboCity], tblClients.[Address (Fisical)] = [me].[txtAddress], tblClients.[Cellphone/Telephone] = [me].[txtCellphone] "
WHERE (([ClientID]=[Me].[txtID].[Tag]));
End If
cmdClear_Click
tblClients_subform.Form.Requery
End Sub
it highlights me this row in red:
WHERE (([ClientID]=[Me].[txtID].[Tag]));
It appears that the following code is not on the same line
CurrentDb.Execute "UPDATE tblClients SET tblClients.ClientName = [me]. [txtName], tblClients.Gender = [me].[cboGender], tblClients.City = [me].[cboCity], tblClients.[Address (Fisical)] = [me].[txtAddress], tblClients.[Cellphone/Telephone] = [me].[txtCellphone] "
WHERE (([ClientID]=[Me].[txtID].[Tag]))
So you may want to change it to
CurrentDb.Execute "UPDATE tblClients SET tblClients.ClientName = [me]. [txtName], tblClients.Gender = [me].[cboGender], tblClients.City = [me].[cboCity], tblClients.[Address (Fisical)] = [me].[txtAddress], tblClients.[Cellphone/Telephone] = [me].[txtCellphone] " & _
"WHERE (([ClientID]=[Me].[txtID].[Tag]))"
In addition to Cableload's correct answer where the WHERE statement that was on a new code line was not connected to the previous line by the use of an underscore at the end of the first one, there is still a referncing issue.
You are referencing values in a UserForm like that were columns in a table so it is not finding the value you are looking for. To get the value into the SQL statement you need to come out of the literal string, reference the value, and then continue writing the string (not forgetting to enclose the value with '): -
CurrentDb.Execute "UPDATE tblClients SET " & _
"[ClientName] = '" & Me.txtName & "', " & _
"[Gender] = '" & Me.cboGender & "', " & _
"[City] = '" & Me.cboCity & "', " & _
"[Address (Fisical)] = '" & Me.txtAddress & "', " & _
"[Cellphone/Telephone] = '" & Me.txtCellphone & "' " & _
"WHERE [ClientID]=" & Me.txtID.Tag
I have spread it across multiple lines for ease of reading but obviously you can adjust your actual code however needed.
I would also question [ClientID]=" & Me.txtID.Tag, is the ClientID in the in the txtID.value or the txtID.Tag, they are different places. The value property is the value in the text box, the Tag property is more like a area for metadata that you can populate if needed but is not automatically populated by default.
Finally I'd like to refer you back to an answer to a previous question you had, at the bottom of the answer there was a tip about placing the resultant query into a Access Query in SQL view to get better information on the error, that would have helped you here too. To give further assistance on the 'resultant query'.
In debug mode before the while the CurrentDb.Execute is highlighted but before it is run (using F8 to step through each line until you get there, or placing a breakpoint on that line
Open the the Immediate Window if it is not already open (either Ctrl+G to from the menu bar 'View' > 'Immediate Window')
Copy all related code from the line after the CurrentDb.Execute statement, in this case it would be UPDATE ... .Tag
In the immediate window type a question mark and then paste in the rleated code and press enter
The immediate window will return the resultant string for you to try in a Query in SQL view.
Change the SELECT keyword to VALUES in your INSERT statement.
CurrentDb.Execute "INSERT INTO tblClients ( ClientID, ClientName, Gender, " & _
"City, [Address (Fisical)], [Cellphone/Telephone] ) " & _
"VALUES (" & Me.txtID & ",'" & Me.txtName & "','" & Me.cboGender & "', '" & Me.cboCity & "','" & Me.txtAddress & "','" & Me.txtCellphone & "')"
And the UPDATE should be this. The issue here was that you were trying to use Form controls in the SQL, but you needed to evaluate the controls first then concatenate their values to your literal string.
I'm wondering if you really need Me.txtID instead of Me.txtID.Tag
So sway that out if it doesn't work.
CurrentDb.Execute "UPDATE tblClients SET tblClients.ClientName = '" & me.txtName & "', tblClients.Gender = '" & me.cboGender & "', tblClients.City = '" & me.cboCity & "', tblClients.[Address (Fisical)] = '" & me.txtAddress & "', tblClients.[Cellphone/Telephone] = '" & me.txtCellphone & "' WHERE (([ClientID]=" & Me.txtID.Tag & "));"
I have the following code:
CurrentDb.Execute "UPDATE Employees SET Login =" & Me.LoginTxt & ",FirstName ='" & Me.FNameTxt & "'" & ",LastName ='" & Me.LNameTxt & "'" & _
",HourlyRate ='" & Me.HRateTxt & "'" & ",ShopID ='" & Me.ShopIDCmbo & "'" & ",HomePhone ='" & Me.HomePhoneTxt & "'" & _
" WHERE ID =" & Me.IDtxt.Value
I get a Runtime Error 3061: Too few parameters. Expected 1.
It tells me the error is in the last part, ie. " WHERE ID =" & Me.IDtxt.Value
I can't for the life of me figure out how to fix this
Please construct the SQL Statement in a string, make the program output it, and add it in your post.
This will help us understanding what's wrong.
If I have to guess, I would add quotes around Me.LoginTxt parameter.