Access DB update one table with value from another - sql

I'm trying to update all records in one table with the values found in another table.
I've tried many versions of the same basic query and always get the same error message:
Operation must use an updateable
query.
Any thoughts on why this query won't work in Access DB?
UPDATE inventoryDetails as idet
SET idet.itemDesc =
(
SELECT bomItemDesc
FROM BOM_TEMPLATES as bt
WHERE bt.bomModelNumber = idet.modelNumber
)
also tried this because I realized that since the second table has multiple model number records for each modelnumber - and I only need the first description from the first record found for each model number.
UPDATE inventoryDetails as idet
SET idet.item_desc =
(
SELECT TOP 1 bomItemDescription
FROM BOM_TEMPLATES as bt
WHERE bt.bomModelNumber = idet.modelNumber
)
...still getting the same error though.

You have to use a join
UPDATE inventoryDetails
INNER JOIN BOM_TEMPLATES ON inventoryDetails.modelNumber = BOM_TEMPLATES.bomModelNumber
SET inventoryDetails.itemDesc = [bomItemDesc];

Any thoughts on why this query won't work in Access DB?
The answer is, because ACE/Jet SQL syntax is not SQL-92 compliant (even when in its ANSI-92 Query Mode!).
I'm assuming yours is a scalar subquery. This construct is simply not supported by ACE/Jet.
ACE/Jet has its own quirky and flawed UPDATE..JOIN syntax, flawed because the engine doesn't force the JOINed values to be scalar and it is free to silently use an arbitrary value. It is different again from SQL Server's own UPDATE..JOIN syntax but at least SQL Server supports the Standard scalar subquery as an alternative. ACE/Jet forces you to either learn its quirky non-portable ways or to use an alternative SQL product.
Sorry to sound negative: the ACE/Jet engine is a great piece of software but UPDATE syntax is absolutely fundamental and the fact it hasn't been changed since the SQL-92 Standard really show its age.

try:
update idet
SET idet.itemDesc = bt.bomItemDesc
from inventoryDetails as idet
inner join BOM_TEMPLATES as bt
on bt.bomModelNumber = idet.modelNumber
This is how I would write it for SQL server. Hope Access understands the same command.

Related

MS Access SQL update query based on another query

My DB has existing data. I'm trying to implement some sort of security rights system. It doesn't need to be truly secure...just limit what each level can effectively change. Technically...one exists...but it needs to be beefed up.
I need to adjust the existing Rights level for people that are Instructors. I have a query (qInstructors) that lists a DISTINCT query of anyone in the class table listed as an Instructor. There are a total of 38 Instructors.
Now I need to update the User table to adjust the rights of those 38 people...and this is where I'm stuck. A simple update query, no problem. But I must not be searching with the correct term because I can't find anything to help me hammer out the SQL.
UPDATE tblUserList
INNER JOIN tblUserList ON tblUserList.NTID = qInstructors.Instructor
SET tblUserList.Rights = 2
WHERE [NTID]=[Instructor];
When I try to run this, I get a syntax error in the JOIN. This is beyond my SQL knowledge...any leads?
I would suggest doing this using IN:
UPDATE tblUserList
SET tblUserList.Rights = 2
WHERE [NTID] IN (SELECT [Instructor] FROM qInstructors);
The use of JOIN in an UPDATE clause varies by database. The IN version is ANSI standard and should work both in MS Access and in whatever back-end database you might be using.
You were specifying the tblUserlist instead of qinstructors in the join clause.
UPDATE tblUserList
INNER JOIN qInstructors ON tblUserList.NTID = qInstructors.Instructor
SET tblUserList.Rights = 2
Create a query in Design View. Change the type to "Update Query".
Add your target table to the query, and add your existing "Give me instructors" query as well.
Drag a line from the ID in your target table to the corresponding ID returned by your Query.
Drag the field you want to update down to the grid at the bottom. In the "Update To" field, enter "Allowed" or "True" or whatever indicates that something is allowed for instructors.

SQL join using USING: <column name> is not a recognized table hints option

I have the following JOIN:
SELECT * FROM tableA INNER JOIN tableB USING (commonColumn)
I get an error:
"commonColumn" is not a recognized table hints option. If it is
intended as a parameter to a table-valued function or to the
CHANGETABLE function, ensure that your database compatibility mode is
set to 90.
The following instead works:
SELECT * FROM tableA INNER JOIN tableB ON tableA.commonColumn = tableB.commonColumn
The compatibility level in my case is set to 100 (SQL Server 2008), while, by the way, I am working with SQL Server 2012.
What am I doing wrong? I find it very difficult to find example of the use of the keyword USING, as it is almost impossible to do a relevant web search. Yet, it seems the right thing to use when the "joining columns" have the same name...
USING is not supported SQL Server syntax. It's not a reserved keyword, either, so the query engine is using that as a table alias.
It is an ODBC keyword, but those are handled somewhat differently. The engine won't always complain if you use them, but you're not supposed to use them anyways.
It is also listed as a possible future reserved keyword. It's common for new editions of SQL Server to add words to the core reserved list.
Personally, I don't see them adding NATURAL JOIN syntax support, even with USING. A lot of DBAs consider NATURAL JOINs problematic.
The USING keyword is used to specify the source data for MERGE statements (called <table source>) in the documentation.

UPDATE query is not "an updateable query" [duplicate]

On some Microsoft Access queries, I get the following message: Operation must use an updatable query. (Error 3073). I work around it by using temporary tables, but I'm wondering if there's a better way. All the tables involved have a primary key. Here's the code:
UPDATE CLOG SET CLOG.NEXTDUE = (
SELECT H1.paidthru
FROM CTRHIST as H1
WHERE H1.ACCT = clog.ACCT AND
H1.SEQNO = (
SELECT MAX(SEQNO)
FROM CTRHIST
WHERE CTRHIST.ACCT = Clog.ACCT AND
CTRHIST.AMTPAID > 0 AND
CTRHIST.DATEPAID < CLOG.UPDATED_ON
)
)
WHERE CLOG.NEXTDUE IS NULL;
Since Jet 4, all queries that have a join to a SQL statement that summarizes data will be non-updatable. You aren't using a JOIN, but the WHERE clause is exactly equivalent to a join, and thus, the Jet query optimizer treats it the same way it treats a join.
I'm afraid you're out of luck without a temp table, though maybe somebody with greater Jet SQL knowledge than I can come up with a workaround.
BTW, it might have been updatable in Jet 3.5 (Access 97), as a whole lot of queries were updatable then that became non-updatable when upgraded to Jet 4.
--
I had a similar problem where the following queries wouldn't work;
update tbl_Lot_Valuation_Details as LVD
set LVD.LGAName = (select LGA.LGA_NAME from tbl_Prop_LGA as LGA where LGA.LGA_CODE = LVD.LGCode)
where LVD.LGAName is null;
update tbl_LOT_VALUATION_DETAILS inner join tbl_prop_LGA on tbl_LOT_VALUATION_DETAILS.LGCode = tbl_prop_LGA.LGA_CODE
set tbl_LOT_VALUATION_DETAILS.LGAName = [tbl_Prop_LGA].[LGA_NAME]
where tbl_LOT_VALUATION_DETAILS.LGAName is null;
However using DLookup resolved the problem;
update tbl_Lot_Valuation_Details as LVD
set LVD.LGAName = dlookup("LGA_NAME", "tbl_Prop_LGA", "LGA_CODE="+LVD.LGCode)
where LVD.LGAName is null;
This solution was originally proposed at https://stackoverflow.com/questions/537161/sql-update-woes-in-ms-access-operation-must-use-an-updateable-query
The problem defintely relates to the use of (in this case) the max() function. Any aggregation function used during a join (e.g. to retrieve the max or min or avg value from a joined table) will cause the error. And the same applies to using subqueries instead of joins (as in the original code).
This is incredibly annoying (and unjustified!) as it is a reasonably common thing to want to do. I've also had to use temp tables to get around it (pull the aggregated value into a temp table with an insert statement, then join to this table with your update, then drop the temp table).
Glenn
There is no error in the code. But the error is Thrown because of the following reason.
- Please check weather you have given Read-write permission to MS-Access database file.
- The Database file where it is stored (say in Folder1) is read-only..?
suppose you are stored the database (MS-Access file) in read only folder, while running your application the connection is not force-fully opened. Hence change the file permission / its containing folder permission like in C:\Program files all most all c drive files been set read-only so changing this permission solves this Problem.
I know my answer is 7 years late, but here's my suggestion anyway:
When Access complains about an UPDATE query that includes a JOIN, just save the query, with RecordsetType property set to Dynaset (Inconsistent Updates).
This will sometimes allow the UPDATE to work.
Thirteen years later I face the same issue. DISTINCTROW did not solve my problem, but dlookup did.
I need to update a table from an aggregate query. As far as I understand, MS Access always assumes that de junction between the to-update table and the aggregate query is one-to-many., even though unique records are assured in the query.
The use of dlookup is:
DLOOKUP(Field, SetOfRecords, Criteria)
Field: a string that identifies the field from which the data is retrieved.
SetOfRecords: a string that identifies the set o record from which the field is retrieved, being a table name or a (saved) query name (that doesn’t require parameters).
Criteria: A string used to restrict the range of data on which the DLookup function is performed, equivalent to the WHERE clause in an SQL expression, without the word WHERE.
Remark
If more than one field meets criteria, the DLookup function returns the first occurrence. You should specify criteria that will ensure that the field value returned by the DLookup function is unique.
The query that worked for me is:
UPDATE tblTarifaDeCorretagem
SET tblTarifaDeCorretagem.ValorCorretagem =
[tblTarifaDeCorretagem].[TarifaParteFixa]+
DLookUp(
"[ParteVariável]",
"cstParteVariavelPorOrdem",
"[IdTarifaDeCorretagem] = " & [tblTarifaDeCorretagem].[IdTarifaDeCorretagem]
);
I would try building the UPDATE query in Access. I had an UPDATE query I wrote myself like
UPDATE TABLE1
SET Field1 =
(SELECT Table2.Field2
FROM Table2
WHERE Table2.UniqueIDColumn = Table1.UniqueIDColumn)
The query gave me that error you're seeing. This worked on my SQL Server though, but just like earlier answers noted, Access UPDATE syntax isn't standard syntax. However, when I rebuilt it using Access's query wizard (it used the JOIN syntax) it worked fine. Normally I'd just make the UPDATE query a passthrough to use the non-JET syntax, but one of the tables I was joining with was a local Access table.
This occurs when there is not a UNIQUE MS-ACCESS key for the table(s) being updated. (Regardless of the SQL schema).
When creating MS-Access Links to SQL tables, you are asked to specify the index (key) at link time. If this is done incorrectly, or not at all, the query against the linked table is not updatable
When linking SQL tables into Access MAKE SURE that when Access prompts you for the index (key) you use exactly what SQL uses to avoid problem(s), although specifying any unique key is all Access needs to update the table.
If you were not the person who originally linked the table, delete the linked table from MS-ACCESS (the link only gets deleted) and re-link it specifying the key properly and all will work correctly.
(A little late to the party...)
The three ways I've gotten around this problem in the past are:
Reference a text box on an open form
DSum
DLookup
I had the same issue.
My solution is to first create a table from the non updatable query and then do the update from table to table and it works.
Mine failed with a simple INSERT statement. Fixed by starting the application with 'Run as Administrator' access.
MS Access - joining tables in an update query... how to make it updatable
Open the query in design view
Click once on the link b/w tables/view
In the “properties” window, change the value for “unique records” to “yes”
Save the query as an update query and run it.
You can always write the code in VBA that updates similarly. I had this problem too, and my workaround was making a select query, with all the joins, that had all the data I was looking for to be able to update, making that a recordset and running the update query repeatedly as an update query of only the updating table, only searching the criteria you're looking for
Dim updatingItems As Recordset
Dim clientName As String
Dim tableID As String
Set updatingItems = CurrentDb.OpenRecordset("*insert SELECT SQL here*");", dbOpenDynaset)
Do Until updatingItems .EOF
clientName = updatingItems .Fields("strName")
tableID = updatingItems .Fields("ID")
DoCmd.RunSQL "UPDATE *ONLY TABLE TO UPDATE* SET *TABLE*.strClientName= '" & clientName & "' WHERE (((*TABLE*.ID)=" & tableID & "))"
updatingItems.MoveNext
Loop
I'm only doing this to about 60 records a day, doing it to a few thousand could take much longer, as the query is running from start to finish multiple times, instead of just selecting an overall group and making changes. You might need ' ' around the quotes for tableID, as it's a string, but I'm pretty sure this is what worked for me.
I kept getting the same error until I made the connecting field a unique index in both connecting tables. Only then did the query become updatable.
Philip Stilianos
In essence, while your SQL looks perfectly reasonable, Jet has never supported the SQL standard syntax for UPDATE. Instead, it uses its own proprietary syntax (different again from SQL Server's proprietary UPDATE syntax) which is very limited. Often, the only workarounds "Operation must use an updatable query" are very painful. Seriously consider switching to a more capable SQL product.
For some more details about your specific problems and some possible workarounds, see Update Query Based on Totals Query Fails.
I kept getting the same error, but all SQLs execute in Access very well.
and when I amended the permission of AccessFile.
the problem fixed!!
I give 'Network Service' account full control permission, this account if for IIS
When I got this error, it may have been because of my UPDATE syntax being wrong, but after I fixed the update query I got the same error again...so I went to the ODBC Data Source Administrator and found that my connection was read-only. After I made the connection read-write and re-connected it worked just fine.
Today in my MS-Access 2003 with an ODBC tabla pointing to a SQL Server 2000 with sa password gave me the same error.
I defined a Primary Key on the table in the SQL Server database, and the issue was gone.
There is another scenario here that would apply. A file that was checked out of Visual Source Safe, for anyone still using it, that was not given "Writeablity", either in the View option or Check Out, will also recieve this error message.
Solution is to re-acquire the file from Source Safe and apply the Writeability setting.
To further answer what DRUA referred to in his/her answer...
I develop my databases in Access 2007. My users are using access 2007 runtime. They have read permissions to a database_Front (front end) folder, and read/write permissions to the database_Back folder.
In rolling out a new database, the user did not follow the full instructions of copying the front end to their computer, and instead created a shortcut. Running the Front-end through the shortcut will create a condition where the query is not updateable because of the file write restrictions.
Copying the front end to their documents folder solves the problem.
Yes, it complicates things when the users have to get an updated version of the front-end, but at least the query works without having to resort to temp tables and such.
check your DB (Database permission) and give full permission
Go to DB folder-> right click properties->security->edit-> give full control
& Start menu ->run->type "uac" make it down (if it high)
The answer given above by iDevlop worked for me. Note that I wasn't able to find the RecordsetType property in my update query. However, I was able to find that property by changing my query to a select query, setting that property as iDevlop noted and then changing my query to an update query. This worked, no need for a temp table.
I'd have liked for this to just be a comment to what iDevlop posted so that it flowed from his solution, but I don't have a high enough score.
I solved this by adding "DISTINCTROW"
so here this would be
UPDATE DISTINCTROW CLOG SET CLOG.NEXTDUE

SQL Query in Hibernate

I'm carrying out a SQL query which looks like:
SELECT thi.*
FROM track_history_items thi
JOIN artists art
ON thi.artist_id = art.id
WHERE thi.type = TrackBroadcast
Group By art.name
ORDER thi.created_at DESC
This works fine when I run it directly on my database from MySql Workbench, but when I run in through Hibernate, I get a No Dialect mapping for JDBC type: -1 error.
Anyone have any ideas what could be causing it?
Probably one or more of the columns in the query is not supported by the mysql dialect... try expanding the * and add one column at a time until you find the offending one.
Then it is just a matter of deciding whether you need that column or not.

SQL Update Using From

I know this is a contrived example so please do not jump all over me for the uselessness of the code. This is an issue in more complex chunk of code but I wanted to isolate the I am having.
The error I am getting is 'SQL Error: ORA-00933: SQL command not properly ended'. Any ideas? I am using SQL Developer by the way.
Once again...this is a contrived example and while the join is pointless in this case it is not in the more complex example.
Here is the code:
Update u
set first300pa = 1
from GameData_ME u
inner join
GameData_ME v on u.pitchandeventid = v.pitchandeventid
As this blog says,
Those who transitioned from SqlServer
to Oracle might find the absence of
the UPDATE FROM a significant loss.
Fortunately, the blog continues by showing a lot of the power of Oracle's UPDATE and how to use it to perform the tasks you need (but it won't be with a FROM clause in the UPDATE statement... not in Oracle!-).