Chapter 11. Designing Advanced Reports
In the previous chapter, you learned to create simple reportsânicely formatted printouts that arrange information inside a single table. Simple reports are a great way to create a hard copy that has more polish than a datasheet printout. As you learned in the previous chapter, simple reports give you the fine-grained formatting you need to highlight important columns and values, and they handle long text fields gracefully, without wasting space or chopping off part of the data.
Simple reports are a great Access tool, but theyâre still, well, simple. Their structure is their main limitation. No matter how you format or arrange your data in a simple report, Access always presents it as a table. In the real world, you may want your printed data to take other forms. You may want to transform your data into customer invoices, class attendance lists, or mailing labels. All these reports perform the same taskâthey take the data in a table, and then arrange it on the printed pageâbut none of them can be satisfied with a plain-vanilla report and its simple tabular structure.
In this chapter, youâll see how to create a variety of more specialized reports that take the concepts you learned in the last chapter, and extend them with a few new tricks. Along the way, youâll take a look at Design view, youâll learn how to add pictures and shapes, and youâll tell Access where it can break pages in long printouts. Youâll also see how to use ...
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