Me again - I guess in all fairness he owns the company.
> Me again - I guess in all fairness he owns the company.
But he didn't hire you to do his personal chores, he hired you to advance
the company.
I'd love to be able to answer your original question, and while I could give
some pointers on parts of it, I've never used Access and there's no way I
know to import directly from a Word document. Your best approach is
changing the Word document to a CSV file and formatting it appropriately so
that you can import it. Additionally, Outlook doesn't have any "reporting"
features and can't tell you which phone numbers you call the most
frequently. After all, Outlook has no connection to a phone and can't tell
how often you use it.

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Brian Tillman
Caryl - 04 Feb 2007 22:19 GMT
Brian - pretty much what I thought. I did figure on ditching the Word file
after I formatted it correctly & exported either to Access or Outlook. But
your info on no "reporting" features with Outlook, tells me that I will need
to export the info to Access. I do realize even Access has no connection to
a phone & can't tell me how often it is used. I just figured the end user
would be able to let me know the names/#'s of most often called people & then
I could use a separate column in my Access table that woul allow me to enter
"yes". Then I could do a report that would only include those names that
have a yes in that column & ignore those that do not.
My main concern now would be to figure out a way for the user to make an
updating change in Outlook & then Access would recognize that a change was
made & therefore be changed in Access at the same time.