ID: Q165143
The information in this article applies to:
Novice: Requires knowledge of the user interface on single-user computers.
After you delete an object from the Database window, the object that is selected next seems random and inconsistent. For example, when you delete a form, the form that is selected next is not necessarily the form that appears immediately before or after the one you deleted.
After you delete an object from the Database window, Microsoft Access recreates an unsorted list of the remaining objects of that same type, and automatically selects the first item on the list. The selected item might be any of the remaining objects on the same tab in the Database window.
This behavior is by design.
1. Start Microsoft Access and open the sample database Northwind.mdb.
2. Click the Forms tab in the Database window, and select the Customers
form.
3. On the Edit menu, click Copy.
4. On the Edit menu, click Paste.
5. In the Paste As dialog box, type frmDelete1, and then click OK.
6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 to create two more forms: frmDelete2 and
frmDelete3.
7. Select frmDelete2, and then click Delete on the Edit menu. Click Yes
when prompted if you want to delete the form.
Note that the selected form in the Database window is something other than
frmDelete1 or frmDelete3.
For more information about how Microsoft Access deletes objects, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
ARTICLE-ID: Q90129
TITLE : ACC: How Microsoft Access Deletes Objects from a Database
Additional query words: select highlight cursor
Keywords : kbui UifDbwin
Version : 97
Platform : WINDOWS
Hardware : x86
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: November 19, 1998