ACC: Form Is Editable Even When AllowEdits Property Set to FalseID: Q167420
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When you open a Microsoft Access form that has the AllowEdits property set to No (False), you can still edit the fields on that form. This article assumes that you are familiar with Visual Basic for Applications and with creating Microsoft Access applications using the programming tools provided with Microsoft Access. For more information about Visual Basic for Applications, please refer to your version of the "Building Applications with Microsoft Access" manual.
This behavior occurs if you set the value of a control programmatically in the Current event of the form. It also occurs if you set the value of a control in the Load event of the form. In that case, however, the only record that you can edit is the first record that is displayed on the form.
If you need to edit the values of bound fields programmatically in forms
that have the AllowEdits property set to False, edit those fields in the
RecordsetClone of the form, and not in the form itself.
The following example demonstrates how to create Visual Basic code in the
Current event of a form that can change the values of fields in the
RecordsetClone of a form.
CAUTION: Following the steps in this example will modify the sample
database Northwind.mdb. You may want to back up the Northwind.mdb file
and perform these steps on a copy of the database.
Private Sub Form_Current()
Dim rs As Recordset
Set rs = Me.RecordsetClone
rs.Bookmark = Form.Bookmark
rs.Edit
' The following updates the CompanyName field to itself plus the
' letter "a".
rs!CompanyName = rs!CompanyName & "a"
rs.Update
End Sub
Private Sub Form_Current()
' The following updates the CompanyName field to itself plus the
' letter "a".
Me!CompanyName = Me!CompanyName & "a"
End Sub
?Forms!Customers.AllowEditsNote that the property is set to False, but that you are able to edit fields on the form.
For more information about the AllowEdits property, search the Help Index
for "AllowEdits property," or ask the Microsoft Access 97 Office Assistant.
For more information about the RecordsetClone property, search the Help
Index for "RecordsetClone property," or ask the Microsoft Access 97 Office
Assistant.
Additional query words:
Keywords : kbusage FmsEvnt FmsProp
Version : WINDOWS:7.0,97
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: August 5, 1999