cheuschober
Muse of Fire
- Local time
- Today, 11:19
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2004
- Messages
- 168
Hey hey--
So, in my 'yout I made some silly choices with the object names of my database -- spaces and the lack of a standardized notation such as 'frm' before the various queries, reports, tables, forms, etc.
Of course, as I've read more and more I've understood that such good standards exist and for a reason, but for the life of me, I can't seem to find any quick way to fix them all without basically causing a humongous deconstruction of my albeit, reasonably large database here. Are there any automated procedures to help this standardization process?
No. 2, deals with design. Basically, I have a database going that will be used for actors (who have surprisingly odd tax deductions) to take care of their finances. Expense logs, income logs, deductions summaries, etc. Additionally I'm creating an additional side to this database for important business information to be kept, like agents, auditions, contacts, material, etc. Each of these sides of the same coin will be fairly huge in their own right as they could easily have 30 years worth of data entered into them and only portions of the financial side of it can be cleared.
I had originally planned to separate these into two distinctive databases, however, they meet in one place--income. Income needs to record the employer and all of the multiple tables worth of data associated with employers, which is considered a 'business contact' in the 'Actor's Resource' side of this system
My question is whether or not it would behoove me to combine these into database or, was the rumour I heard true--that the system will work much more efficiently if these larger (65+ tables each) systems are separated and linked? Particularly, I would love to have one switchboard be able to open one or the other, but I don't know what the limits are.
Keep in mind, of course, this is for cheap home-computer use not work-horse. No user can be expected to have much more than a pIII with 128mb of pc133.
Thanks for the help,
~Chad
So, in my 'yout I made some silly choices with the object names of my database -- spaces and the lack of a standardized notation such as 'frm' before the various queries, reports, tables, forms, etc.
Of course, as I've read more and more I've understood that such good standards exist and for a reason, but for the life of me, I can't seem to find any quick way to fix them all without basically causing a humongous deconstruction of my albeit, reasonably large database here. Are there any automated procedures to help this standardization process?
No. 2, deals with design. Basically, I have a database going that will be used for actors (who have surprisingly odd tax deductions) to take care of their finances. Expense logs, income logs, deductions summaries, etc. Additionally I'm creating an additional side to this database for important business information to be kept, like agents, auditions, contacts, material, etc. Each of these sides of the same coin will be fairly huge in their own right as they could easily have 30 years worth of data entered into them and only portions of the financial side of it can be cleared.
I had originally planned to separate these into two distinctive databases, however, they meet in one place--income. Income needs to record the employer and all of the multiple tables worth of data associated with employers, which is considered a 'business contact' in the 'Actor's Resource' side of this system
My question is whether or not it would behoove me to combine these into database or, was the rumour I heard true--that the system will work much more efficiently if these larger (65+ tables each) systems are separated and linked? Particularly, I would love to have one switchboard be able to open one or the other, but I don't know what the limits are.
Keep in mind, of course, this is for cheap home-computer use not work-horse. No user can be expected to have much more than a pIII with 128mb of pc133.
Thanks for the help,
~Chad