Dear there,
I have every recently finished most of the crucial parts. At the present, I just realize that one thing would bring me in major trouble.
In the PK field, it was defined as DataType: Number, Format 00000, I also utilized the DMAX code for autoincrementing values. However, it seams to be functional. Problem is that this database has now been used in two locations at the same time.
Form an Office locationed in Lao PDR. the PK was defined using 00000 as a DataType However the values would look likely to this (e.g 00001, 00002...) while another set in Vietnam was defined as 30000 (e.g 30000, 30001, 30002...) This will be going to be desperate disaster, once they are combined in one set.
As I run a quick test, when I imported few records from Vietnam set (example 30001, 30002, 30003, 30004 ). In table, they visually appeared duplicated to the existing records as 00001, 00002, 00003 and 00004.
What could be the solution to this?
Really appreciate for any kindly assistance, thank you in advance
With best regards,
I have every recently finished most of the crucial parts. At the present, I just realize that one thing would bring me in major trouble.
In the PK field, it was defined as DataType: Number, Format 00000, I also utilized the DMAX code for autoincrementing values. However, it seams to be functional. Problem is that this database has now been used in two locations at the same time.
Form an Office locationed in Lao PDR. the PK was defined using 00000 as a DataType However the values would look likely to this (e.g 00001, 00002...) while another set in Vietnam was defined as 30000 (e.g 30000, 30001, 30002...) This will be going to be desperate disaster, once they are combined in one set.
As I run a quick test, when I imported few records from Vietnam set (example 30001, 30002, 30003, 30004 ). In table, they visually appeared duplicated to the existing records as 00001, 00002, 00003 and 00004.
What could be the solution to this?
Really appreciate for any kindly assistance, thank you in advance
With best regards,