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  1. #91
    aaron.kempf@gmail.com
    Guest

    Re: The best elegant solution to override 65k rows limit in a sheet

    I LEFT THAT COMPANY BECAUSE THEY'RE A PIECE OF ****


  2. #92
    aaron.kempf@gmail.com
    Guest

    Re: The best elegant solution to override 65k rows limit in a sheet

    yes, I was assraped by a demon that ate spreadsheets

    this demon lives and thrives in each of your heads.. you sit around and
    build the same spreadsheet week in and week out

    it is not the most efficient way to do business.

    you idiots sit around AND RECREATE THE SAME REPORT WEEK IN AND WEEK
    OUT.

    YOU SIT AROUND AND MAKE INVOICES IN EXCEL.

    YOU SIT AROUND AND MAKE COMPENSATION REPORTS IN EXCEL.

    YOU SIT AROUND AND MAKE BUDGETING AND FORECASTING APPS IN EXCEL.

    YOU GUYS ARE THE BANE OF HUMANITY-- YOU SIT AROUND AND TAKE ADVANTAGE
    OF THE DATABASE PEOPLE-- YOUR DISEASED PROGRAM SPAWNS MORE AND MORE
    BEANCOUNTERS-- WHEN WHAT YOU REALLY NEED IS MORE AND MORE DATABASE
    PEOPLE.


  3. #93
    aaron.kempf@gmail.com
    Guest

    Re: The best elegant solution to override 65k rows limit in a sheet

    ACCESS DOESNT TAKE TRAINING.

    IT TAKES PEOPLE WITH DRIVE TO GO OUT AND LEARN IT ON THEIR OWN.

    YOU GUYS ARE SLOTHS; YOU AREN'T ADAPTING TO TECHNOLOGY. YOU GUYS ARE
    JERKING OFF WITH SPREADSHEETS AND YOUR FUTURE CONSISTS OF DRINKING OUT
    OF A PAPER BAG ON THE SIDE OF THE STREET.

    Harlan-- DATA ENTRY DOESNT EVER HAPPEN IN EXCEL YOU IDIOT.

    DATA ENTRY HAPPENS WITH A DATABASE. AND YOUR DISEASED COMPANY AND
    DISEASED FRIENDS NEED TO WAKE UP AND SMELL THE COFFEE. THERE ARE
    BETTER TOOLS FOR BUILDING THE SAME REPORT WEEK IN AND WEEK OUT. THERE
    ARE BETTER TOOLS FOR 'DATA ENTRY'.


  4. #94
    Registered User
    Join Date
    08-12-2005
    Posts
    33
    Hi,
    Put your data in Ms Access then import them on excel by pivot table.

  5. #95
    Forum Guru swatsp0p's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-07-2004
    Location
    Minnesota, USA
    MS-Off Ver
    Excel 2003
    Posts
    1,545
    Quote Originally Posted by aaron.kempf@gmail.com
    I LEFT THAT COMPANY BECAUSE THEY'RE A PIECE OF S**T
    I see Aaron is at it again. Your filth does nothing to promote your cause. It does, however, minimize any credibility you might have garnered. Your posts should be helpful and informative to the readers. This is neither.

    BTW, I'll bet you still cashed the paychecks from that company.

    Bruce
    Bruce
    The older I get, the better I used to be.
    Minneapolis, MN USA

  6. #96
    Harlan Grove
    Guest

    Re: The best elegant solution to override 65k rows limit in a sheet

    aaron.kempf@gmail.com wrote...
    >ACCESS DOESNT TAKE TRAINING.
    >
    >IT TAKES PEOPLE WITH DRIVE TO GO OUT AND LEARN IT ON THEIR OWN.


    Any software can be learned by anyone with sufficient wit, sufficient
    motivation and sufficient time. It's that third item that explains why
    sensible companies spend money on training - the time saved more than
    makes up for the training cost FOR A *FEW* PEOPLE. It doesn't make
    sense for *ALL* people, and most Excel users aren't going to spend
    their weekends coming into the office to learn Access on their own, and
    they're not going to waste their weekdays learning it because they have
    their REAL JOBS to do.

    >Harlan-- DATA ENTRY DOESNT EVER HAPPEN IN EXCEL YOU IDIOT.


    Data entry happens almost exclusively in spreadsheets and two rather
    ancient Clipper apps (admittedly database, but xBase rather than SQL)
    where I work. You may know how things are done where you work (unlikely
    since you'd thoroughly demonstrated your narrowness of perspective),
    but you have no idea how things are done where I work.

    I can't call you an idiot. That'd imply there was some slight chance
    you could recognize the overwhelming stupidity of what you write.

    >DATA ENTRY HAPPENS WITH A DATABASE. AND YOUR DISEASED COMPANY AND
    >DISEASED FRIENDS NEED TO WAKE UP AND SMELL THE COFFEE. THERE ARE

    ....

    Data entry happens in forms, be they database forms, web forms,
    spreadsheet forms, whatever. Maybe most data is stored in database.
    That's fine. I'm on record as stating that databases are ideal as
    storage subsystems. They make decent reporting tools too. They're just
    not particularly flexible for analysis. Of couse if you assume several
    tens of thousands of dollars of additional software running on top of
    some database, that'd help, but most Excel users won't have such
    additional software available for their use, so assuming they do would
    only futher establish the utter stupidity of your rants.


  7. #97
    aaron.kempf@gmail.com
    Guest

    Re: The best elegant solution to override 65k rows limit in a sheet

    YOU'RE NOT IMPORTING FROM EXCEL BACK INTO ACCESS YOU MERELY RUN REPORTS
    ON THE NUMBERS

    THE DATA ISNT GOING FROM EXCEL TO ACCESS TO EXCEL

    ITS GOING FROM THE SOURCE-- TO ACCESS-- AND IT CAN BE ******** REPORTED
    ON ***************** through a pivot table.

    pivot tables aren't an excel phenomenon.

    there are a dozen differenent ways to use pivotTables without opening
    excel

    I would reccomend OFFICE WEB COMPONENTS over excel any day of the
    week.. emailing huge spreadsheets around was passe in 1995


  8. #98
    Harlan Grove
    Guest

    Re: The best elegant solution to override 65k rows limit in a sheet

    aaron.kempf@gmail.com wrote...
    >YOU'RE NOT IMPORTING FROM EXCEL BACK INTO ACCESS YOU MERELY RUN REPORTS
    >ON THE NUMBERS


    If the numbers aren't in one's company's database, e.g., any
    information fresh from customers, Access could do squat all with it.

    Possibly it could be scanned and sent through OCR. Obviously we'd
    differ on the best software to use to check the scanned/OCRed result,
    but I'd use Excel or Word EVERY TIME rather than Access in that
    situation.

    >THE DATA ISNT GOING FROM EXCEL TO ACCESS TO EXCEL

    ....

    For me, if original data entry is in Excel, it usually stays there,
    never moving on to Access or Oracle or DB2. In the rare situations it
    does move on to Access, it never comes back to Excel because it's
    already available in Excel, and I find it easier & quicker to pull such
    data from other XLS files than from Access.

    >I would reccomend OFFICE WEB COMPONENTS over excel any day of the
    >week.. emailing huge spreadsheets around was passe in 1995


    And how would one transmit a lovely OWC object to anyone else if the
    sender has no rights to create web pages on the web server, which is
    the situation of most employees in most companies whose jobs aren't in
    web development? Lemme think - convert it into an Excel file!

    When are you gonna stop being an idiot?


  9. #99
    Registered User
    Join Date
    03-08-2005
    Location
    The Netherlands
    Posts
    25

    Red face bypass the 65 K limit in Execl

    Try Corel's Quattro Pro 12, The limit is 1000000 rows (A1 to IV 100000) and Tabs from A through Z

    It's an investment but it works.

    I use it when running a 175000 records csv file and it works, just keep an eye on the virtual memory but even this is handled better with Corel.

    Hans
    Hans

  10. #100
    Registered User
    Join Date
    06-15-2006
    Posts
    2
    When I try to open a large DBF in either ACCESS or QUATTRO,
    I get the error message INDEX DOES NOT EXIST.

    I am aware that the values in Column A are not unique.

    Any solutions?

    -- Thanks Jay

  11. #101
    Forum Contributor
    Join Date
    11-14-2005
    Location
    Somewhere....out there.....
    Posts
    126
    I wonder if this Aaron idiot eats with the same mouth that the rest of his garbage comes from?

    I wonder what rock he crawled out from? Whatever one it was, he should crawl back under it.

    Incidentally, what other names does this moronic troll use to sneak into forums and newsgroups?

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