Learn Microsoft Access Advanced Programming Techniques, Tips and Tricks.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

PERMIT TO VIEW RUN QUERY

Permit View/Run Query.

In a secure workgroup, you can assign others permission to view the data your query returns, or in the case of an action query, to run the query, even if they are otherwise restricted from viewing the query's underlying table or query.

  1. Open the query in Design view. Select the query by clicking anywhere in the Query Design view outside the design grid and the field lists.
  2. Click Properties on the toolbar to display the query's property sheet.
  3. Set the Run Permissions property to Owner's.

The following are true for this setting:

  • All users have the query owner's permission to view or run the query.
  • Only the query owner can save changes to the query.
  • Only the query owner can change the ownership of the query.

Note: You can also set default permissions for all new queries. Click Options on Tools menu. Click the Tables/Queries tab, and then click the Run Permissions option you want to use.

<-- For FB Posts without Images

Earlier Post Link References:

-->

MS-ACCESS Security Links.

  1. Create a security user account
  2. Create a security group account
  3. Add users to security groups
  4. Remove users from security groups
  5. Delete a security user account
  6. Delete a security group account
  7. Create or change a security account password
  8. Clear a security account password
  9. Assign or remove permissions
  10. Assign default permissions for new tables, queries, forms, reports, and macros.
  11. View or transfer ownership of Objects
  12. Transfer ownership of an entire database to another administrator
  13. Permit others to view or run my query but not change data or query design.
  14. Change default permissions for all new queries.
  15. RunPermissions Property
  16. Convert Microsoft Access 95 or 97 secured databases.
  17. Convert a workgroup information file from a previous version of Microsoft Access.
  18. Share a previous-version secured database across several versions of Microsoft Access

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments subject to moderation before publishing.

Powered by Blogger.