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I have a huge database (800MB) which consists of a field called 'Date Last Modified' at the moment this field is entered as a text data type but need to change it to a Date/Time field to carry out some queries.

I have another exact same database but with only 35MB of data inside it and when I change the data type it works fine, but when I try to change data type on big database it gives me an error:

Micorosoft Office Access can't change the data type.

There isn't enough disk space or memory

After doing some research some sites mentioned of changing the registry file (MaxLocksPerFile) tried that as well, but no luck :-(

Can anyone help please?

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  • Have you tried creating a new table with the same fields except that 'Date Last Modified' is datetime type. This new table should not have any indexes. Append your data to the new table with an append query.
    – Fionnuala
    Mar 11, 2010 at 23:51
  • sorry not quite sure what you mean by indexes :s the data is in a CSV file which i used to import into Access and it didnt let me set the data type then either, same issue at the import level. Mar 12, 2010 at 0:02
  • If you don't know what an index is, you probably don't have one :) Please post two or three dates to show the format, thanks.
    – Fionnuala
    Mar 12, 2010 at 0:11

7 Answers 7

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As John W. Vinson says here, the problem you're running into is that Access wants to hold a copy of the table while it makes the changes, and that causes it to exceed the maximum allowable size of an Access file. Compacting and repairing might help get the file under the size limit, but it didn't work for me.

If, like me, you have a lot of complex relationships and reports on the old table that you don't want to have to redo, try this variation on @user292452's solution instead:

  1. Copy the table (i.e. 'YourTable') then paste Structure Only back into your database with a different name (i.e. 'YourTable_new').
  2. Copy YourTable again, and paste-append the data to YourTable_new. (To paste-append, first paste, and select Append Data to Existing Table.)
  3. You may want to make a copy of your Access database at this point, just in case something goes wrong with the next part.
  4. Delete all data in YourTable using a delete query---select all fields, using the asterisk, and then run with default settings.
  5. Now you can change the fields in YourTable as needed and save again.
  6. Paste-append the data from YourTable_new to YourTable, and check that there were no errors from type conversion, length, etc.
  7. Delete YourTable_new.
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    In step 5, you edit the original table, don't you?
    – Andre
    Feb 3, 2016 at 17:21
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One relatively tedious (but straightforward) solution would be to break the big database up into smaller databases, do the conversion on the smaller databases, and then recombine them.

This has an added benefit that if, by some chance, the text is an invalid date in one chunk, it will be easier to find (because of the smaller chunk sizes).

Assuming you have some kind of integer key on the table that ranges from 1 to (say) 10000000, you can just do queries like

SELECT *
INTO newTable1
FROM yourtable
WHERE yourkey >= 0 AND yourkey < 1000000

SELECT *
INTO newTable2
FROM yourtable
WHERE yourkey >= 1000000 AND yourkey < 2000000

etc.

Make sure to enter and run these queries seperately, since it seems that Access will give you a syntax error if you try to run more than one at a time.

If your keys are something else, you can do the same kind of thing, but you'll have to be a bit more tricky about your WHERE clauses.

Of course, a final thing to consider, if you can swing it, is to migrate to a different database that has a little more power. I'm guessing you have reasons that this isn't easy, but with the amount of data you're talking about, you'll probably be running into other problems as well as you continue to use Access.

EDIT

Since you are still having some troubles, here is some more detail in the hopes that you'll see something that I didn't describe well enough before:

Here, you can see that I've created a table "OutputIDrive" similar to what you're describing. I have an ID tag, though I only have three entries. alt text

Here, I've created a query, gone into SQL mode, and entered the appropriate SQL statement. In my case, because my query only grabs value >= 0 and < 2, we'll just get one row...the one with ID = 1. alt text

When I click the run button, I get a popup that tells/warns me what's going to happen...it's going to put a row into a new table. That's good...that's what we're looking for. I click "OK". alt text

Now our new table has been created, and when I click on it, we can see that our one line of data with ID = 1 has been copied over to this new table.
alt text

Now you should be able to just modify the table name and the number values in your SQL query, and run it again.

Hopefully this will help you with whatever tripped you up.

EDIT 2:

Aha! This is the trick. You have to enter and run the SQL statements one at a time in Access. If you try to put multiple statements in and run them, you'll get that error. So run the first one, then erase it and run the second one, etc. and you should be fine. I think that will do it! I've edited the above to make it clearer.

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  • Sorry I am abit of a novice when it comes to SQL. My table is called 'OutputIDrive' mykey is 'ID' and it ranges from 0 > 1325210 How can I put that into SQL? I tried changing your source above but get the 'Syntax error in query expression 'ID >=0 AND ID < 662605' Thanks for your help. Mar 11, 2010 at 22:27
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Adapted from Karl Donaubauer's answer on an MSDN post:

  • Switch to immediate window (Ctl + G)
  • Execute the following statement:

    DBEngine.SetOption dbMaxLocksPerFile, 200000


Microsoft has a KnowledgeBase article that addresses this problem directly and describes the cause:

The page locks required for the transaction exceed the MaxLocksPerFile value, which defaults to 9500 locks. The MaxLocksPerFile setting is stored in the Windows registry.

The KnowledgeBase article says it applies to Access 2002 and 2003, but it worked for me when changing a field in an .mdb from Access 2013.

0

It's entirely possible that in a database of that size, you've got text data that won't convert to a valid Date/Time.

I would suggest (and you may hate me for this) that you export all those prospective date values from "Big" and go through them (perhaps in Excel) to see which ones are not formatted the way you'd expect.

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  • funny enough, I actually have! :( The data within the database has been automatically generated and all are definitely a date type. As for excel, at first I tried to open it with Excel, but Excel has a maximum number of cells, I think around 1.2Million, this data goes over that :( Mar 11, 2010 at 22:16
  • Can I suggest migrating your data from Access into SQL Express or something? That's a crazy huge amount of data to trust to Access. Mar 11, 2010 at 22:28
  • It would be a good idea, however I am a complete novice when it comes to any database other than Access, but if there is a simple step of converting this database into SQL it would be great. Mar 11, 2010 at 22:30
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    Access has a 2gb limit, 800mb is not a crazy amount of data. I think it is safer to stay with Access if that is familiar, unless you, khalidfazeli, expect the amount of data to more than double.
    – Fionnuala
    Mar 11, 2010 at 23:58
  • no the amount of data wouldnt change anymore from now on, will only need a few queries which shouldn't add anymore than 200mb to it. Mar 12, 2010 at 9:55
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Assuming that the error message is accurate, you're running up against a disk or memory limitation. Assuming that you have more than a couple of gigabytes free on your disk drive, my best guess is that rebuilding the table would put the database (including work space) over the 2 gigabyte per file limit in Access.

If that's the case you'll need to:

  1. Unload the data into some convenient format and load it back in to an empty database with an already existing table definition.

  2. Move a subset of the data into a smaller table, change the data type in the smaller table, compact and repair the database, and repeat until all the data is converted.

If the error message is NOT correct (which is possible), the most likely cause is a bad or out-of-range date in your text-date column.

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  1. Copy the table (i.e. 'YourTable') then paste just its structure back into your database with a different name (i.e. 'YourTable_new').

  2. Change the fields in the new table to what you want and save it.

  3. Create an append query and copy all the data from your old table into the new one.

Hopefully Access will automatically convert the old text field directly to the correct value for the new Date/Time field. If not, you might have to clear out the old table and re-append all the data and use a string to date function to convert that one field when you do the append.

Also, if there is an autonumber field in the old table this might not work because there is no way to ensure that the old autonumber values will line up with the new autonumber values that get assigned.

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  • Huh? Of course you can keep the same Autonumber values. Just append the old Autonumber field to the new Autonumber field. The Jet/ACE Autonumber data type is just a Long Integer field with a special type of default value (and a few other restrictions, such as not being editable once the record is created), so you can append any value to the field in a new record as long as it doesn't violate the index for the existing data. Mar 12, 2010 at 18:29
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You've been offered a bunch of different ways to get around the disk space error message.

Have you tried adding a new field to your existing table using Date data type and then updating the field with the value the existing string date field? If that works, you can then delete the old field and rename the new one to the old name. That would probably take up less temp space than doing a direct conversion from string to date on a single field.

If it still doesn't work, you may be able to do it with a sceond table with two columns, the first long integer (make it the primary key), the second, date. Then append the PK and string date field to this empty table. Then add a new date field to the existing table, and using a join, update the new field with the values from the two-column table.

This may run into the same problem. It depends on number of things internal to the Jet/ACE database engine over which we have no real control.

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