1

I have made a form in ms-access to get a query output according to the form.

The sql in the access query being:

SELECT w.* FROM work_log1 AS w, [task name] AS t WHERE t.task_name=forms!
[Accenture QC]!combo4 And t.task_id=w.task_name And w.activity_start_date Between  
forms ![Accenture QC]!text0 And forms![Accenture QC]!text11 
and w.[TAT] = forms![Accenture QC]!combo46

Now everything is working fine, but i want to remove the last filter line if the combo46 is blank.

I have made the sql somehow like this:

and iif(forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 = '', t.task_id=w.task_name ,
t.task_id=w.task_name   and w.[TAT] = forms![Accenture QC]!combo46)

Is this the right way to do this, what if there was only this TAT filter to be applied?

I mean if how to write something like this:

"SELECT w.* FROM work_log1 AS w where (w.[TAT] = forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 
OR forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 Is Null)" 

Thanks

1 Answer 1

1

Currently the last part of your WHERE clause is ...

and w.[TAT] = forms![Accenture QC]!combo46

If your goal is to ignore that constraint on w.[TAT] when combo46 is Null, try this:

AND (w.[TAT] = forms![Accenture QC]!combo46
    OR forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 Is Null)

This could be less straightforward if "blank" could mean anything other than Null ... eg an empty (zero-length) string or space characters. You could capture all those possibilities in one expression.

Len(Trim(forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 & "")) = 0

In the latest version of your question's query ...

SELECT w.*
FROM work_log1 AS w
where
       w.[TAT] = forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 
    OR Len(Trim(forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 & "")) = 0
1
  • no i was asking if this will work like "SELECT w.* FROM work_log1 AS w where (w.[TAT] = forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 OR forms![Accenture QC]!combo46 Is Null)" Sep 13, 2012 at 16:43

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.