s-103
| About changing the properties of several controls at once |
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| You can change property settings for a group of controls of the same type or for a group of controls of different types. |
s-105
| If you select controls of different types, Microsoft Access displays only the properties that are shared by the group in the property sheet. |
s-106
| If all the controls that you've selected share the same property setting, that setting appears in the property sheet; otherwise, that property box is blank. |
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| If you change the property setting, the change is applied to all selected controls. |
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| To select several controls at once in a data access page, you must have Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 installed on your computer. |
s-109
| In a form or report, the Name property never appears when more than one control is selected because control names must be unique. |
s-110
| About grouping data in PivotTable and PivotChart view |
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| Grouping on intervals in PivotTable and PivotChart view |
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| You can group items by specifying the type of interval and the size of the interval. |
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| For example, you can group a field with date values into different months, and specify the interval as 2, to create groups such as Jan-Feb, Mar-Apr, and so on. |
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| The type of interval you can specify for a field depends on the data type of the field. |
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| Numeric fields |
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| You can group in intervals of any integer, such as 1, 2, 5, 100, and so on. For example, you can group the EmployeeID field into groups of 1-100, 101-200, and so on. |
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| Date and time fields |
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| You can group in intervals such as days, weeks, and quarters. |
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| For example, you can group the values in the ShippedDate field into months to show data for orders shipped in January, orders shipped in February, and so on. |