|
vb123.com
Garry Robinson's Popular MS Access, Office and VB
Resource Site
 |
|
Home
Contact Us
Order our Software
RSS &
Newsletter
Join our XML/RSS Newsfeed or sign up for our informative newsletter on
Office Automation, Access and VB topics
Read More
Get Good Help
If you need help with a database, our Professionals could be the answer
Read More
Is Your Database Corrupt ?
If you have a corrupt database,
Try our Access Recovery
service
The
Workbench
Find out who has your database open, start the
correct version of Access, easy compacting and backups, change startup
options, mde compile, shutdown database
Read and
Download
The Toolshed
Searchable help file comprising of all the information at vb123.com plus
hidden downloads etc. Read More
The Toolbox
Libraries of software that we regularly import into our projects.
Enhances the Toolshed More..
Upsize to SQL
Upsize to SQL Server 2005 or 2008 or improve the performance of your
Access to SQL Server application
Read More
DryToast New
Backup and query your BaseCamp®
projects
Read More
Datamining/Graphs
Explore your data with this versatile graphing and data mining shareware
tool. Read More
Garry's Blog
Find out a few other things that
Garry has been writing about Microsoft Access.
Read more
About The Editor
Garry Robinson
writes for a number of popular computer magazines, is now a book author
and has worked on 100+ Access databases. He is based in Sydney,
Australia
Contact Us ...
Search ...
or try our new Expression Web
vb123.com.au
|
| |
Uncover the SendTo menu in
Windows XP - then manage multiple versions of Access (and other applications)
Author: Garry Robinson from GR-FX,
March 2002
After making the transition to Access XP on my laptop, one of
the Explorer functions that I really missed was modifying the sendto command
list.. ie. Being able to right click
on an Access database and choose SendTo Access 97/Access 2000/Access XP.
Without that feature, it can be quite painful opening up the correct
version of Access before double clicking on the file. Anyway, after a lot
of searching in XP help, I finally found the trick to expose the SendTo
commands. Here are the steps that you need to follow. Other send
to's that I use are different versions of Word, a decent editor, a decent image
editor and folders such as c:\temp.

Figure 1 - SendTo is a great Explorer productivity trick
Click on image above to see full picture
To add a destination
to the Send To menu
- Open My Computer.
- Double-click the disk drive where
Windows is installed (usually drive C, unless you have more
than one drive on your computer).
If you can't see the items on your drive when you open it,
under System Tasks, click Show the contents of this drive.
- Double-click the Documents and Settings folder.
- Double-click the folder of a specific user.
eg. c:\documents and settings\'user name'\sendto
- Double-click the SendTo folder.
"Here is the catch" GR
The SendTo folder is hidden by default. If it is not
visible, on the Tools menu, click Folder Options. On the View
tab, click Show hidden files and folders.
- On the File menu, point to New, and then
click Shortcut.
- Follow the instructions on your screen.
Adding Access Versions to The SendTo Menu
- Keep the sendto folder open in your "documents and
settings" folder.
- Find your Access executable using Windows Explorer.
It will probably be called MSACCESS.EXE and will be in the Office sub
directory.
- Right click on the file and choose copy.
- Return to the SendTo folder and right click in it.
Choose paste shortcut. Change the shortcut name to something more
meaningful such as Access 2000.
- Now when you right click on a file, you will see the send
to the list of Access software as in figure 1.
Now you may want to return to folders and turn off
the view hidden files options.
An easier way to handle multiple versions is to use
The Access Workbench
Click on the
button for the next
help page in this Access Loop.
|