Filemaker Pro

May 3, 2006

I have noticed this site contains a google add to filemaker pro.

Is filemaker pro any good. I am making a fairly complicated db, with upto 15 concurrent users. I am using SQL server as the BE.


Would filemaker pro be a viable alternative or is it just a easy way of making a simple database.

Ta

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Filemaker Vs Access

Oct 13, 2005

Hi, im an access user, but i keep hearing good things about filemaker pro. A friend of mine is useing it for a cutomercontact database, and hes really optimistic about it.

Has any got any experience with it. Which is better? Access or file maker? Why?

thanks for all the reply's :D

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Import From Filemaker

Jan 22, 2006

I have been asked to recreate an existing database which was done in FileMaker into Access.
Rather than re-enter all the data which is in there, can I just import it into Access?
I tried exporting the FileMaker data into Lotus 123 format and then inporting it to Access that way. Filemaker has a bad habit of not exporting duplicate entries. I need this data as well.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

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Filemaker ODBC

Mar 21, 2007

Just a quick (hopefully easy) question.

Does anyone know if it is possible to link to Filemaker Pro tables for Mac, into Access?

The Filemaker DB will hold the data, with Access displaying the forms, along with some additional tables.

Does anyone have any ideas?

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Access Vs Filemaker

May 3, 2007

hi,
i justs start experimenting with database applications and i think filemaker is a dam good one. i find it very easy to collaborate my MS Excel knowledge with in it.
my qustion is can I use formulas such as this below in access to automatically calculate a fields based on another fields.

If(shift start time>shift end time;(Int(2400/100)+((2400-Int(2400/100)*100)/60))-(Int(shift start time/100)+((shift start time-Int(shift start time/100)*100)/60));If(shift start time<shift end time;(Int(shift end time/100)+((shift end time-Int(shift end time/100)*100)/60))-(Int(shift start time/100)+((shift start time-Int(shift start time/100)*100)/60)); and so on

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Filemaker Lookup Equivalent

Nov 19, 2007

Hi all,

Sorry for such a Newbie question but....
I'm trying to find the equivalent of Filemaker's Lookup function within Access. To quote the Filemaker help page:

"A lookup copies data from another table into a field in the current table. After data is copied, it becomes part of the current table (and remains in the table from which it was copied). Data copied to the current table doesn't change automatically when the data in the other table changes.
To establish a connection between tables for a lookup, you create a relationship. Then you define a lookup to copy data from a field in the related table into a field in the current table."

The requirement for this is for an invoicing database where we need to copy a customer's invoice and shipping address into the invoice record so that, if the customer changes address, the old orders retain the actual address that was shipped to rather than be updated to whatever the customer's current address is. The same applies to many other things that fluctuate over time such as promotion discounts and list prices. When these change, looking back through old orders will give different prices than were actually invoiced. This must be a very common situation.

I've searched high and low on the web for an answer but so far have come up with nothing. A workaround might be to create the relationship then, when the customer ID (or product code etc) is changed, fire off a macro that copies the data from the related fields in the second table into the appropriate fields within the current table. If the Filemaker Lookup functionality is already present within Access it would be much neater to use that instead.

Any ideas?

Many thanks,
- Andy

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