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#11
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How do I sort a listbox by field
But with this code...HOW do I get rid of the semi-Colon?
"Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Yes. Get rid of the semi-colon (and make sure there's a space between the closing parenthesis and the key word Order) -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... This all make sence...but I tried it and I get a blank screen. The strSQL shows that everything is right. "SELECT [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part] FROM Personnel WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) AND ((Personnel.Status)="active")); ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Is it the semi-colon before the ORDER BY that does it? How do I get rid of that? B "John W. Vinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 May 2010 14:47:05 -0500, "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote: And that's what I'm TRYING to do...This is what I have now: Dim strSQL As String strSQL = Me.lstMailTo.RowSource strSQL = strSQL & " " & ORDER By Personnel.Email Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL Me!lstMailTo.Requery *********** strSQL is picking up the proper RowSource but when I try to add the ORDER BY to the strSQL I'm getting a two ORDER BYs in my strSQL...the old one and the new one...and so I get NOTHING in the ListBox lstMailTo The problem is that strSQL is *the whole thing* - it isn't a complex object with an Order By property that you can replace; it's just a text string. VBA won't have a clue what you mean by the ORDER By Personnel.Email text there; that's SQL text, not valid VBA code. I'd suggest using a saved query in your table, without *any* ORDER BY clause, and use code like strSQL = Currentdb.QueryDefs("lstMailToTemplateQuery").SQL strSQL = strSQL & " ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL You won't need to requery it - setting its rowsource does the job. -- John W. Vinson [MVP] |
#12
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How do I sort a listbox by field
On Wed, 12 May 2010 11:07:15 -0500, Bruce Rodtnick wrote:
But with this code...HOW do I get rid of the semi-Colon? "Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Yes. Get rid of the semi-colon (and make sure there's a space between the closing parenthesis and the key word Order) -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... This all make sence...but I tried it and I get a blank screen. The strSQL shows that everything is right. "SELECT [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part] FROM Personnel WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) AND ((Personnel.Status)="active")); ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Is it the semi-colon before the ORDER BY that does it? How do I get rid of that? B "John W. Vinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 May 2010 14:47:05 -0500, "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote: And that's what I'm TRYING to do...This is what I have now: Dim strSQL As String strSQL = Me.lstMailTo.RowSource strSQL = strSQL & " " & ORDER By Personnel.Email Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL Me!lstMailTo.Requery *********** strSQL is picking up the proper RowSource but when I try to add the ORDER BY to the strSQL I'm getting a two ORDER BYs in my strSQL...the old one and the new one...and so I get NOTHING in the ListBox lstMailTo The problem is that strSQL is *the whole thing* - it isn't a complex object with an Order By property that you can replace; it's just a text string. VBA won't have a clue what you mean by the ORDER By Personnel.Email text there; that's SQL text, not valid VBA code. I'd suggest using a saved query in your table, without *any* ORDER BY clause, and use code like strSQL = Currentdb.QueryDefs("lstMailToTemplateQuery").SQL strSQL = strSQL & " ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL You won't need to requery it - setting its rowsource does the job. -- John W. Vinson [MVP] Did you not read my reply? You get "rid" of that first semicolon by not putting it in in the first place. strSQL = "Select blah blah" strSQL = strSQL & " Order by Personnel.email;" -- Fred Please respond only to this newsgroup. I do not reply to personal e-mail |
#13
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How do I sort a listbox by field
Sorry, I was responding to Doug Steele's post. I tried your code and
nothing changed. This is the strSQL it created: "Select [FirstName] & ' ' & [LastName] AS mbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part], FROM Personnel, WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) And ((Personnel.Status) = 'Active')), OrderBy Personnel.[Voice Part];" I added the parentheses, but nothing happened. B "fredg" wrote in message ... On Wed, 12 May 2010 11:07:15 -0500, Bruce Rodtnick wrote: But with this code...HOW do I get rid of the semi-Colon? "Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Yes. Get rid of the semi-colon (and make sure there's a space between the closing parenthesis and the key word Order) -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... This all make sence...but I tried it and I get a blank screen. The strSQL shows that everything is right. "SELECT [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part] FROM Personnel WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) AND ((Personnel.Status)="active")); ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Is it the semi-colon before the ORDER BY that does it? How do I get rid of that? B "John W. Vinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 May 2010 14:47:05 -0500, "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote: And that's what I'm TRYING to do...This is what I have now: Dim strSQL As String strSQL = Me.lstMailTo.RowSource strSQL = strSQL & " " & ORDER By Personnel.Email Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL Me!lstMailTo.Requery *********** strSQL is picking up the proper RowSource but when I try to add the ORDER BY to the strSQL I'm getting a two ORDER BYs in my strSQL...the old one and the new one...and so I get NOTHING in the ListBox lstMailTo The problem is that strSQL is *the whole thing* - it isn't a complex object with an Order By property that you can replace; it's just a text string. VBA won't have a clue what you mean by the ORDER By Personnel.Email text there; that's SQL text, not valid VBA code. I'd suggest using a saved query in your table, without *any* ORDER BY clause, and use code like strSQL = Currentdb.QueryDefs("lstMailToTemplateQuery").SQL strSQL = strSQL & " ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL You won't need to requery it - setting its rowsource does the job. -- John W. Vinson [MVP] Did you not read my reply? You get "rid" of that first semicolon by not putting it in in the first place. strSQL = "Select blah blah" strSQL = strSQL & " Order by Personnel.email;" -- Fred Please respond only to this newsgroup. I do not reply to personal e-mail |
#14
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How do I sort a listbox by field
Bruce
You may wish to spend some time using Access HELP to verify your syntax. Another approach would be to first create a query that does what you want in the query design view, then switch to the SQL view to see/get the SQL code that works. When I look at your expression, I wonder why you have a comma before the ORDER BY clause? Good luck! Regards Jeff Boyce Microsoft Access MVP -- Disclaimer: This author may have received products and services mentioned in this post. Mention and/or description of a product or service herein does not constitute endorsement thereof. Any code or pseudocode included in this post is offered "as is", with no guarantee as to suitability. You can thank the FTC of the USA for making this disclaimer possible/necessary. "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... Sorry, I was responding to Doug Steele's post. I tried your code and nothing changed. This is the strSQL it created: "Select [FirstName] & ' ' & [LastName] AS mbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part], FROM Personnel, WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) And ((Personnel.Status) = 'Active')), OrderBy Personnel.[Voice Part];" I added the parentheses, but nothing happened. B "fredg" wrote in message ... On Wed, 12 May 2010 11:07:15 -0500, Bruce Rodtnick wrote: But with this code...HOW do I get rid of the semi-Colon? "Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Yes. Get rid of the semi-colon (and make sure there's a space between the closing parenthesis and the key word Order) -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... This all make sence...but I tried it and I get a blank screen. The strSQL shows that everything is right. "SELECT [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part] FROM Personnel WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) AND ((Personnel.Status)="active")); ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Is it the semi-colon before the ORDER BY that does it? How do I get rid of that? B "John W. Vinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 May 2010 14:47:05 -0500, "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote: And that's what I'm TRYING to do...This is what I have now: Dim strSQL As String strSQL = Me.lstMailTo.RowSource strSQL = strSQL & " " & ORDER By Personnel.Email Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL Me!lstMailTo.Requery *********** strSQL is picking up the proper RowSource but when I try to add the ORDER BY to the strSQL I'm getting a two ORDER BYs in my strSQL...the old one and the new one...and so I get NOTHING in the ListBox lstMailTo The problem is that strSQL is *the whole thing* - it isn't a complex object with an Order By property that you can replace; it's just a text string. VBA won't have a clue what you mean by the ORDER By Personnel.Email text there; that's SQL text, not valid VBA code. I'd suggest using a saved query in your table, without *any* ORDER BY clause, and use code like strSQL = Currentdb.QueryDefs("lstMailToTemplateQuery").SQL strSQL = strSQL & " ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL You won't need to requery it - setting its rowsource does the job. -- John W. Vinson [MVP] Did you not read my reply? You get "rid" of that first semicolon by not putting it in in the first place. strSQL = "Select blah blah" strSQL = strSQL & " Order by Personnel.email;" -- Fred Please respond only to this newsgroup. I do not reply to personal e-mail |
#15
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How do I sort a listbox by field
Where did the comma come from?
For the original problem, try Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = Replace(strSQL, ";", " ") -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... Sorry, I was responding to Doug Steele's post. I tried your code and nothing changed. This is the strSQL it created: "Select [FirstName] & ' ' & [LastName] AS mbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part], FROM Personnel, WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) And ((Personnel.Status) = 'Active')), OrderBy Personnel.[Voice Part];" I added the parentheses, but nothing happened. B "fredg" wrote in message ... On Wed, 12 May 2010 11:07:15 -0500, Bruce Rodtnick wrote: But with this code...HOW do I get rid of the semi-Colon? "Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Yes. Get rid of the semi-colon (and make sure there's a space between the closing parenthesis and the key word Order) -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... This all make sence...but I tried it and I get a blank screen. The strSQL shows that everything is right. "SELECT [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part] FROM Personnel WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) AND ((Personnel.Status)="active")); ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Is it the semi-colon before the ORDER BY that does it? How do I get rid of that? B "John W. Vinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 May 2010 14:47:05 -0500, "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote: And that's what I'm TRYING to do...This is what I have now: Dim strSQL As String strSQL = Me.lstMailTo.RowSource strSQL = strSQL & " " & ORDER By Personnel.Email Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL Me!lstMailTo.Requery *********** strSQL is picking up the proper RowSource but when I try to add the ORDER BY to the strSQL I'm getting a two ORDER BYs in my strSQL...the old one and the new one...and so I get NOTHING in the ListBox lstMailTo The problem is that strSQL is *the whole thing* - it isn't a complex object with an Order By property that you can replace; it's just a text string. VBA won't have a clue what you mean by the ORDER By Personnel.Email text there; that's SQL text, not valid VBA code. I'd suggest using a saved query in your table, without *any* ORDER BY clause, and use code like strSQL = Currentdb.QueryDefs("lstMailToTemplateQuery").SQL strSQL = strSQL & " ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL You won't need to requery it - setting its rowsource does the job. -- John W. Vinson [MVP] Did you not read my reply? You get "rid" of that first semicolon by not putting it in in the first place. strSQL = "Select blah blah" strSQL = strSQL & " Order by Personnel.email;" -- Fred Please respond only to this newsgroup. I do not reply to personal e-mail |
#16
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How do I sort a listbox by field
Yes, I've tried taking the SQL code and pasting it in my code....but I keep
getting a compile error: Sub or Function not Defined on the word FROM. The Help there doesn't really tell me much. This is my entire code: Private Sub lblVoicePart_Click() Dim strSQL As String strSQL = "SELECT [FirstName] & ' ' & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part], Personnel.LastName, Personnel.FirstName" FROM [Personnel] WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) And ((Personnel.Status) = "active")) 'If this is to order by the [Voice Part] field, then use: strSQL = strSQL & " OrderBy Personnel.[Voice Part];" End Sub B "Jeff Boyce" wrote in message ... Bruce You may wish to spend some time using Access HELP to verify your syntax. Another approach would be to first create a query that does what you want in the query design view, then switch to the SQL view to see/get the SQL code that works. When I look at your expression, I wonder why you have a comma before the ORDER BY clause? Good luck! Regards Jeff Boyce Microsoft Access MVP -- Disclaimer: This author may have received products and services mentioned in this post. Mention and/or description of a product or service herein does not constitute endorsement thereof. Any code or pseudocode included in this post is offered "as is", with no guarantee as to suitability. You can thank the FTC of the USA for making this disclaimer possible/necessary. "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... Sorry, I was responding to Doug Steele's post. I tried your code and nothing changed. This is the strSQL it created: "Select [FirstName] & ' ' & [LastName] AS mbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part], FROM Personnel, WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) And ((Personnel.Status) = 'Active')), OrderBy Personnel.[Voice Part];" I added the parentheses, but nothing happened. B "fredg" wrote in message ... On Wed, 12 May 2010 11:07:15 -0500, Bruce Rodtnick wrote: But with this code...HOW do I get rid of the semi-Colon? "Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Yes. Get rid of the semi-colon (and make sure there's a space between the closing parenthesis and the key word Order) -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... This all make sence...but I tried it and I get a blank screen. The strSQL shows that everything is right. "SELECT [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part] FROM Personnel WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) AND ((Personnel.Status)="active")); ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Is it the semi-colon before the ORDER BY that does it? How do I get rid of that? B "John W. Vinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 May 2010 14:47:05 -0500, "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote: And that's what I'm TRYING to do...This is what I have now: Dim strSQL As String strSQL = Me.lstMailTo.RowSource strSQL = strSQL & " " & ORDER By Personnel.Email Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL Me!lstMailTo.Requery *********** strSQL is picking up the proper RowSource but when I try to add the ORDER BY to the strSQL I'm getting a two ORDER BYs in my strSQL...the old one and the new one...and so I get NOTHING in the ListBox lstMailTo The problem is that strSQL is *the whole thing* - it isn't a complex object with an Order By property that you can replace; it's just a text string. VBA won't have a clue what you mean by the ORDER By Personnel.Email text there; that's SQL text, not valid VBA code. I'd suggest using a saved query in your table, without *any* ORDER BY clause, and use code like strSQL = Currentdb.QueryDefs("lstMailToTemplateQuery").SQL strSQL = strSQL & " ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL You won't need to requery it - setting its rowsource does the job. -- John W. Vinson [MVP] Did you not read my reply? You get "rid" of that first semicolon by not putting it in in the first place. strSQL = "Select blah blah" strSQL = strSQL & " Order by Personnel.email;" -- Fred Please respond only to this newsgroup. I do not reply to personal e-mail |
#17
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How do I sort a listbox by field
HA!!!!! That did it! Thanx!
B "Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Where did the comma come from? For the original problem, try Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = Replace(strSQL, ";", " ") -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... Sorry, I was responding to Doug Steele's post. I tried your code and nothing changed. This is the strSQL it created: "Select [FirstName] & ' ' & [LastName] AS mbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part], FROM Personnel, WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) And ((Personnel.Status) = 'Active')), OrderBy Personnel.[Voice Part];" I added the parentheses, but nothing happened. B "fredg" wrote in message ... On Wed, 12 May 2010 11:07:15 -0500, Bruce Rodtnick wrote: But with this code...HOW do I get rid of the semi-Colon? "Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Yes. Get rid of the semi-colon (and make sure there's a space between the closing parenthesis and the key word Order) -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... This all make sence...but I tried it and I get a blank screen. The strSQL shows that everything is right. "SELECT [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part] FROM Personnel WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) AND ((Personnel.Status)="active")); ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Is it the semi-colon before the ORDER BY that does it? How do I get rid of that? B "John W. Vinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 May 2010 14:47:05 -0500, "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote: And that's what I'm TRYING to do...This is what I have now: Dim strSQL As String strSQL = Me.lstMailTo.RowSource strSQL = strSQL & " " & ORDER By Personnel.Email Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL Me!lstMailTo.Requery *********** strSQL is picking up the proper RowSource but when I try to add the ORDER BY to the strSQL I'm getting a two ORDER BYs in my strSQL...the old one and the new one...and so I get NOTHING in the ListBox lstMailTo The problem is that strSQL is *the whole thing* - it isn't a complex object with an Order By property that you can replace; it's just a text string. VBA won't have a clue what you mean by the ORDER By Personnel.Email text there; that's SQL text, not valid VBA code. I'd suggest using a saved query in your table, without *any* ORDER BY clause, and use code like strSQL = Currentdb.QueryDefs("lstMailToTemplateQuery").SQL strSQL = strSQL & " ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL You won't need to requery it - setting its rowsource does the job. -- John W. Vinson [MVP] Did you not read my reply? You get "rid" of that first semicolon by not putting it in in the first place. strSQL = "Select blah blah" strSQL = strSQL & " Order by Personnel.email;" -- Fred Please respond only to this newsgroup. I do not reply to personal e-mail |
#18
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How do I sort a listbox by field
Please verify your syntax ...
I believe "ORDER BY" needs a space... Regards Jeff Boyce Microsoft Access MVP -- Disclaimer: This author may have received products and services mentioned in this post. Mention and/or description of a product or service herein does not constitute endorsement thereof. Any code or pseudocode included in this post is offered "as is", with no guarantee as to suitability. You can thank the FTC of the USA for making this disclaimer possible/necessary. "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... Yes, I've tried taking the SQL code and pasting it in my code....but I keep getting a compile error: Sub or Function not Defined on the word FROM. The Help there doesn't really tell me much. This is my entire code: Private Sub lblVoicePart_Click() Dim strSQL As String strSQL = "SELECT [FirstName] & ' ' & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part], Personnel.LastName, Personnel.FirstName" FROM [Personnel] WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) And ((Personnel.Status) = "active")) 'If this is to order by the [Voice Part] field, then use: strSQL = strSQL & " OrderBy Personnel.[Voice Part];" End Sub B "Jeff Boyce" wrote in message ... Bruce You may wish to spend some time using Access HELP to verify your syntax. Another approach would be to first create a query that does what you want in the query design view, then switch to the SQL view to see/get the SQL code that works. When I look at your expression, I wonder why you have a comma before the ORDER BY clause? Good luck! Regards Jeff Boyce Microsoft Access MVP -- Disclaimer: This author may have received products and services mentioned in this post. Mention and/or description of a product or service herein does not constitute endorsement thereof. Any code or pseudocode included in this post is offered "as is", with no guarantee as to suitability. You can thank the FTC of the USA for making this disclaimer possible/necessary. "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... Sorry, I was responding to Doug Steele's post. I tried your code and nothing changed. This is the strSQL it created: "Select [FirstName] & ' ' & [LastName] AS mbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part], FROM Personnel, WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) And ((Personnel.Status) = 'Active')), OrderBy Personnel.[Voice Part];" I added the parentheses, but nothing happened. B "fredg" wrote in message ... On Wed, 12 May 2010 11:07:15 -0500, Bruce Rodtnick wrote: But with this code...HOW do I get rid of the semi-Colon? "Douglas J. Steele" wrote in message ... Yes. Get rid of the semi-colon (and make sure there's a space between the closing parenthesis and the key word Order) -- Doug Steele, Microsoft Access MVP http://www.AccessMVP.com/DJSteele (no e-mails, please!) "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote in message ... This all make sence...but I tried it and I get a blank screen. The strSQL shows that everything is right. "SELECT [FirstName] & " " & [LastName] AS MbrName, Personnel.Email, Personnel.[Voice Part] FROM Personnel WHERE (((Personnel.Email) Is Not Null) AND ((Personnel.Status)="active")); ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Is it the semi-colon before the ORDER BY that does it? How do I get rid of that? B "John W. Vinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 May 2010 14:47:05 -0500, "Bruce Rodtnick" wrote: And that's what I'm TRYING to do...This is what I have now: Dim strSQL As String strSQL = Me.lstMailTo.RowSource strSQL = strSQL & " " & ORDER By Personnel.Email Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL Me!lstMailTo.Requery *********** strSQL is picking up the proper RowSource but when I try to add the ORDER BY to the strSQL I'm getting a two ORDER BYs in my strSQL...the old one and the new one...and so I get NOTHING in the ListBox lstMailTo The problem is that strSQL is *the whole thing* - it isn't a complex object with an Order By property that you can replace; it's just a text string. VBA won't have a clue what you mean by the ORDER By Personnel.Email text there; that's SQL text, not valid VBA code. I'd suggest using a saved query in your table, without *any* ORDER BY clause, and use code like strSQL = Currentdb.QueryDefs("lstMailToTemplateQuery").SQL strSQL = strSQL & " ORDER BY Personnel.Email" Me!lstMailTo.RowSource = strSQL You won't need to requery it - setting its rowsource does the job. -- John W. Vinson [MVP] Did you not read my reply? You get "rid" of that first semicolon by not putting it in in the first place. strSQL = "Select blah blah" strSQL = strSQL & " Order by Personnel.email;" -- Fred Please respond only to this newsgroup. I do not reply to personal e-mail |
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