1 / 44

A Painless Introduction to MS Access Databasing

A Painless Introduction to MS Access Databasing. Yannick Pouliot, PhD Bioresearch Informationist lanebioresearch@stanford.edu Lane Medical Library & Knowledge Management Center 4/20/07. Preliminaries. Launch MS Access Open Simple1.mdb File/Open Using the Help  don’t neglect it!

Rita
Download Presentation

A Painless Introduction to MS Access Databasing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Painless Introduction to MS Access Databasing Yannick Pouliot, PhD Bioresearch Informationist lanebioresearch@stanford.edu Lane Medical Library & Knowledge Management Center 4/20/07

  2. Preliminaries • Launch MS Access • Open Simple1.mdb • File/Open • Using the Help  don’t neglect it! • Exercise: ask the Office Assistant for “select syntax” 2

  3. Contents • Familiarization with MS Acces • Understanding a simple database • Basics of SQL querying • Creating a simple database • Loading database via MS Excel • Tools for running SQL queries • Installation (Windows) • Selected databases • Resources & cheat sheet 3

  4. Resources – MS Access Available as eBook Available as eBook 4

  5. Resources – Excel/MS Query In Lane catalog 5

  6. Resources – MS Access Free Online Training Resources • Using an Access database to store and information (2 min) http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/assistance/HA011709681033.aspx • Creating a database from Excel (5 min): http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/assistance/HA012013211033.aspx • Creating tables in Access (50 min): http://office.microsoft.com/training/training.aspx?AssetID=RC061183261033 • Writing queries (50 min): http://office.microsoft.com/training/training.aspx?AssetID=RC010776611033 6

  7. Why Bother with MS Access? 7

  8. Why MS Access? • More: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/access/HA010429181033.aspx 8

  9. Definitions, Definitions… 9

  10. Definitions • Database: Collection of tables  • Table • Collection of records that share a common fundamental characteristic • E.g., patients and locations can each be stored in their own table • Schema • A view that inter-relates tables to each other • Record • Basic unit of information in a relational table • E.g., 1 record per person • A record is composed of fields • Query • Set of instructions to a database “engine” to retrieve, sort and format returning data. • E.g., “find me all patients in my database” • Database engine • Software application that stores the data and enables querying 10

  11. Table and Field DefinitionsHow It Looks In Access… 11

  12. Main Relational Database Engines • Oracle • MS Access • MS SQL Server • Filemaker • MS SQL Server • MySQL • Postgress • Sybase 12

  13. Understanding Relational Databases 13

  14. “join” Understanding the Relational Principle: A Simple Database • Every patient gets ONE record in the Patients table • Every visit gets ONE record in the Visits table • Rows in different tables can be related one to another using a shared key (identifier  number unique to table) • There can be multiple visits records for a given patient • There can be multiple tissue records for a given patient 14

  15. The Relational Principle in Action • Related records can be found using a shared key • Shared key = identifier that is: • unique to each table • Can be referenced by another table • Example: Patients.ID = Visits.PatientID 15

  16. The Database Schema: Your Roadmap For Querying • The schema describes all tables and all fields • Describes relationships between tables • Crucial in enabling retrievall of desired data • Simple example: • Very important • Must understand schema for accurate querying • Wrong understanding = wrong results 16

  17. Example: The Schema for SRI’s BioWarehouse System 17

  18. Querying MS Accessor any relational database… 18

  19. How Relational Databases Are Queried • Querying = extracting information out of the database • … and into something, e.g., Excel • This is done using the Structured Query Language (SQL) 19

  20. Introducing The SQL Select Statement SELECT LastName, FirstName FROM Patients • Good news: This is the only SQL statement you need to understand for querying • Exercise: run SuperSimpleQuery1 in Simple1 database 20

  21. [ ] = elective Basic Syntax of Select Statement SELECT field_name FROM table [WHERE condition] Example: Select LastName,FirstName From Patients Where Alive = ‘Y’; Important: Everything is MS Access is case sensitive  LastName ≠ lastName 21

  22. Realistic Querying With the MS Access Query Builder 22

  23. A More Complete Description of Select Statement SELECT [DISTINCT|COUNT] field_list FROM table_list [WHERE conditions] [GROUPBY field_list] [ORDER BYfield_list [ASC | DESC] ]  more: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/access/HP010322651033.aspx?pid=CH010410171033 Includes examples and descriptions of each SELECT operator (e.g., “group by”) 23

  24. Meaningful Queries in Acces Exercises - Database: Simple2.mdb • Returning ordered records • Counting records • LifetimeNumberFAQs1 • Exercise: how many FAQs per day? • LifetimeNumberFAQs2 • Demo: creating Pivot Tables • Generating averages • Querying from a query! • Change order of columns • Change sorting of rows 24

  25. Uploading Data in MS Access 25

  26. Importing Data Into Acces From Access Important • Column headers in Excel file must match those of columns in Access target table • No spaces, weird characters • Must ensure that data in Excel columns is of correct type (text, number, date) • Blanks (not empty cells!) are nasty • Exercise: Loading data via Excel • File: LoadingData.xls • Demo: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/access/HP010950951033.aspx 26

  27. Creating an Access DB from Excel • One table per Excel worksheet • Demo: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/access/HA012013211033.aspx 27

  28. Cool Things You Can Do In Access • Store entire files in records • Excel, Word, sounds, pictures anything 28

  29. Extras 29

  30. Creating Forms Using MS InfoPath • Really the easiest way to create interfaces to Access • 10 min of work • Probably 30 for you  • More: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/access/HA011199501033.aspx 30

  31. Querying With MS Excel • MSQuery, an unknown hero • Free • Facilitates writing of a SQL query  graphical • First, need to find it! • Search for “MSQRY32.EXE” using “Search for Files or Folders” • Search hidden files and folders • On my disk, it is located in C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\OFFICE11 • Once you find it, create a shortcut to it and rename it e.g. MSQuery • move the shortcut to a desired location • Also needed: creating a data source name 31

  32. To Conclude… • If using Excel is a headache, use MS Access • Access can work very well on its own • reasonably easy to learn/use.. • Lots of free resources to quickly learn how to use it • MS Access + Excel = dynamite 32

  33. Yannick Pouliot, PhD lanebioresearch@stanford.edu 33

  34. The Nitty- Gritty Details 34

  35. How to Query Using MS Query Steps • Make sure you have the requisite driver (next slide) • Create a Data Source Name (Windows only) • Write your query • Get the results back into Excel! See Lane videorecorded class Managing Experiment Data Using Excel and Friends: Digging Out from Under the Avalanchefor lots more details. 35

  36. Step1: Getting DriversEssential for SQL Querying • A driver is a piece of software that lets your operating system talk to a database • Installed drivers visible in ODBC manager • “data connectivity” tool • Each database engine (Oracle, MySQL, etc) requires its own driver • Generally must be installed by user • Drivers are needed by Data Source Name tool and querying programs • Require (simple) installation 36

  37. MySQL Driver: Needed to Query MySQL Databases • Windows: Download MySQL Connector/ODBC 3.51 here • Must be installed for direct querying using e.g. Excel • Not necessary if you are using the MySQL Query Browser 37

  38. Oracle Driver: Needed to Query Oracle Databases • Installing “client” software will also install driver • Windows: Download 10g Client here • Mac: Download 10g Client here • Free Oracle user account required to download • Must be installed if you are querying using MS Query or any other query browser involving Oracle 38

  39. Step 2: Creating a Data Source Name • A Data Source Name (DSN) tells programs on your PC where and how to query a database • Populating the fields: • Data Source Name: Unique name of your choice • Description: anything • Server: exactly as given by the database provider • Port number: as specified by database provider • Defaults: MySQL: 3306; Oracle: 1521; MS Access: N/A 39

  40. Words of Caution • Easy to build queries that • Retrieve nonsense • Never complete, end up completely bogging down the database • Scotty to Captain Kirk: “Where going in circles, and at warp 6 we’re going mighty fast…” • Understanding schema is only way to prevent that • Not always easy… 40

  41. Resources – SQLThe Language to Query Relational Databases • Beginning SQL, Wilton P & Colby JW: Ehttp://jenson.stanford.edu/uhtbin/cgisirsi/5AGuKeptoD/GREEN/59960102/9#holdings • Oracle SQL*Plus, Gennick, J. • Beginning MySQL:e-book http://site.ebrary.com/lib/stanford/Doc?id=10114227 41

  42. 42

  43. The Relational Principle in Action • Related records can be found using a shared key • Example: Patients.ID = Visits.PatientID 43

  44. SQL Querying…With What? • Other query browsers exist but are more sophisticated • = more complex • Example: PL/SQL Developer, from Allround Automations 44

More Related