ACC: Errors Concatenating Variables or Controls (2.0/7.0/97)Last reviewed: August 29, 1997Article ID: Q136059 |
The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARYModerate: Requires basic macro, coding, and interoperability skills. When you concatenate variables or controls in a function or OpenRecordset method, you may receive one of the following error messages.
In Microsoft Access 97The Microsoft Jet database engine does not recognize <name> as a valid Field name or expression. (Error 3070) -or- Data type mismatch in criteria expression. (Error 3464) -or-
In Microsoft Access 2.0 and 7.0Can't bind name '<argument>' -or- Type Mismatch -or-
In Microsoft Access 7.0 and 97Too few parameters. Expected 1 -or-
In Microsoft Access 2.01 parameter expected only 0 supplied.
MORE INFORMATIONThese error messages can occur if one of the following is true:
Microsoft Jet Engine error(3070) or "Can't bind name '<argument>'" ErrorYou may receive the Microsoft Jet Engine error message or the "Can't bind name '<argument>'" error message when you concatenate a variable or control that has a String data type in a method or function as a Numeric data type. For example, the following sample function produces one of these error messages:
Call the function as follows: MyFunction ("Seattle") Function MyFunction (DataToFind As String) Dim MyDB As Database, Myset As Recordset Set MyDB = CurrentDB() Set Myset = MyDB.OpenRecordset("Employees", DB_OPEN_DYNASET) Myset.FindFirst "[City]= " & DataToFind End FunctionThe correct syntax for the last line of the code above is as follows:
MySet.FindFirst "[City] = '" & DataToFind & "'" "Type Mismatch" or "Data Type Mismatch in Criteria Expression" ErrorYou may receive the "Type Mismatch" or "Data Type Mismatch in Criteria Expression" error message when you concatenate a variable or control that has a Numeric data type in a method or function as a String data type. For example, the following function produces one of these error messages:
Call the function as follows: MyFunction (3). Function MyFunction (NumberToFind As integer) Dim MyDB As Database, MySet As Recordset Set MyDB = CurrentDB() Set MySet = MyDB.OpenRecordset("Order Details", DB_OPEN_DYNASET) MySet.FindFirst "[Quantity] = '" & NumberToFind & "'" End FunctionThe correct syntax for the next to the last line of the code above is as follows:
MySet.FindFirst "[Quantity] = " & NumberToFindKeep the following requirements in mind:
"Too few parameters. Expected 1" ErrorYou may receive this error message when you use the OpenRecordset method in code on an existing query. If the query is a parameter query, you need to explicitly declare the parameter and its data type and set the parameter value for that query in the function. For example in Query1, which includes fields from the Employees table in the sample database Northwind.mdb (or NWIND.MDB in version 2.0), the following sample code generates the error message when Query1 has the parameter "[Enter a City]" in the criteria for the [City] field:
Function TestQP() Dim MyDB As Database, MySet As Recordset Set MyDB = CurrentDB() Set MySet = MyDB.OpenRecordset("Query1", DB_OPEN_DYNASET) Debug.Print MySet![City]; Tab(10); MySet![Region] End FunctionWhen you refer to the parameter query, the correct syntax is as follows:
Function TestQP() Dim MyDB As Database, MyDef As QueryDef, MySet As Recordset Set MyDB = CurrentDB() Set MyDef = MyDB.QueryDefs("Query1") MyDef![Enter a City] = "Seattle" Set MySet = MyDef.OpenRecordset(DB_OPEN_DYNASET) Debug.Print MySet![City]; Tab(10); MySet![Region] MySet.Close MyDef.Close End FunctionThe same error message may appear when you concatenate a variable in the SQL SELECT statement of a OpenRecordset method. A syntactically correct example is as follows. NOTE: In the following statement, an underscore (_) at the end of a line is used as a line-continuation character. Remove the underscore from the end of the line when re-creating this statement.
Set MySet = MyDB.OpenRecordset("SELECT * FROM Employees WHERE [City] _ = '" & Forms!Form1!Field0 & "';")This SELECT statement points to a control on a form for the WHERE clause. [City] is a Text field type and the contents of the control are text.
REFERENCESFor more information about concatenating variables or controls in Microsoft Access versions 1.x, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
ARTICLE-ID: Q96576 TITLE : ACC1x: Error Messages when Concatenating Variables or Controls |
Additional query words: parameters
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