No idea. Something to do with how Access stores the field "behind the scenes". If the field is used for it's intended purpose using the correct property settings, no worries. :-)
Joel --- In [email protected], Clauss Gilbert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > thank you, i'll try this, but do you know what the # mean ? Why are there > different parts in the hypertext fields ? > GC > > > _____ > > De : [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] De la part > de Joel > Envoyé : mercredi 20 décembre 2006 23:03 > À : [email protected] > Objet : [ms_access] Re: hypertext fields > > > > I noticed if I display a hyperlink field in a textbox with the "is > hyperlink" set to false, the # characters appear. If you change the "is > hyperlink" property of the textbox to true, the #'s disappear and the > text becomes underlined/blue and is clickable. > > Check the field design properties of the field in the table, the "Is > hyperlink" property of the textbox to ensure they are appropriate. > > Joel > > --- In [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:ms_access%40yahoogroups.com> ps.com, > Clauss Gilbert <gilbert.clauss@> > wrote: > > > > Hello, > > What do the # (diesis) characters in an hypertext field of a table > (or on a > > form) mean ? > > Why are there sometimes two (one at the beginning, one at the end of > the > > link), sometimes three (# text_part1# text_part2#) ? > > > > Thank you > > > > Gilbert Clauss > > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >
