Stefan,

Indeed, and my mistake (semantics). I meant what you explained. It is clear

to me that the order in the table remains in the manner the data were

entered, and that cannot be changed, unless a record is deleted and then

re-entered, which would place it elsewhere (at the end). This does not

really have any benefits IMHO.

And yes, I understand that it is the output that is sorted based on the

query. Thanks for clarifying this, and as I read my question, I should have

seen the difference myself. Mea culpa! : =)

I am quite familiar with SQL Server 2000, but need to use MySQL for a

project for the University I am at (Devry Alpharetta, Atlanta), to capture

the input from a student survey of the classes and the Faculty members.

There are several fields: semester (char), course(char), courseID (int),

Faculty (varchar[30] - if that is acceptable in that format - and the

answers to 18 questions, all alpha characters (char) or numeric char (int),

and one Boolean (yes/no or 1,0).

I need to figure out how to best structure this, e.g. create tables on the

fly (if that is possible using ASP/ADO and SQL with ODBC connector), or

create tables with many to many relationships and store the data for each

course survey in a separate table.

The tables with many to many relationships would hold all the courses,

courseID's, and Faculty members, and the answers to the survey would create

links between those and the results from the surveys.

A typical class unique identification would look like this:

sum03_FBaah_CIS_349

The cols would be 1 through 18 + a calculation col for the average of

questions 1 to 18 and a col for the average of all answers to question 1,

question 2, etc ...

Mind you I may export the answers to an excel spreadsheet and do the

calculations there rather than in the DB itself.

Anyway this is a long answer to your response but I wanted those who read

this to get an idea of what I am working with.

Any suggestions are welcomed.

Albert

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Fortuno, Adam" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'Albert'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 02, 2003 9:38 AM
Subject: RE: Show database problem


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