Microsoft Access 2000 has a new feature that is not
available in earlier versions of Access. In Access 2000, you can convert an
Access 2000 database back to the Access 97 file format.
For more information about
converting an Access 2000 database back to Access 97, click
Microsoft Access Help on the
Help menu, type
convert an Access 2000 database to Access
97 in the Office Assistant or the Answer Wizard, and then click
Search to view the topics returned.
Conversion White Paper
The most comprehensive single source of information about
converting databases to Microsoft Access 2000 is the
Microsoft Access 2000 Conversion White Paper. The white paper includes the following topics:
- Overview
- Converting a Database
- Converting Microsoft Access 97 Databases
- Converting Microsoft Access 95 Databases
- Converting Microsoft Access 2.0 Databases
- Issues Encountered When Saving as a Prior
Version
For additional information about how to
obtain the <I>Microsoft Access 2000 Conversion White Paper</I>,
click the article number below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge
Base:
237313 ACC2000: Conversion White Paper Available in Download Center
Help Topics
For more information about conversion and compatibility issues, click
Microsoft Access Help on the
Help menu, type
conversion
compatibility in the Office Assistant or the Answer Wizard, and then click
Search to view the topics returned.
The
"Conversion and Compatibility Issues" Help topic contains the following links:
- Convert a Database
- Convert a Secured Database from a Previous Version of
Microsoft Access
- Convert Library Databases and Add-ins
- What's New for Developer's: Overview
- Convert Access Basic Code to Visual Basic
- Convert Code That Calls a DLL
- Macro Actions and Methods of the DoCmd Object
- Convert SendKeys Key Combinations
- Style for Intrinsic Constants
- Scoping and Object-Naming Compatibility
- DAO Object Library Compatibility
- Examples of Converting DAO Code
For more
information about troubleshooting the conversion of a previous-version
database, click
Microsoft Access Help on the
Help menu, type
troubleshoot converting previous
version in the Office Assistant or the Answer Wizard, and then
click
Search to view the topics returned.
The
"Troubleshoot Converting an Access Database" Help topic contains the following
links:
Converting any previous-version database
- An identifier causes an error
- My code can't compile
- Time values in my query criteria return different
results
Converting a Microsoft Access version 2.0 database
- My converted Microsoft Access version 2.0 report has
different margins
- A procedure causes an error
- I receive an out-of-memory error when converting a large
database
- My 16-bit API calls do not convert
- My custom controls do not convert
- I receive an error that a table exceeds the limit of 32
indexes
- I receive an ODBC error when opening a form or report in a
converted database
Converting a Microsoft Access 2000 database to Microsoft Access 97
- I receive a message that my computer is missing at least
one of the Access 97 object libraries
Microsoft Access 2000 Readme File
Another good source of information is the Microsoft Access 2000
Readme file (Acread9.txt). This file is installed by default in the C:\Program
Files\Microsoft Office\Office folder. The readme file contains the following
topics related to conversion and compatibility:
- Compatibility Library
- Turning On Name AutoCorrect in a Converted Access
Database