Microsoft Access 2010 Bible

(Rick Simeone) #1

841


CHAPTER


Optimizing Access


Applications


IN THIS CHAPTER


Taking advantage of VBA’s
Load on Demand
functionality

Deciding which file format
to use

Using .accde databases for
better performance

Achieving better performance
through compilation

Increasing the absolute speed
of your application

Increasing the perceived speed
of your application

Using special techniques with
large databases

W


hen Microsoft introduced 32-bit Access, a number of new perfor-
mance concerns came part and parcel with the new features and
functions. Microsoft continues to make a conscious effort to
enhance the performance of the Access database engine, as well as compila-
tion techniques and features such as the formerly undocumented Decompile
command. The end result is that Microsoft has helped to ease your burden,
but in no way has it completely taken that burden from you.


Tip
The published minimum RAM requirement for a computer to run Access on
Windows XP (SP2 or later), Windows Server 2003 (or higher), or Windows
Vista or Windows 7 is 256MB — with an emphasis on minimum. If you plan to
do serious development with Access, you should have at least 512MB to 1GB
of RAM or, preferably, 2GB or more.


With today’s computers and memory prices, this amount of memory is a valuable
investment. In fact, simply adding more memory will increase speed much more
than changing your processor speed, because Access must use the hard drive as a
virtual memory area if it doesn’t have enough memory. Hard drives are slow, and
big hard drives are even slower — regardless of the processor speed.


Understanding Module


Load on Demand


One of the great features of Visual Basic for Applications (VBA), the core lan-
guage of Microsoft Access, is its load on demand functionality. Using load on
demand, Access loads code modules only as they’re needed or referenced. In

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