No it is not. However, there are a lot of things that both a database and a spreadsheet can do, so Access does have some capabilities to do what a spreadsheet can. Spreadsheets focus on numeric analysis and manpulation, so mostly concentrate on numbers. Databases deal with processing lists of data, some of which would be numeric, but it works with a lot of other kinds of data. Microsoft Access is a database and that is what it is designed to be, so it is not a spreadsheet.
No, Microsoft Access is a flatfile database program. Microsoft Excel would be an example of a spreadsheet program.
database
No. Excel is a spreadsheet. Access is the database.
Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.Any of the Microsoft applications, like Word, Access, Powerpoint etc. can be linked to Excel. Other spreadsheet and database applications in particular can link to it.
Microsoft Office Access uses a database type known as the Microsoft Jet Database Engine. You can learn more about Microsoft Access online from the Wikipedia.
Microsoft Access is an individual database program. Open Office is a suite of programs incorporating database, spreadsheet, writing and presentation programs.
Microsoft Access is a database application and it does not have cells in the way a spreadsheet does. A datasheet in Access is not the same as a worksheet in Excel and it does not have a fixed amount of columns, rows and cells. So there is no answer to the question.
Access is a database. Excel is a spreadsheet. Both are useful to displaying data systematically, but a database is enormously more flexible. Access is a relational database, which is even more flexible than an ordinary database and permits the data to be manipulated in many ways. +++ It's not "instead of" but "both" - using whichever is the better for the given work. ' It does depend on your purposes. Excel is by far the better if you need only a single table, or if you need to embed a lot of mathematical formulae in the spread-sheet - though MS has ruined what had been its nearly-good graph routines. A database table looks like a spread-sheet page, but it lacks the rapid copying functions that are valuable features in Excel.
Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.
None. Microsoft Access is a database application.
Microsoft Office is an office suite that may or may not contain the Access database program. Only the most expensive versions of MS Office include Access, so more often than not MS Office does not include a database, although it always includes a word processor (MS Word) and a spreadsheet (MS Excel).
Microsoft Access 2007 is one version of Microsoft's database software package. Microsoft Access comes with a variety of prebuilt database solutions.
Excel is part of the Microsoft Office program. It is a spreadsheet, useful for keeping numerical data. The same program has another part called Access, which is a database, useful for manipulating data of all kinds in various ways.
Microsoft Access is a database application and Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application, so they are two different kinds of application. There are things that both can do, but if you want to create a proper database, then Access is better than Excel. It has far more facilities for working with databases than Excel does. Because of that, it is simpler to do lots of things in Access than in Excel. If you want to create a spreadsheet, then that is what Excel is used for, though you can do a lot of things Excel does in Access. If you already have Excel and want to create databases, then you can, but you won't be able to do the really sophisticated things that Access can do and which a really good database needs, such as queries, reports, relationships etc. If you want a really good database that can do those things, then you need Access.