the difference between the way Access saves a record and the way Excel saves a row in a worksheet.
Answer
access save the data excel save the worksheet
In Access, a row from a spreadsheet is normally a record.
You can copy data from Access and paste it directly into Excel. From a table or query, data can be selected and then copied and pasted into Excel. In that case, data changing in the original Access file will not change data in the Excel file. To do that there must be a link between the data. You can also import data from Access into Excel and from Excel into Access, again maintaining a link to the source if you want.
They are the same thing, excel is Microsoft's spreadsheet programme.
I would say that there is no differences between Excel VBA and Access VBA. VBA is the acronym for visual basic for application and is the common language for the office suite. Excel vba gives you a native access to excel object (eg a worksheet, a cell, a range, etc.) but object of other applications can be made accessible via configuration (references). Access vba gives you a native access to access object.
MS Excel is a spreadsheet; MS Paint is a basic graphics editing program.
Microsoft Excel is a worksheet. Microsoft Word is a word processor.
SQL is Structured Query Language, and relates to databases. Excel is a spreadsheet application.
It will put the fields in Access into columns in Excel, and records in Access will be in rows in Excel. Data will be converted to appropriate data types.
Microsoft Access is a database application and Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. There are some things that both can do, but each is designed primarily for their respective tasks. Spreadsheets are for numerical analysis and manipulation. Databases are for processing lists of data.
Excel
Excel is a spreadsheet program that is marketed by Microsoft. Word is a word processing program that is marketed by the same company.
You can get the difference on your calculator, or in Excel. In Excel, the expression would be: = -10 - (-20) As to the "why", look at the numbers on a number line. That should help you visualize the situation.