A check box would be best, but you would also be able to use a combo-box or a list or a pair of radio buttons.
An attribute would refer to a field in the tables that you create in Access.
It could be stored in a Memo field, but in reality you would not use Microsoft Access at all to store it. You would store in a Microsoft Word document.
Type is Microsoft Access Database (.mdb)
Microsoft access courses are available in New York. You would be able to sign up for a Microsoft access course through Microsoft's official website or npyl.org.
No. A wpd extension is not one from Microsoft Access. It would be a word processing document.
Microsoft Access is a database management program used in web design systems. Schools that would offer classes in Access would be based around IT or web design platforms.
Anyone is able to access the Microsoft commerce server. Although everyone can access it, to be able to access it one must first download the commerce server files first.
I would start at the Microsoft website. Microsoft continually offers tutorials.
Microsoft Access
Yes, in an Access database, typical field names for a table storing contact information could include "First Name," "Last Name," "Address," and "Phone." These field names help organize and categorize the data within the database, making it easier to manage and retrieve information.
You would probably be best to use Microsoft Access but you could also use Microsoft Excel, particuarly if there was a lot of numerical data.
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.