Remove the parentheses in the function call. The line of code should now look like this:
String_In_Queries_Alter sOriginal, sNew
Save and compile again. If you're still getting compile errors, I don't see String_In_Queries_Alter defined here. Did you paste it into the same module as your other code here or did you paste it into a standard module and make sure it's public?
This looks like an easy problem to solve, but I think you didn't get any help yesterday because you didn't post the compile error message (making us guess what your problem is), and you're blindly copying code without knowing what it does or how to use it. Many people are reluctant to give help when it's decided that help will fall on deaf ears. If you want to get help faster here in the future, I'd advise reading Access's built in help or a book on Access. Your future posts will show any vba assistance will be put to good use, instead of showing somebody who's never coded before and won't read an instruction manual to learn how. I know this sounds like I'm criticizing you, but I think you'd rather know the unwritten rules on how to get help fast when you're starting out.
Chris Microsoft MVP
Shimon wrote:
[Quoted Text] >Here is the code I'm using > >Dim sOriginal As String >Dim sNew As String >Dim log As String > >sOriginal = "tblMember" >sNew = "tblMemberUS" > String_In_Queries_Alter (sOriginal, sNew) > >The module is from the codescan DB I got off Allen's site (I think).
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