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Richard Rost
Richard Rost

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Text Box Margins in Microsoft Access

Today's TechHelp tutorial from Access Learning Zone focuses on a fundamental concept for beginners: aligning text boxes for numbers, dates, and currency so they appear neat and tidy. It's straightforward to align the text boxes themselves, but there's often extra space inside that can disrupt the alignment. The goal is to ensure everything looks well-organized.

Brandon from Tustin, California, one of my platinum members, reached out with a query about this. He has a form with a column of vertical text boxes, some formatted as currency and others as dates. The issue is that currency values leave additional space to the right, allowing for negative number parentheses, whereas date values do not. This misalignment makes the column appear disorganized. Brandon wants to know how to add space to the right of date values to achieve a neatly aligned column.

This can be easily addressed by setting a margin inside the text boxes for date or number values that require alignment adjustment. For currency data types, the space is already provided for negative parentheses. By adding a margin, rather than padding (which is different), we can resolve this discrepancy.

In my TechHelp free template, available on my website, I have a customer form with three aligned number fields. Personally, I prefer left alignment, but I understand the preference for right alignment. Let's take a moment to adjust these values for left alignment by accessing the format options.

If you're unfamiliar with the process, I usually keep my ribbon collapsed when recording videos for a cleaner view. You can double-click to expand it and maintain it open. Let's select the text boxes and apply right alignment. I'll save, close, and reopen to verify they look correct.

Now, observe the text boxes closely. The currency fields have additional space for potential negative parentheses, while others do not. To add a margin, enter design view. Select the text boxes by drawing a box that touches them, without encircling them completely. Access the property sheet, located at the bottom of the right-click options, and open it if necessary.

With the text boxes selected, navigate to the Format tab and locate margins (distinct from padding). We'll start by adding a small right margin, around 0.1, to see how it looks. Save, close, and reopen the form to check the result. If it's excessive, return to design view and adjust the margin to slightly smaller values, such as 0.09 or 0.08. Consider 'Twips' - a measurement unit - that may cause numbers to appear slightly altered. Adjust accordingly until the alignment is visually satisfactory.

These margin adjustments apply equally to left, right, and top margins. If this interests you, I cover various form formatting techniques in my beginner series. You can start with Microsoft Access Beginner Level 1, a four-hour free course introducing the basics. Beyond that, I offer beginner, expert, advanced, and developer lessons on my website.

That's today's TechHelp tutorial. I hope you found it instructive. Live long and prosper, my friends. You can find a complete video tutorial with step-by-step instructions on everything discussed here on my website.

For a complete video tutorial on this topic, please visit https://599cd.com/TextBoxMargins?key=Dev.To

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