User manual
Table Of Contents
- Preface Introducing FileMaker Pro
- Chapter 1 Using databases
- About database fields and records
- Opening files
- Opening multiple windows per file
- Closing windows and files
- Saving files
- About modes
- Viewing records
- Adding and duplicating records
- Deleting records
- Entering data
- Finding records
- Making a find request
- Finding text and characters
- Finding numbers, dates, times, and timestamps
- Finding ranges of information
- Finding data in related fields
- Finding empty or non-empty fields
- Finding duplicate values
- Finding records that match multiple criteria
- Finding records except those matching criteria
- Deleting and reverting requests
- Viewing, repeating, or changing the last find
- Hiding records from a found set and viewing hidden records
- Finding and replacing data
- Sorting records
- Previewing and printing databases
- Automating tasks with scripts
- Backing up database files
- Setting preferences
- Chapter 2 Creating databases
- Chapter 3 Working with related tables and files
- Chapter 4 Sharing and exchanging data
- Chapter 5 Protecting databases with accounts and privilege sets
- Chapter 6 Converting FileMaker databases from previous versions
- Index
Introducing FileMaker Pro 11
Sharing and exchanging data
A benefit of storing data in FileMaker Pro is sharing your data with
others. You can share your data with other FileMaker
Pro users on a
network, use the web publishing capabilities to share data over the
web, or use ODBC (Open Database Connectivity) and JDBC (Java
Database Connectivity) to share FileMaker
Pro files with ODBC-
and JDBC-compliant applications.
If your computer is connected to a network, you and other Windows
and Mac
OS FileMaker Pro users can use the same database file
simultaneously. FileMaker Pro Network Sharing supports the
sharing of files with up to five concurrent users.
Note If you need to share files with more than five concurrent users
on a network, FileMaker recommends the use of FileMaker Server.
You can quickly and easily publish FileMaker Pro layouts as web
pages, which allows anyone with a web browser on your intranet (or
the Internet) to access your FileMaker Pro databases.
With FileMaker Pro accounts and privilege sets, you can make your
web databases secure.
Using SQL (Structured Query Language) queries, you can get data
from FileMaker Pro files to create charts, generate reports, and
analyze your data with ODBC- and JDBC-compliant software
applications. You can also use FileMaker Pro as an ODBC client
application, accessing data sources such as Microsoft Access or
Oracle databases. For more information about using, and the
limitations of using, ODBC and JDBC with FileMaker Pro, see Help.
For more information about sharing and exchanging data, see
chapter 4, “Sharing and exchanging data.”