![]() ![]() You can also set the CanGrow property for a control on a form however, the setting only takes effect when you print the form or view it in Print Preview. If you create a simple report by using the Report tool on the Create tab, you’ll see the CanGrow property in action. This makes for a better presentation than a datasheet, because each row is set to the necessary height for that record. On reports, you can set the CanGrow property of text boxes and report sections to Yes, which lets them adjust their heights automatically based on the amount of text they contain. The catch is that the new row height applies to all rows in the datasheet, so the datasheet takes up more vertical space and you wind up doing more scrolling to view all your records. In a datasheet view, you need to manually adjust the row height before you can see the text that wraps to subsequent lines. The process for doing that depends on what kind of object you’re working with. The key is making sure there is enough room for the text to wrap. ![]() It may surprise you to learn that in most places where text is displayed in Access, text wrapping is on by default. How do you wrap text in Access? It’s a question we hear quite frequently on. ![]()
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