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ms access - Is there any important difference between set dbs=currentdb() and using currentDB() directly?

I have inherited a lot of code that is essentially like this:

dim dbs as dao.database
set dbs = currentdb()
dbs.execute "Some SQL string"
set dbs = nothing

Is there any reason not to recode it as:

currentdb().execute "some  SQL string"

(I know that if I want to use .recordsaffected, currentdb().recordsaffected won't yield usable results).

Are there any benefits from recoding it, other than simplifying the code?

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Simply using CurrentDb.Whatever is a tempting shortcut, but there are quite a few circumstances where it causes strange behaviour. That's because CurrentDb is not an Object itself, it is a Function that returns a copy of the current Database object.

Years ago I swore off trying to use CurrentDb like it was an Object after the umpteenth time I was debugging code that I knew was "right", and it was... once I created a proper DAO.Database object (Set cdb = CurrentDb) and used cdb.Whatever instead of CurrentDb.Whatever.


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