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- Xref: sparky comp.os.ms-windows.programmer.misc:4403 comp.os.ms-windows.programmer.tools:1786
- Newsgroups: comp.os.ms-windows.programmer.misc,comp.os.ms-windows.programmer.tools
- Path: sparky!uunet!microsoft!hexnut!joero
- From: joero@microsoft.com (Joe Robison)
- Subject: Re: VB and databases.
- Message-ID: <1992Dec19.025136.26415@microsoft.com>
- Date: 19 Dec 92 02:51:36 GMT
- Organization: Microsoft Corp.
- References: <MIZO.92Dec14095658@sevax1.cse.canon.co.jp> <1992Dec9.153629.20811@ugle.unit.no><1992Dec9.160604.4529@titan.ksc.nasa.gov>
- Lines: 20
-
- In article <MIZO.92Dec14095658@sevax1.cse.canon.co.jp> mizo@sevax1.cse.canon.co.jp wrote:
- >
- > >>>>You might want to look at Microsoft Access. Its a brand new relational
- > >>>>database product from Microsoft. It supports data, sound, images, etc in
- > >>>>the database. I'd heard good things about it. I saw a demo of the product
- > >>>>and I'm sold. The "script" language is amazingly "VisualBasic" like
- > >>>>(imagine that :-).
- >
- > I have not seen the product here in Japan yet, but does it allow you
- > to write a DLL and use it from inside Access just like VB does?
-
- You can Declare a DLL routine and call it from Access Basic in exactly the
- same way (and using exactly the same syntax) as you would in Visual Basic.
-
- Hope this helps.
-
- --
- Joe Robison
- joero@microsoft.com
- Not A Microsoft Spokeshuman
-