![]() So, for example, if I created TABLE.DB, and structured it to include a field of 270 characters, I would wind up with TABLE.DB and also TABLE.MB. ![]() DB files the contents of longer fields would go into companion. ![]() Fields up to 240 (?) characters would be stored in. My impression was that Paradox used .MB files to hold the contents of a table’s largest fields. In Paradox for DOS, I had constructed tables with various kinds of fields. So I went in search of an alternate way of getting data out of those old Paradox tables. But it had been more than ten years since I had seriously used PDOX for DOS at this writing it was not running for me at all and it had been more than ten years since I had used its commands often enough to remember them. At times, it had been possible to run a DOS-based version of Paradox on Windows XP in Windows Virtual Machine and also (I think), five years earlier, in VMware on Ubuntu. I believe the version I had used to create those tables was Paradox 4.0 for DOS.
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