Category : Paradox DBMS
Archive   : PIC-DB.ZIP
Filename : PIC-DB.DB

 
Output of file : PIC-DB.DB contained in archive : PIC-DB.ZIP
ªË2dEm`EmFdpEm¿EmÇEmVALPICS.DBPictureDescription¨!*@First letter capitalized!*[{ *[ ],-*[ ],;,*[ ]}!,@]Allows for embedded blanks for more than 1 character, caps after hyphen, comma & period!*[{ ,.,(,;,}*{ ,.,(,;,}!,@]Caps first letter following period, parens, or comma"!*[ !,@]"Capitalizes after a space#####ZIP Code, 5 positions¨#####[-####]ZIP Code, with optional "+4"#####[-####],&#&#&#ZIP Code, with optional "+4", and allows for Canadian & British postal codes###-###{#,-####}[x#*#]Phone number, with or without area code; also allows extension starting with letter x###-##-####Social Security Number##/##/##Date in MM/DD/YY form; forces 2 digits for Day and Month¨##:##Time of day (HH:MM)##:##:##Time of day (HH:MM:SS)#[#]/#[#]/##Date in MM/DD/YY form; allows for 1-digit Day or Month&&2-letter state abbreviation(312)###-####,(###)###-####Phone number with space bar entry for local area codeT*!All upper-caseFeb,Sep,Oct,Nov,Dec,J{an,u{n,1}},Ma{r,y},A{pr,ug}Allows 3-letter month abbreviationYes,NoAllows only Yes or No to be entered; user needs only to type Y or NYes,NoAllows only Yes or No to be entered; user needs only to type Y or NYes,NoAllows only Yes or No to be entered; user needs only to type Y or N¨{&,#,_}*7[&,#,_].*3[&,#,_]Valid DOS filename, inserts period, optional extension{1[0,1,2],0#,#}/01/8#Allows only 1st day of month to be input for years in the 1980s{A,P}MAM or PM time designationComment 1:This table is based on a file [VALPICS.ARC] written by Bob Foster [72150,1050]Comment 2:Table created by Mike Sullivan [70205,1152] 2/8/89

  3 Responses to “Category : Paradox DBMS
Archive   : PIC-DB.ZIP
Filename : PIC-DB.DB

  1. Very nice! Thank you for this wonderful archive. I wonder why I found it only now. Long live the BBS file archives!

  2. This is so awesome! 😀 I’d be cool if you could download an entire archive of this at once, though.

  3. But one thing that puzzles me is the “mtswslnkmcjklsdlsbdmMICROSOFT” string. There is an article about it here. It is definitely worth a read: http://www.os2museum.com/wp/mtswslnk/