Contributor: SWAG SUPPORT TEAM { There are a number of reasons why a program might need to query the structure of a table used in the application. One reason is a prelude to creating TField components at run-time that represent the fields in the table. The information gleaned from the structure of the table form the basis of the TField components to be created. The example below demonstrates how to iterate through the fields available in a TTable or TQuery. The example extracts information about the available fields and displays the information in a TListBox, but the same methodology can be used to provide information necessary for the dynamic building of TField descendants. The example uses a TTable as the data set, but a TQuery can be used in the same manner as both TTable and TQuery components incorp- orate the Field-Defs property the same way. } procedure TForm1.Button1Click(Sender: TObject); var i: Integer; F: TFieldDef; D: String; begin Table1.Active := True; ListBox1.Items.Clear; with Table1 do begin for i := 0 to FieldDefs.Count - 1 do begin F := FieldDefs.Items[i]; case F.DataType of ftUnknown: D := 'Unknown'; ftString: D := 'String'; ftSmallint: D := 'SmallInt'; ftInteger: D := 'Integer'; ftWord: D := 'Word'; ftBoolean: D := 'Boolean'; ftFloat: D := 'Float'; ftCurrency: D := 'Currency'; ftBCD: D := 'BCD'; ftDate: D := 'Date'; ftTime: D := 'Time'; ftDateTime: D := 'DateTime'; ftBytes: D := 'Bytes'; ftVarBytes: D := ''; ftBlob: D := 'BLOB'; ftMemo: D := 'Memo'; ftGraphic: D := 'Graphic'; else D := ''; end; ListBox1.Items.Add(F.Name + ', ' + D); end; end; Table1.Active := False; end; DISCLAIMER: You have the right to use this technical information subject to the terms of the No-Nonsense License Statement that you received with the Borland product to which this information pertains.