>If that causes you a problem, you may create a Visual FoxPro DLL that will allow you total control of it by using Visual FoxPro command from Visual Basic. I did that once because they was a lack of control in VB and it was the perfect solution for us to do. The VFP DLL was extremly simple by allowing us to establish an object with VFP and doing VFP commands from there.
That would create too much overhead for me. But, I've got it working now.
Jay Shepherd