You should be able to right click on the .exe and go to Properties and then go to the Version tab for the information you're after.
Hope this helps
HarleyQuinn
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The most overlooked advantage to owning a computer is that if they foul up there's no law against wacking them around a little. - Joe Martin
Get the most out of Tek-Tips, read FAQ222-2244 before posting.
This tab shows the version number of the application, but I can't see anything pertaining to the version of Visual Basic that was used to create the application. Am I missing something.....?
Sorry Ed, I'd mis-understood your question there...
HarleyQuinn
---------------------------------
The most overlooked advantage to owning a computer is that if they foul up there's no law against wacking them around a little. - Joe Martin
Get the most out of Tek-Tips, read FAQ222-2244 before posting.
Not that I'm complaining but I assume that star was for SBerthold?
HarleyQuinn
---------------------------------
The most overlooked advantage to owning a computer is that if they foul up there's no law against wacking them around a little. - Joe Martin
Get the most out of Tek-Tips, read FAQ222-2244 before posting.
HarleyQuinn
---------------------------------
The most overlooked advantage to owning a computer is that if they foul up there's no law against wacking them around a little. - Joe Martin
Get the most out of Tek-Tips, read FAQ222-2244 before posting.
Thanks. That was a cheap way (Notepad), but you could use something like Depends.Exe (Dependency Walker) and see which Dlls the exe uses (start profiling to see the ones visible only at runtime)
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