This example demonstrates the Count property with two collections in the Employee database. The property obtains the number of objects in each collection, and sets the upper limit for loops that enumerate these collections. Another way to enumerate these collections without using the Count property would be to use For Each...Next
statements.
Public Sub CountX()
Dim rstEmployees As ADODB.Recordset
Dim strCnn As String
Dim intloop As Integer
' Open recordset with data from Employee table.
strCnn = "Provider=sqloledb;" & _
"Data Source=srv;Initial Catalog=pubs;User Id=sa;Password=; "
Set rstEmployees = New ADODB.Recordset
rstEmployees.Open "employee", strCnn, , , adCmdTable
' Print information about Fields collection.
Debug.Print rstEmployees.Fields.Count & _
" Fields in Employee"
For intloop = 0 To rstEmployees.Fields.Count - 1
Debug.Print " " & rstEmployees.Fields(intloop).Name
Next intloop
' Print information about Properties collection.
Debug.Print rstEmployees.Properties.Count & _
" Properties in Employee"
For intloop = 0 To rstEmployees.Properties.Count - 1
Debug.Print " " & rstEmployees.Properties(intloop).Name
Next intloop
rstEmployees.Close
End Sub