**RANDOM** is used in an [OPEN](OPEN) statement to read([GET](GET)) from or write([PUT](PUT)) to a file. ## Syntax > OPEN Filename$ FOR RANDOM AS #1 [LEN = *recordlength%*] * RANDOM is the Default mode if no mode is given in the [OPEN](OPEN) statement. * It creates the file if the legal file name given does NOT exist. * As a RANDOM file, it can read or write any record using [GET](GET) and/or [PUT](PUT) statements. * *Recordlength%* is determined by getting the LEN of a [TYPE](TYPE) variable or a [FIELD](FIELD) statement. - [STRING](STRING) = 1 byte/character, [INTEGER](INTEGER) = 2 bytes, [LONG](LONG) = 4 bytes, [SINGLE](SINGLE) = 4 bytes [DOUBLE](DOUBLE) = 8 bytes - [_BYTE](_BYTE) = 1 byte, [_INTEGER64](_INTEGER64) = 8 bytes, [_FLOAT](_FLOAT) = 10 bytes (so far) * If no record length is used in the [OPEN](OPEN) statement, the default record size is 128 bytes except for the last record. * A record length cannot exceed 32767 or an [ERROR Codes](ERROR-Codes) will occur! * To determine the number of records in a file the records% = [LOF](LOF) \ recordlength%. * When **variable length strings** are PUT into RANDOM files the record length must exceed the maximum string entry by: - 2 bytes are reserved for recording variable string lengths up to 32767 bytes (LEN = longest + 2) - 8 bytes are reserved for recording variable string lengths exceeding 32767 bytes (LEN = longest + 8) * A serial communication port can also be opened for RANDOM in an [OPEN COM](OPEN-COM) statement. ## Example(s) Function that finds a RANDOM file's record number for a string value such as a phone number. ```vb TYPE customer age AS INTEGER phone AS STRING * 10 END TYPE DIM SHARED cust AS customer, recLEN recLEN = LEN(cust) 'get the length of the record type PRINT "RecLEN:"; recLEN OPEN "randfile.rec" FOR RANDOM AS #1 LEN = recLEN FOR i = 1 TO 4 READ cust.age, cust.phone PUT #1, , cust NEXT CLOSE #1 RP = RecordPos("randfile.rec", "2223456789") 'returns 0 if record not found! PRINT RP IF RP THEN OPEN "randfile.rec" FOR RANDOM AS #2 LEN = recLEN GET #2, RP, cust CLOSE #2 PRINT cust.age, cust.phone END IF END DATA 59,2223456789,62,4122776477,32,3335551212,49,1234567890 FUNCTION RecordPos (file$, search$) f = FREEFILE OPEN file$ FOR INPUT AS #f FL = LOF(f) dat$ = INPUT$(FL, f) CLOSE f recpos = INSTR(dat$, search$) IF recpos THEN RecordPos = recpos \ recLEN + 1 ELSE RecordPos = 0 END FUNCTION ``` > *Note:* Random files can store records holding various variable types using a [TYPE](TYPE) definition or a [FIELD](FIELD) statement. When not using a [TYPE](TYPE) or fixed length strings, QB4.5 allows RANDOM files to hold variable length strings up to 2 bytes less than the LEN = record length statement: ```vb _CONTROLCHR OFF OPEN "myfile.txt" FOR OUTPUT AS #1: CLOSE #1: ' clears former file of all entries. OPEN "myfile.txt" FOR RANDOM AS #1 LEN = 13 'strings can be up to 11 bytes with 2 byte padder a$ = CHR$(1) + CHR$(0) + "ABCDEFGHI" b$ = "ABCDEFGHI" c$ = "1234" PUT #1, 1, a$ PUT #1, 2, b$ PUT #1, 3, c$ FOR i = 1 TO 3 GET #1, i, a$ PRINT a$, LEN(a$) NEXT CLOSE ``` ```text ☺ ABCDEFGHI 11 ABCDEFGHI 9 1234 4 ``` > *Note:* The 2 byte file padders before each string PUT will show the length of a string for GET as [ASCII](ASCII) characters. Padders will always be 2 bytes and strings up to the last one will be 13 bytes each no matter the length up to 11, so the file size can be determined as (2 + 11) + (2 + 9 + 2) + (2 + 4) or 13 + 13 + 2 + 4 = 32 bytes. ## See Also * [GET](GET), [PUT](PUT), [FIELD](FIELD) * [BINARY](BINARY) * [SEEK](SEEK), [SEEK (statement)](SEEK-(statement))