These functions allow you to access records stored in dBase-format
     (dbf) databases.
    
     dBase files are simple sequential files of fixed length records. 
     Records are appended to the end of the file and delete records are
     kept until you call dbase_pack().
    
     The types of dBase fields available are:
     
Table 1. Available types of fields
| Field | dBase Type | Format | Additional informations | 
|---|
| M | Memo | n/a | This type is not supported by PHP, such field will be ignored | 
| D | Date | YYYYMMDD | The field length is limited to 8 | 
| N | Number | A number | You must declare a length and a precision (the number of digits
          after the decimal point) | 
| C | String | A string | You must declare a length. When retrieving data, the string
         will be right-padded with spaces to fit the declared length. | 
| L | Boolean | T or Y for TRUE, 
         F or N for FALSE | Stored and returned as an integer (1 or 0) | 
| Warning | 
| 
      There is no support for indexes or memo fields. There is no
      support for locking, too. Two concurrent webserver processes
      modifying the same dBase file will very likely ruin your database.
      
      We recommend that you do not use dBase files as your production
      database. Choose any real SQL server instead; MySQL or Postgres
      are common choices with PHP. dBase support is here to allow you to
      import and export data to and from your web database, because the
      file format is commonly understood by Windows spreadsheets and
      organizers.
      | 
  In order to enable the bundled dbase library and to use these functions,
  you must compile PHP with the --enable-dbase
   option.
 
This extension has no configuration directives defined in php.ini.
This extension has no resource types defined.
     Many examples in this reference require a dBase database. We will use 
     /tmp/test.dbf that will be created in the example of
     dbase_create().
    
This extension has no constants defined.