Here's drill and tap chart...but there are hundreds on the net. Find the one that fits your needs...or two...or three.
http://www.stanford.edu/group/prl/cgi-bin/wiki/index.php?title=Tapping_and_Threading#Tap_and_Drill_Bit_Size_Table
Bolt sizes (not screws...screws are tapered and are used in wood/plastic) were defined by the Unified Thread Standard....years ago...and have been replaced by metric sizes lately. In the Unified Thread Standard, there are numbered diameters for bolts, #0 through #10, with 0 the smallest and 10 the largest. The outside diameter of the threads = 0.060" + 0.013"*(numbered diameter). So #2 has a major diameter of 0.060" + 0.013"*2 = 0.086".
The number after the dash is threads per inch....so an 00-80 bolt is 0/.60" in diameter and has 80 threads per inch. A 4-40 bolt would be 0.112" in diameter... with 40 threads per inch.
Lastly....bolts from 1/4" and up..use the diameter outright, followed by the threads per inch.....1/4" 20 bolts are 0.25" in diamter and have 20 threads per inch.
http://www.stanford.edu/group/prl/cgi-bin/wiki/index.php?title=Tapping_and_Threading#Tap_and_Drill_Bit_Size_Table
Bolt sizes (not screws...screws are tapered and are used in wood/plastic) were defined by the Unified Thread Standard....years ago...and have been replaced by metric sizes lately. In the Unified Thread Standard, there are numbered diameters for bolts, #0 through #10, with 0 the smallest and 10 the largest. The outside diameter of the threads = 0.060" + 0.013"*(numbered diameter). So #2 has a major diameter of 0.060" + 0.013"*2 = 0.086".
The number after the dash is threads per inch....so an 00-80 bolt is 0/.60" in diameter and has 80 threads per inch. A 4-40 bolt would be 0.112" in diameter... with 40 threads per inch.
Lastly....bolts from 1/4" and up..use the diameter outright, followed by the threads per inch.....1/4" 20 bolts are 0.25" in diamter and have 20 threads per inch.