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- The Home and Business Calendar Version 1.5
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- Written by Charles H. Crawford with special thanks to Eric Bohlmand
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- Documentation
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- The use of calendars in day to day living is not only taken for
- granted, but a necessity in the modern world. Most people can easily
- relate to the familiar square image of Sunday through Saturday sitting
- beneath a centered month with rows of numbers representing the days. The
- home and business calendar software takes a different approach to the same
- information with a view towards electronically duplicating the calendar
- pad where information is presented on a day by day basis with the next day
- sitting underneath the one you are reviewing. this allows for storage,
- quick searches and event conflict avoidance capacity. Another important
- advantage to this line oriented programming approach is to provide folks
- who do not relate to the graphic square image with the ability to scan
- through an alternative method. People who rely upon speech synthesis to
- access computer information will especially appreciate this serial line
- approach.
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- No program is worth the disk space it is written within unless it
- reasonably serves the interests of its users. Folks who have suggestions
- on how the program might operate better should feel free and are
- encouraged to send them along to me at the following address.
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- Charles Crawford
- The Massachusetts Commission for the Blind
- 88 Kingston Street
- Boston, Ma 02111.
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- The MCB BBS is also available at area code 617 telephone 451-5327
- (8,n,1 best parameters) to leave your suggestions as a comment to the
- sysop. I would encourage folks to call the board and download future
- versions of the calendar program as well as other programs written with
- the needs and concerns of visually impaired users in mind. Folks with
- "Hayes series V 9600" BPS modems can call at that fast speed, while others
- with lower speed modems of any make can also call at those lower speeds.
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- Neither "Calendar" nor the other programs such as the talking
- checkbook or the electronic address book are warrantee for any purpose and
- are not to be sold as they are released to the public domain. Users use
- the programs at their own risk and while I personally have had no problems
- with mind, that is only my experience and any problems arising from the
- use of the software are the sole responsibility of the user who agrees to
- this through the use of the software.
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- Now that we have gotten through all of that, let's get to the program
- itself.
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- The first thing that you will want to do with the calendar program is
- either set colors to your liking or add an entry. Setting colors is easy
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- by typing menu option 3. Folks with visual problems who can see some color
- sets better than others will appreciate the "set colors" feature.
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- Adding an entry to the calendar is simply a matter of pressing option
- 1 and following the prompts. The software was written assuming that you
- already have some dates in the database and when you go to enter a new
- entry, it checks to see if your start time for your meeting or event
- conflicts with a previous entry. Slashes are required for date entries (
- December 25, 1990 would be 12/25/90 ). The starting and ending times
- should be uniform in terms of the punctuation you use. You should use the
- colon when entering starting and ending times and the program will ask you
- later as to whether it is A.M. or P.M. This means that a meeting or event
- starting at nine in the morning would be entered as 9:00 and later the
- program will ask you whether it is before or after noon. The software has
- been modified by Eric Bohlman to incorporate "Clipper" routines which both
- arrange records in AM/PM mode as well as reporting them in proper time
- sequence. the use of the colon in the starting and ending time entries is
- important to keep the "Clipper" index correct. Also, the program looks to
- see if your entry is in conflict with time already entered for the date in
- question to ensure that you don't schedule to events for the same time
- periods.
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- The software will show a conflicting meeting if it detects one. You
- will then have the display of your other meetings during the day to allow
- you to determine what you want to do about conflicts or scheduling. One
- thing you might want to do is to schedule meeting starting at the top of
- an hour and ending them at one minute before the end of the hour. This
- will let the software see no conflict between the ending time and the
- starting time of different events. If you schedule 9:00 to 10:00 on a
- given day and then go in to schedule another meeting starting at 10:00 and
- ending at 11:00; then you'll see the program report a conflict, since
- 10:00 is the ending time for one meeting and 10:00 is the starting time
- for another. The program sees you doing two things at one time and since
- humans are so superior to the computer, it cannot recognize that you are
- ending one thing and starting another at the same time. The way to handle
- this is to simply tell the software that you are ending your meeting or
- event at 10:59 and the computer and you can be one with the universe.
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- If you decide that a previously entered conflicting record is not as
- important as the one you are currently entering, then either choose to
- delete, cancel or move it. Deleting means that you mark the record to be
- taken out of the database completely once you leave the calendar program.
- Cancelling does not delete the record and future versions will have
- routines built in to search your cancelled meetings and not show them with
- the active records. Moving a record simply marks the record for instant
- search and editing for future versions. Currently a record marked for
- moving behaves like any other record which you would have to edit to
- change the date or time or whatever to actually move the meeting.
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- Once you have been shown the conflicting meeting and other events of
- the day and once you may have chosen to move forward, then you will be
- asked a series of questions which get the information necessary to
- provide you with a comprehensive summary of the meetings you have
- scheduled. As one who must mange time very closely, I can appreciate the
- need for comprehensive information at your immediate disposal.
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- Menu option 2 provides you with the opportunity to review your
- records. If you want to see what is coming up for a two week period, then
- simply tell the computer the dates between which you want to search and
- you are all set.
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- Menu option 4 is for folks like me who love adding information early,
- but who then may have to edit it later. This is particularly useful for
- those who may want to use the "notes" lines as a way of keeping a short
- record of what decisions were made or other facts needing to be
- remembered. If you have marked a record for deletion and then go to the
- edit function, don't be surprised to see the record you had marked, since
- it will show up until you've left the program to DOS. If you delete a
- record and then go to the edit screen and find it coming up, then simply
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- answer the question about this being the record you want to edit with a
- "N" for no; this will cause the edit program to skip to the next record
- for that date if there is any.
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- Menu option 5 is a fast and simple way to check out the current day's
- activity and should be a real time saver.
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- Menu option 6 allows you to take a fast scan of what's coming up
- within fixed starting and ending dates. Nice for the busy person looking
- for a time to fit one more thing in.
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- Menu option 7 allows you to get an ascii text file generated of
- meetings with a particular person. This will help you to keep track of
- meetings with your boss (hope they all went well) or others you want to
- keep a record of. In addition, you can print the ascii text file using the
- DOS print command "print filename" and show the listing to folks who might
- want to know about meetings they have had with you.
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- Menu option 8 is a handy way to keep track of birthdays,
- anniversaries and the like. It creates a new database called
- "Special.dbf" and when you list the records, it also creates a text file
- called "Special.txt". this allows you to enter information about special
- dates you'll want to be reminded of, and generate a text file that looks
- for records associated with a particular month you give it. If you enter
- your dog's birthday as 09/05/91 and your anniversary as 09/18/88, then
- when you list for the month of September or "09", then you'll get both
- dates and information. Just remember to keep the "Special.dbf" file in the
- same sub-directory as your "TC.dbf" and you'll be fine. Also remember that
- each time you list special dates, the file "Special.txt" is written over.
- You can use your DOS "type filename|more" to read it, or your favorite
- text editor. You can also rename the text file before you use the special
- dates option again and save the file to review another time.
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- Folks interested in an office scheduling routine for more than one
- user can do the following for the time being.
- 1. create sub-directories or multiple floppies with the blank database
- "tc.dbf) in them. Place your "Calendar.exe"file in your path that DOS
- looks to as it operates. Most folks have "path = C:\DOS " in their
- autoexec.bat file in their root directory in C. If in that case, you were
- to put the "Calendar.exe" file in the c:\DOS sub-directory, then you could
- change directories to the one corresponding to a particular person and
- type "Calendar" and up should come the calendar program looking at the
- right database. If I wanted my cat George to have a calendar outside of
- mine, then I would create a sub-directory called "George" and put the
- calendar program in my DOS path. If then, I went to c:\george and then
- typed "Calendar", then the information appearing would be brought up from
- the "George" sub-directory rather than than my own. The same would work
- with any number of sub-directories set up for different office people.
- Just be sure that "TC.dbf" is in the right sub-directory corresponding to
- the person you are scheduling for and that "Calendar.exe" is in your DOS
- pathway.
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- Enjoy the program and use it in good health.
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- Please note that my cat is not named George and he would be insulted
- if I did not mention that. Also his day is so busy with things that keep
- cats entertained, that he would need a whole disk to keep up.
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- Charles H. Crawford.
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