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- <TUTORIAL TOPICS> [BR=/I60.62/J22.20/K0.0]
- RETURN TO
- PC-BROWSE HELP[?BR.HLP]
- Introduction lookup keyword search Popping Up PC-Browse
- Areacode lookup search Sailboat
- Cross-References Lookup-search Files Searching for Text
- Hamlet Misused Searching many files
- Index Page Pasting Text Simple PC-Browse File
- Loading PC-Browse PC-Browse Applications Viewing a File
-
-
- Use Tab or Arrows to highlight an entry; then press Enter
- <INTRODUCTION>
- PC-Browse Tutorial
-
- First, A Word for People Who Don't Read Manuals
-
- What's that? You never read manuals? Not even if we say, "Pretty please?" Aw,
- c'mon, just the first two sections of the Tutorial. We promise they'll be
- short. Just skip the introduction and read the section What Does PC-Browse Do?
- Then load PC-Browse and your favorite word processor (that's PC-Write,
- right?), and try the examples in the next section, Finding, Viewing, and
- Pasting Text.
-
- Many of the hints, suggestions, and sample uses described in this manual have
- come from people who tested early versions of the product as we developed it;
- we're grateful for their suggestions. In fact, we'd love to hear from you
- about how you're using PC-Browse; drop us a line at Quicksoft.
-
-
- Now, Back to the Tutorial
-
- Remember your first Swiss Army Knife? Remember looking at all those blades and
- gizmos, trying to figure out each one? Remember, too, how quickly it became
- indispensable?
-
- Sure, there were better knives if you needed to do some serious cutting, and
- real screwdrivers for assembling your bookshelves. But all of your "real"
- tools were bulky. There was the Swiss Army Knife, always ready to work for you
- when you needed to tighten a screw, or cut a loose thread. Likewise, PC-Browse
- is a tool you can always keep on your computer, to help when you need it to
- look at or find a file, or get a directory.
-
- PC-Browse is both a familiar and a completely new type of product.
-
- You've already used many of its functions. Pop-up programs (or TSRs) have been
- around for years. There are a number of find-text-on-my-disk utilities. You
- can use any word processor to view text files and extract portions of them for
- further use; even hypertext, or cross-referenced on-screen information, is
- used for on-line help in a few products. In some ways, there's little new in
- PC-Browse.
-
- What is new is that PC-Browse combines these concepts, with a few more, into a
- handy Swiss Army Knife utility. As with any product, there are two steps to
- learning it: first, figuring out what it does and second, discovering how to
- do it. In this tutorial, you'll learn the "what" and the "how."
-
- This tutorial is divided into the following topics:
-
- √ What Does PC-Browse Do?
-
- An overview of the capabilities of your new Swiss Army Knife.
-
- √ Finding, Viewing, and Pasting Text.
-
- How to use PC-Browse with the text files already on your disk.
-
- √ Using PC-Browse Applications.
-
- A view of more interesting application files, along with an introduction
- to cross-referenced material (hypertext).
-
- √ Developing Your Own PC-Browse Applications.
-
- How to develop PC-Browse applications for your own use or for
- distribution to other folks.
-
- What Does PC-Browse Do?
-
- In this tutorial, we'll look at some problems you could solve with PC-Browse:
-
- 1. How can I find the memo on restructuring I wrote 6 months ago?
-
- Pop-up PC-Browse and tell it to search the whole disk for, say,
- "restruct." It will quickly find each file containing the search text,
- and show you that text in context! A single keystroke moves from one
- reference to the next. You can even use multiple windows to keep track
- of different references.
-
- 2. What's Mr. Walton's address?
-
- If you're typing a letter to him, put the cursor on his name and pop up
- PC-Browse to jump to his page in your address file. PC-Browse can even
- paste the address right into your letter.
-
- 3. What's the area code for El Paso?
-
- Simply pop-up PC-Browse's area code application and ask it to find El
- Paso.
-
- 4. Is it correct to say, "What's the affect of this decision?"
-
- With our sample misused-words application, just put the cursor on
- "affect" and press the hot key. You'll see how to use "affect" and
- "effect" correctly.
-
- 5. What do we charge for part #73241?
-
- Pop up PC-Browse with your parts list, type in the part number, and you
- can look it up in a flash! It takes only a few seconds to look up any
- of thousands of parts.
-
- 6. How do I add online help to an application or product designed without it?
-
- You can create a PC-Browse file with an index of help topics on the
- first page. A user needing help just pops up PC-Browse, uses the arrow
- or tab keys to select a topic, and then jumps right to it.
-
- 7. Could I do that with an online procedures manual?
-
- Of course. You can use PC-Browse's cross-referencing feature
- (hypertext) to let users explore company procedures and decision-making
- policies in as much detail as necessary.
-
- We'll answer all seven of these questions in greater detail at the end of the
- tutorial.
-
-
- Finding, Viewing, and Pasting Text
-
- We suggest that you read this section at your computer, with PC-Browse and a
- word processing program loaded. It takes only a few minutes to copy PC-Browse
- to a disk and try out the dozen or so main commands.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <Loading PC-Browse>
-
- 1. If you haven't installed PC-Browse on your computer, just copy the
- following files from your PC-Browse Program diskette to a work disk (if you
- have a hard disk, put them in a new subdirectory such as \PCBR):
-
- BR.EXE ADDRESS DECISION HAMLET QUARTO
- BR.HLP AREACODE GLOSSARY MISUSED SAILBOAT
-
- 2. Load PC-Browse from the DOS prompt by typing:
-
- BR <Enter>
-
- If you have a full-color monitor, instead type:
-
- BR /C <Enter>
-
- You'll see the copyright screen, and then the DOS prompt.
-
- 3. Now load your favorite word processor, and create a "scratch" file for
- editing.
-
- This file is only for practice, as you explore ways in which PC-Browse and
- other applications can communicate. With a hard disk, start your word
- processor from the PC-Browse subdirectory if possible (or else give the PC-
- Browse subdirectory path whenever you enter PC-Browse file names during the
- tutorial).
-
- Remarks
- Like most pop-up programs, PC-Browse works only with text-based programs such
- as PC-Write, Word Perfect, WordStar, Microsoft Word in text mode, etc. PC-
- Browse won't pop up over Microsoft Word in graphics mode, other graphic
- programs, or Windows.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <Popping Up PC-Browse>
-
- You should be in your word processor, editing a practice file.
-
- 1. Hold down the Shift and Ctrl keys, and press the F1 key.
-
- We'll refer to this process as "Press Shf Ctl F1". This is the main hot key
- that pops-up PC-Browse "over" whatever program you're using. PC-Browse
- covers the top part of your screen. (If you need to change this hot key
- because another of your programs uses Shf Ctl F1, see the Customizing
- section.) The initial screen is:
-
- ┌File:─────────────────────────────────────────Find:cursorword────────────┐
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- └Esc:Exit F1:Help F6:File F9:Find──────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- 2. To return to your application, simply press the Esc key.
-
- Your word processor's screen is restored. Now press Shf Ctl F1 again to pop
- PC-Browse back up.
-
- The basic operation in PC-Browse is file viewing. You can view one file while
- you're working in another. Even with a multiple-window word processor such as
- PC-Write or Microsoft Word, it's easier to keep a file you're referring to in
- PC-Browse and pop it up when you need it. If you're in Lotus 123 and need to
- review the memo that describes your spreadsheet, PC-Browse may be the only way
- to go.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <Viewing a File> with PC-Browse
-
- 1. Press F6 to select a file.
-
- 2. Type the file name "ADDRESS" and press the Enter key.
-
- PC-Browse quickly loads the file and displays the first page.
-
- 3. Browse through the file by pressing the PgDn or PgUp keys.
-
- These keys scroll the file one line at a time, within a page. To scroll
- faster, a whole window at a time and across pages, press Shf PgDn or Shf
- PgUp. If you reach the start or end of the file, PC-Browse beeps. Little
- triangles just above the lower right corner point up or down to show you
- which direction you can scroll.
-
- 4. Look at the major PC-Browse functions on the menu at the bottom of the
- window:
-
- │ │
- └ Esc:Exit F1:Help F4:Backtrack F6:File F7:Paste F9:Find F10:First-page─┘
-
- 5. Press and hold the Shift key by itself to view another group of functions:
-
- │ │
- └ Esc:Unload F4:View-Locations F7:Print ─────────────PgUp/Dn:more┘
-
- Now you've seen both of the PC-Browse menus. This will be easy. There are a
- few more function key operations, not on these menus. You can use PC-Browse
- with an alternate pair of menus which show all function keys but with more
- abbreviated labels (see: Customizing).
-
- 6. Release the shift key to see the Main Menu again.
-
- 7. Press the F1 key to see on-line help.
-
- You can use PgDn, Shf PgDn, and so on to browse through the help screens.
- When you're done, press the Esc key (or the F1 key) to return to PC-Browse.
-
- Let's search for Spencer Katt's address in this file.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <Searching for Text> in One File
-
- 1. Press the F9 key to type the Find text. Type:
-
- katt
-
- The Find text is the text you're asking PC-Browse to search for. We're
- searching a single file, ADDRESS, as you can see on the top line of the
- window.
-
- 2. Press the Grey+ key to begin the search.
-
- You don't have to press the Enter key after typing the Find text. If you do
- press Enter after typing the Find (or the File) text, either Grey+ or a second
- Enter starts the search. The Grey+ key is the darker + key on the right side
- of the keyboard.
-
- PC-Browse finds the right address immediately. Of course, this is a small
- file, but it can search files quite rapidly, even on a basic PC or XT. Mr.
- Katt's address is on the screen, and the word "Katt" is highlighted.
-
- What if this is not the Katt you're looking for? Press Grey+ or Enter to
- continue the search. Since this is the only Katt in the ADDRESS file, PC-
- Browse will beep and tell you it couldn't find "katt".
-
- PC-Browse can interact with your host application in two ways. First, when you
- pop it up, the word at the cursor (if any) automatically becomes the Find
- text. Second, you can paste selected text directly into your application, just
- as if you had typed it yourself.
-
- 3. Press Esc to return to your word processor.
-
- 4. Enter "Walton" on a line in your practice file. Leave the cursor just after
- the "n".
-
- 5. Try to remember the address. Scratch your head, since you don't know it,
- unless you've done the Tutorial before!
-
- 6. Press Shf Ctl F1 to pop-up PC-Browse. The Find text will be the name
- "walton".
-
- 7. Press Enter or Grey+ to search. PC-Browse finds "Walton" this time.
-
- Let's paste this address into your word-processing practice file.
- See Pasting Text
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <PASTING TEXT> INTO ANOTHER PROGRAM
-
- 1. Press Esc to return to your word processor, and put the cursor at a place
- in the document to insert the address. Press Shf Ctl F1 to pop-up PC-Browse
- again.
-
- 2. Press the F7 key. The Paste Menu appears:
-
- │ │
- └Esc:Cancel F4:Start marking F5:Marked text F6:File name F7:Window F8:Page┘
-
- 3. Use the Up and Down Arrow keys to move the cursor to the first line of the
- address.
-
- 4. Press the F4 key to start marking lines for pasting.
-
- 5. Use the Down Arrow key to extend the marked (highlighted) area through the
- last line of the address.
-
- If you didn't start with the right line, simply move the cursor to the
- correct first line and press F4 again to restart the marking process.
-
- ┌File:address.sam───────────────────────────────Find:walton──────────────────┐
- │ │
- │Jack Walton │
- │1139 73rd Place │
- │Seattle, WA │
- │ │
- │ │
- │Victoria I. Warshawski │
- │Lake Front Drive │
- │Chicago, IL │
- │ │
- └Esc:Cancel F4:Start marking F5:Marked text F6:File name F7:Window F8:Page┘
-
- 6. Press the F5 key to tell PC-Browse that you want to paste the marked lines.
-
- PC-Browse asks when you want to paste the text:
-
- │ │
- └Esc:Cancel paste F9:Paste now F10:Paste when Paste-hotkey pressed─────────┘
-
- Your word-processor's cursor (since it's the host application, this cursor
- is not visible) was just after the "n" in "Walton", but you want to paste
- it to the line below. Press F10 to tell PC-Browse you will press the Shf
- Ctl F7 key to paste these lines into your application. (You could press F9
- to paste them after "Walton", and put it on the next line with your word
- processor.) Pressing F10 (or F9) returns to your word processor.
-
- 7. Move to the next line in your word processing file, make sure you're in
- "push" or "insert" mode, and press the Shf Ctl F7 hot key. The address is
- pasted into your file.
-
- You can also print text if your printer is hooked up (Shf F7 on the Main
- Menu), or print text to a file (Shf F6 to set the file name, then Shf F7).
- See Printing and Pasting in the Reference section for more information.
-
- We knew where to look for Mr. Walton's address. What if we don't know what
- file it's in?
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <SEARCHING MANY FILES>
-
- Searching for Text in Many Files
-
- 1. Press Shf Ctl F1 to pop-up PC-Browse again.
-
- This time, we'll search the entire directory (or diskette) for references
- to "walton".
-
- 2. Press F6 to type a file name. Type *.* and press Enter.
-
- The "*.*" says to search all files in the current directory. These are the
- same wild card characters you use with DOS. You could type "?." for all
- one-character file names or "*.doc" for files with .DOC extensions. Since
- we haven't specified a particular file and haven't told PC-Browse to search
- yet, no file is loaded into the PC-Browse window.
-
- 3. Press F9 to type the Find text. Type "walton" and press Grey+ to begin the
- search.
-
- This multi-file search can present the results to you in two ways: showing
- you each file in turn, or showing you a list of files by name. Now PC-
- Browse asks which you would like, with the following prompt:
-
- │ │
- └Esc:Cancel F9:View each match as found F10:Collect matches and list them──┘
-
- 4. Press F9 to see each file containing "walton".
-
- PC-Browse quickly loads and scans each file in turn, looking for the Find
- text. As it scans a file, it displays the file name at the top of the
- window. When it finds your text, it displays the file, highlighting the
- text found. If this is not the reference you were looking for, you could
- press Enter (or Grey+) again to keep searching. Don't do this quite yet,
- however.
-
- Before we move to the next section of the Tutorial, we'll describe two other
- features related to finding text, with suggestions for exploring these
- features on your own. See Exploring on your own.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <EXPLORING> ON YOUR OWN
-
- First, suppose you're not sure this is the "walton" you're looking for. You
- could search for another with the Grey+ or Enter key, but how would you get
- back to this one if you wanted to? PC-Browse offers two ways to do this. The
- first method is to open another PC-Browse window. The second method uses the
- automatic location list.
-
- TO OPEN ANOTHER WINDOW
-
- 1. Press F2 to Open another window.
-
- There's room on your screen for two windows (you can set this; see
- Customizing). PC-Browse copies the current window to the bottom half of the
- screen, and all activity now occurs in this lower window. The uppper window
- is "frozen" for now.
-
- 2. Press Enter (or Grey+) to search again in the new window.
-
- PC-Browse first saves your place (location) in a list. In a few seconds
- you'll find another reference to "walton". Let's return to the first
- "walton" you found.
-
- 3. Press F4 to return to the previous location.
-
- Even if that reference was in a different file, PC-Browse quickly switches
- back to the first one. It saves your "trail" back to where you started, if
- it can. When the list gets too long (about ten levels by default) it only
- saves the most recent locations.
-
- 4. Return to the upper window by pressing Shf F2.
-
- This closes the lower window. The original text returns to the lower part
- of the screen.
-
- THE LOCATION LIST
-
- What if you want to search your entire hard disk for "walton"?
-
- 5. Press F6, type "\*\*.*", and press Enter.
-
- The "\*\" represents all directories on the disk. We've extended the DOS
- asterisk convention a bit. Just as "\brs\*.*" tells PC-Browse to search all
- files in the BRS directory, "\*\*.*" tells PC-Browse to search all files in
- all directories.
-
- Press Enter again to start the search. You can also press Grey+ right after
- typing the File text to start searching immediately. Since the PC-Browse
- directory, if you created one, is one of the last directories, it may take
- a while to reach the ADDRESS file.
-
- PC-Browse asks if you want to see each file containing the search text, or
- see a list of all such files. If you have more than one disk drive, you can
- also search multiple drives. For example, "ce:\*\*.*" searches both drives
- C and E.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- USING <PC-BROWSE APPLICATIONS>
-
- PC-Browse comes with a number of sample applications. Some are useful on their
- own; others simply help you explore the various tools of the PC-Browse Swiss
- Army Knife.
-
- We'll start with two "real" applications that you may find useful (see the
- files Areacode and Misused). Then we'll use some of the "demonstration" files
- to explore more features, such as hypertext (see the files Hamlet and Sailboat)
- Finally, we'll look more closely at these files so you can learn how to design
- your own applications (see Developing your own PC-Browse Applications).
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <AREACODE>
-
- 1. If you haven't already loaded PC-Browse and then your word processor,
- please do so. Make sure you have a practice file loaded in your word
- processor.
-
- 2. Pop-up PC-Browse by pressing Shf Ctl F1.
-
- 3. Press F6, type the file name AREACODE, then press Enter.
-
- 4. Press Ctl PgDn and Ctl PgUp to browse through the file page by page.
-
- Each page has an area code, the state and time zone for that area code, and
- a list of the major cities in that area. Since this file (like most PC-
- Browse oriented files) is divided into pages, you can look through it
- quickly with Ctl PgDn. In this file each page is shorter than the window,
- but that's not always the case. (You can look at a longer page with the
- scrolling keys PgUp and PgDn, but they don't skip across pages like the Ctl
- PgUp and Ctl PgDn keys.)
-
- What's the area code for El Paso? We need to find El Paso in the AREACODE
- file.
-
- Finding an Area Code for a City
-
- 1. Press F9 and then type "El Paso".
-
- Previously, we used Grey+ to start a search. However, it searches from your
- current position in the file to the end. Since you may be in the middle of
- this file, we need to search from the top.
-
- 2. Press F10 or Shf Grey+ from the Find prompt to search from the start of the
- file.
-
- PC-Browse finds El Paso and highlights it. Since the 915 area code covers
- two time zones, El Paso is noted specifically as being on Mountain Time.
-
- ┌File:areacode──────────────────────────────────Find:El Paso─────────────────┐
- │915 │
- │Texas <TX> (CST/MST) │
- │Abilene (CST), El Paso (MST), Midland (CST), Odessa (CST) │
- │San Angelo (CST), Sweetwater (CST) │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ │
- └ Esc:Exit F1:Help F4:Backtrack F6:File F7:Paste F9:Find F10:First-page┘
-
- Let's try a harder city to spell, such as Hamtramck (near Detroit).
- Luckily, we don't have to spell the whole word.
-
- 3. Press F9, type "hamt", then press F10 to search from the beginning.
-
- PC-Browse finds whatever text you type; you're not limited to whole words.
- You can also use PC-Browse wild cards in the Find text, as described in the
- Reference section under Using Wild Cards in a Search.
-
- Note that a city in this area code, Warren, has the same name as a city in
- another state. The city name is followed by a cross-reference to this other
- state, with the state abbreviation in a different color (depending on your
- monitor type).
-
- 4. Press Tab to highlight the cross-reference (to Ohio).
-
- The Find text changes to the text you highlighted, surrounded by a pair of
- "funny characters." These characters indicate a cross-reference, or
- hypertext link.
-
- 5. The Find text is now "oh". Press Enter to search for it.
-
- PC-Browse finds the first page in the file with OH as the "page title." You
- can now check the area code for Warren, OH rather than Warren, MI.
-
- Automatic cross-referencing is the heart of the hypertext concept. You select
- text that is specially marked, and then at the press of a key you're whisked
- off to the material referenced by that text.
-
- In PC-Browse terminology, the "OH" that you tabbed to is called the trigger
- keyword, because it can trigger a search for other material. When you pressed
- Enter, PC-Browse jumped to the target keyword of that search, the <OH> on the
- Ohio page. This type of searching is called keyword searching.
-
- 6. Press F4 to return to the page you started the cross-reference from.
-
- As you jump around a cross-referenced document or group of documents,
- pursuing ideas and connections, you can always work your way back up the
- trail you followed.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <MISUSED>
-
- Checking a Commonly Misused Word
-
- 1. Press F6, type the PC-Browse application file name MISUSED, then press
- Enter.
-
- This file contains about 100 often misused words, listed in an index in the
- first page. Each word in this list is the trigger to a page of information
- about correct and incorrect usage of the word. To get back to this first
- page at any time, press F10 (or Shf Grey+).
-
- 2. Use Tab and Shf Tab to select words. The Find text reflects each selection.
-
- Since this list is arranged as a table, you can also use the four Arrow
- (cursor) keys to move about it. When the trigger words are not in nicely
- lined-up rows and columns, only Tab and Shf Tab select them.
-
- Let's assume you're writing about Swiss Army Knives and "Their Affect on
- Software Utilities". Should you use "Effect" instead?
-
- 3. Select (with Tab or Arrows) affect (or effect) and press Enter.
-
- PC-Browse displays a page of information about the use of the words
- "affect" and "effect". A little reading, and you discover that the correct
- word here is "effect."
-
- You can also conduct a keyword search by typing in a word directly.
-
- 4. Press F9, type alter, and then (instead of pressing Enter) press F3. This
- converts the Find text to a trigger keyword and does a keyword search from
- the start of the file.
-
- Of course, that's a lot of keys to check one word. Now let's see how to call
- PC-Browse directly from your application and check a word with just one
- keystroke.
-
- 5. Press Esc to return to your word processing practice file.
-
- Assume that you're typing along when you're confronted by the devastating
- question of using "it's" or "its" in a sentence. You could pop up PC-
- Browse, press F9, type the word, and press F3, or you could pop up PC-
- Browse, point to "its" in the index at the start of the file, and press
- Enter. But there's an easier way.
-
-
- 6. Type its (or it's) in your word processing practice file. With the cursor
- still on or just after the word, press Shf Ctl F3.
-
- PC-Browse pops up and automatically jumps to the page where "its" and
- "it's" are discussed. The Shf Ctl F3 hot key is simply a shortcut to look
- something up from your word processor or other program.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <HAMLET>
-
- More Advanced Applications
-
- From here on, the Tutorial is addressed to users who might want to create
- their own PC-Browse files, whether for their own use or for use by others. If
- this doesn't describe you, here's a good point to leave the Tutorial and
- simply begin using PC-Browse. As you work further with the program, feel free
- to turn to the Reference section of the manual to learn more about the
- features we've introduced here.
-
- "Hyper-Documents" That Span More Than One File
-
- 1. Load the sample PC-Browse file HAMLET. Use the Tab key to mark the trigger
- keyword "To be..." on the first page, and then press Enter to link to the
- famous speech.
-
- This file contains a heavily annotated version of the most famous passage
- in English-language theatre. Normally when you read Shakespeare, the
- footnotes are distracting, pulling your eye to the bottom of the page and
- making it hard to concentrate. Most notes contain only simple definitions
- of obscure words; notes about the content refer to essays at the back of
- the book, so you have to flip back and forth.
-
- Hypertext solves these problems. HAMLET is simply a neutral example of some
- heavily cross-referenced material. It could be a procedures manual or
- employee handbook, on-line help specific to a Lotus payroll application, or
- a genealogy record.
-
- 2. Use Shf PgDn to browse through the speech a bit. When you're done, use Shf
- Grey+ or F10 to return to the first page, and then Tab to the reference
- "Quarto Text".
-
- The so-called First Quarto is the first published version of Shakespeare's
- Hamlet; it's different, to say the least. Note the word (a file name) in
- brackets after the reference. This means the cross-reference is in another
- file. The Find text doesn't show the other file name, but PC-Browse keeps
- track of it.
-
- ┌File:hamlet────────────────────────────────────Find:≡Quarto TextΩ───────────┐
- │of the play. │
- │ │
- │ The text given here of "To be, or not to be" is from the First Folio; │
- │the few significant differences from the later Quartos are noted in the │
- │cross-references. │
- │ │
- │ This famous speech also exists in the First Quarto in a much different │
- │form (see Quarto Text [quarto] for comparison.) │
- │ │
- │ (Press F4 to return to previous view) │
- │ │
- └ Esc:Exit F1:Help F4:Backtrack F6:File F7:Paste F9:Find F10:First-page┘
-
- 3. Press Enter to find the target of the cross-reference "Quarto Text".
-
- PC-Browse automatically switches files. The file name on the top line
- changes.
-
- 4. Tab to the "To be..." trigger, then press Enter to view this speech as it
- appeared in 1602. Now Tab to the note on "Marry" to the right of the text.
-
- The "Marry" trigger also cross-references to another file, but here you
- can't see the file name. When you build a PC-Browse file, you decide
- whether a cross-reference shows the file name or not. Here it would have
- been distracting. In fact, we could have made "marry" in the text itself
- the trigger, once again hiding the file name.
-
- 5. Press Enter to follow the "Marry" cross-reference into the GLOSSARY file.
-
- 6. Press F4 a few times, backtracking along your reference trail and
- eventually returning to the HAMLET file.
-
- If you did some exploring already, the location list may have filled up, so
- you may not get all the way back. Explore this file on your own, tracing
- some of the cross-reference trails between the different files.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <SAILBOAT>
-
- "Hyper-Fast" Searching with Lookup Trigger Keywords
-
- So far in this Tutorial, we've been looking at normal text searching and one
- type of PC-Browse keyword search, linear keyword searching. Here we'll look at
- the other type of keyword search, <lookup keyword search>ing.
-
- A <lookup search> is extremely fast; it can search a two megabyte file in under
- 2 seconds on a PC AT. A file designed for lookup searching has several special
- requirements: the keywords must be unique, and the pages in the file must be
- sorted by keyword. Lookup files are usually created from a database program.
- Common uses include parts lists, customer names, and so on.
-
- 1. Load the PC-Browse file SAILBOAT.
-
- We have a customer who ordered part 9047; we need to know how much it
- costs.
-
- 2. Press F9 and type "9047" as the Find text. Press F2 to do a lookup search.
-
- PC-Browse places special characters around the Find text to turn it into a
- lookup trigger. A lookup search isn't noticeably faster on a short file
- such as SAILBOAT. By the time your parts file grows to 100K or so, the
- speed difference will be obvious.
-
- Cross-references within the file can also trigger a lookup search. There's
- one for the part we're looking at, a "Barberhauler Bullet Block w/Becket."
- It's actually the special trigger characters, not the F2 or F3 key, that
- indicate a lookup search is appropriate. This parts list is designed for
- lookup by part number, but it could have used a part name instead. Your
- database program can create a lookup file for each case.
-
- You could also search for a part by pressing F9, typing the part number,
- and pressing F3 to do a linear keyword search. This would not search as
- quickly, however. You could even press F9, type the part number, and press
- Grey+ to just search for the number as normal text. This is as slow as a
- linear search, and it would also find the same number within a phone number
- or address, not just as a part number.
-
- As you see, from the user's perspective lookup keyword searching is almost the
- same as linear keyword searching. The differences are internal, within the
- file. In the next section, we'll examine these differences.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <Developing Your Own> PC-Browse Applications
-
- In this last section, we'll see how PC-Browse files are created by examining
- them "side-by-side" in your word processor and in PC-Browse.
-
- To follow along in this section, you'll need a word processor that can display
- the ASCII characters between 1 and 31, often called control codes. PC-Write is
- ideal; however, the non-document mode of WordStar also works, as well as
- WordPerfect, Microsoft Word, and most other word processors in their "no-
- format" modes. You can build PC-Browse files with any word processor or editor
- that can produce ASCII text; you don't have to use control codes. The files
- we'll examine were built using these control codes. PC-Browse files that use
- control codes are cleaner looking, since the control codes are invisible.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- A <SIMPLE PC-BROWSE FILE>: AREACODE
-
- 1. If you haven't already loaded PC-Browse and then your word processor,
- please do so.
-
-
- Follow the instructions in the first part of this Tutorial, under Loading
- PC-Browse.
-
-
- 2. Load the file AREACODE into your word processor. Pop up PC-Browse (Shf Ctl
- F1) and then press F6 to load AREACODE there, too.
-
- Some word processors may keep a file open, preventing other programs from
- using it. PC-Browse loads a file in read-only mode, but your word processor
- may still have it locked out. In this case, return to DOS and make copies
- of the files AREACODE, MISUSED, HAMLET, and SAILBOAT under alternate names.
- Now you can look at one copy of the file in your word processor and another
- copy in PC-Browse.
-
- 3. Press Esc from PC-Browse to return to your word processor. Note the form
- feeds separating each PC-Browse page.
-
- Information in a PC-Browse file should be divided into "bite-sized" nuggets
- for easy digestion by users. PC-Browse can handle pages of any size, but 5
- to 20 lines, or one window full, is a good size for most application pages.
- Consider breaking up longer material into two or more pages, connected with
- hypertext links.
-
- 4. In your word processor, go to the first line of the file and scroll
- horizontally to the end (In PC-Write, press End. In WordStar, press Ctrl-Q
- D.) Note the material in brackets that begins [BR=.
-
- The text in brackets defines the file characteristics for PC-Browse. It
- looks for [BR= when it loads a file, in the first 160 characters of the
- first line. We place it out beyond character 80 in our files so that it
- doesn't show up on the screen and confuse users. The /I, /J, and /K
- parameters define the characters that delimit trigger and target keywords
- in this file.
-
- The /I part gives the first and last character of a target keyword. The
- target keyword is the text sought during a keyword search (either a linear
- search or a lookup search). The /I:60.62 says a target keyword is any text
- that begins with character 60 ( < ) and ends with character 62 ( > ). These
- characters are called Delimiters. Note the "<NJ>" on the second line of the
- file; since it's surrounded by angle brackets, "NJ" is a target in this
- file. The target delimiters can be different in each application; that's
- why there can be a [BR= line in each application file.
-
-
- The /J part gives the delimiters for a linear search-trigger keyword. Here,
- /J:2.2 says that a linear trigger is any text with a character 2 on both
- sides of it. (In PC-Write, this appears as <Alt B>; in WordStar, as "^B".)
- On the fifth line of the file, note the two cross-references, "DE" and
- "OH", surrounded by these symbols. PC-Browse does not display characters
- whose ASCII value is less than 32. Therefore they make ideal characters to
- use for delimiting keywords, since they don't interfere with the text.
-
- The /K part would give the delimiter for a lookup search-trigger keyword.
- Here, /K is undefined, since this file isn't designed for lookup searching.
-
- The various keyword delimiters highlight their keyword on screen.
- Characters less than 32 that aren't used as delimiters also highlight text
- on the screen, making them valuable for emphasizing words. You can control
- both kinds of highlighting (see Customizing). You'll see an example of this
- when we look at MISUSED.
-
- 5. Pop up PC-Browse to see how this file appears in a PC-Browse window.
-
- Skip back and forth through the file in PC-Browse and in your word
- processor to see how it looks in PC-Browse and what's really in the file.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- PC-BROWSE <INDEX PAGE>: MISUSED
-
- 1. Load the file MISUSED into your word processor. Pop up PC-Browse and load
- MISUSED there, too. In your word processor, find [BR= on the first line of
- the file.
-
- The target and trigger keyword delimiters are different here from those
- used in AREACODE. Also, neither the target nor the trigger delimiters for
- this file are visible in PC-Browse, because both are less than 32.
-
- 2. Scroll your word processor file down about 20 lines until you come to the
- page titled "ACCEPT versus EXCEPT". Pop up PC-Browse and press Ctl PgDn
- from the first page to find this page, too; then press Esc to return to the
- word processor.
-
- This page has target keyword delimiters around ACCEPT and EXCEPT at the top
- as well as general-emphasis "font" characters around the words as used in a
- sentence. The in-sentence words are neither triggers nor targets; they are
- just emphasized with the PC-Write bold font, character 2. Some monitors
- show this emphasis highlighting better than others; pop up PC-Browse
- briefly to see how it appears on yours.
-
- Don't be confused by the fact that we used character 2 as a trigger keyword
- delimiter in the file AREACODE. Each PC-Browse file can have the same
- delimiters, or every file can use different ones. You can develop a style
- and stick to it for your applications; we've mixed and matched in ours for
- demonstration purposes.
-
- 3. Return to the start of the file in both PC-Browse and your word processor.
- In PC-Browse, all of the columns line up; in PC-Write and some other word
- processors, they also line up.
-
- The trigger keywords must line up in columns to be selected in PC-Browse with
- the up and down Arrow keys as well as the Tab key. If there is an index page,
- it is normally the first page of the file, but a row-and-column index works on
- any page.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <CROSS-REFERENCES> TO OTHER FILES: HAMLET
-
- 1. Load HAMLET into your word processor. Pop up PC-Browse and load HAMLET
- there, too. In your word processor, find the [BR= in the first line.
-
- This file uses visible delimiters for target keywords (characters 60 and
- 62, the angle brackets) and hidden delimiters for the linear trigger
- keywords (characters 22 and 20).
-
-
- 2. In your word processor, look at the third paragraph. Note that the trigger
- keyword "Quarto Text" is followed by a word in brackets.
-
- The word in brackets is the name of the file that will be loaded and
- searched when the user Tabs to this trigger and presses Enter to follow the
- link.
-
- This cross-reference file name in brackets is visible in PC-Browse. Pop up
- PC-Browse to confirm this. A bracketed file name must follow the trigger
- immediately (one space between them is allowed, to keep the screen from
- looking cluttered).
-
- 3. In your word processor, scroll down about 30 lines to the middle of the
- soliloquy. Find the trigger keyword "Rub" followed by a word in braces.
-
- This is also the name of the file to load when the user Tabs to this
- trigger and presses Enter. Because the file name starts with a question
- mark, it is invisible in PC-Browse. Pop up PC-Browse to confirm this.
-
- 4. The triggers in parentheses to the right of the soliloquy may not line up
- in your word processor. Pop up PC-Browse briefly and press Shf PgDn to
- reach this part of the file; confirm that they are aligned in PC-Browse.
-
- PC-Write font characters (values 0 to 31) are not displayed in PC-Browse;
- therefore, they're ignored in counting column positions for alignment. The
- line with the "Rub" note also has a trigger in the text of the soliloquy.
- Therefore the "Rub" note may appear to the right of the "Coil" note a few
- lines below in your word processor, since there are no other triggers on
- the "Coil" line.
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
- <LOOKUP-SEARCH FILES>: SAILBOAT
-
- 1. Load the file SAILBOAT into your word processor. Pop up PC-Browse and load
- SAILBOAT there, too. In your word processor, find the "[BR=" text.
-
- This file uses a visible start-delimiter for targets (character 35, " # ")
- and hidden delimiters for the lookup triggers (characters 22 and 20). This
- time there is no linear search-trigger, only a lookup search-trigger.
-
- The end-delimiter for target keywords in this file, character 8, has a
- special meaning to PC-Browse. It indicates that a target keyword is ended
- by any character that is not a letter or a number. So in this file any
- space, end-of-line, or other non-letter-or-number after the word or number
- marks the end of the target. In this file, the ending delimiter is usually
- the end-of-line.
-
- Here, too, character 2 is used for emphasis on part names and prices.
-
- 2. Look at the second page of this file (part #1012, the shroud pin).
-
- In a lookup file, each page must contain exactly one target (1012 on this
- page). It can contain any other information you wish. The targets must also
- appear in ASCII-sort order (basically alphabetical, with numbers sorting
- ahead of letters). It is this ordering that makes lookup searching so fast
- even on huge files.
-
- Summary
-
- That's your guided tour of PC-Browse features. There are a number of features
- we haven't covered, such as more Hot Key shortcuts, search wild cards,
- printing information, and the many customization options.
-
- We started this Tutorial by asking a series of seven questions in the section
- "What does PC-Browse Do". Now we'll give the specific answers:
-
- 1. How can I find the memo on restructuring I wrote 6 months ago?
-
- Pop up PC-Browse, press F6, type "\*\*.*", and press Enter. Then press F9,
- type "restruc", and press Grey+ then F9. If it's on your disk, PC-Browse
- will find it.
-
- 2. What's Mr. Walton's address?
-
-
- Put the cursor on "Walton" in your word processor. Pop-up PC-Browse, press
- F6, and load the ADDRESS file. Press Enter or Grey+ to find the address. To
- paste in the address, press F7, move to the first line of the address,
- press F4, move to the last line, press F5, and then press F9.
-
-
- 3. What's the area code for El Paso?
-
- Pop up PC-Browse and press F6 to load the AREACODE application. Then press
- F9, type "El Paso", and press Grey+.
-
-
- 4. Is it correct to say, "What's the affect of this decision?"
-
- Put the cursor on "affect", pop up PC-Browse, press F6, and load the
- application MISUSED; then press F9, then F3. Read the text of the page PC-
- Browse displays.
-
-
- 5. What do we charge for part #9054?
-
- Load the SAILBOAT file, press F9, type "9054", and press F2 to do a lookup
- search for the part number.
-
- 6. How do I add online help to an application or product designed without it?
-
- Cannibalize a copy of the MISUSED application. Build a table of contents of
- all the terms you think users might look under; set them up as keyword
- triggers to help-text pages, as they are in MISUSED. Even if a specific
- term isn't in the table, users can search for it by typing it at the Find
- prompt and pressing Enter. You could even build a series of sub-indexes;
- certain terms in the table of contents could link to another table with
- additional choices.
-
-
- 7. Could I do that with an online procedures manual or decision tree?
-
- Adapt the sample DECISION file, "What To Do on the Weekend". This is a
- computerized decision tree for deciding what to do on a weekend in Seattle.
-
- 8. Explore PC-Browse on your own. Modify our sample files to see how they
- work. Experiment.
-
- What do you mean, there wasn't a Question 8? Life always gives you a
- Question 8 -- "Where do I go from here?"
-
- Press F10 To Go To the Table of Contents
- Press F4 to return to the previous view
-
-