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- [ THE KAY*FOG RBBS | CPM-CC08.ART | posted 01/18/86 | 214 lines 12k ]
-
- The CP/M Connection Originally published in
- by Computer Currents
- Ted Silveira 2550 9th Street
- (copyright and all rights reserved) Berkeley, CA 94710
-
-
- July 30, 1985
- WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
-
- On May 7, Computer Currents printed a letter from Richard Kervick, who
- was asking for help with his five-year-old Superbrain CP/M computer. I
- didn't think he'd have much luck, but within a few weeks, Kervick not only
- got what he needed but turned up half a dozen other Superbrain owners he'd
- never known about.
-
- Maybe I shouldn't have been surprised, but I was. (Lost Tribe
- Discovered! No Contact With Civilization Since Dark Ages!) And now I'm
- curious. If you read most magazines and newspapers, the world seems to
- have converted to IBM and Apple, but what happened to all those CP/M
- machines people used to use? Are they still chugging along as before, or
- are they propping up bookshelves?
-
- If you're using a CP/M computer that's no longer being manufactured or
- one that's four years old or older (pre-IBM PC, in other words), write and
- tell me your story. Who made your computer, how old is it, and what's its
- history? What do you do with it, and how good a job does it do? What
- trials have you faced to keep it running? What plans do you have for it in
- the future? (If you really feel like an orphan, enclose a stamped, self-
- addressed envelope, and by way of thanks, I'll try to put you in touch with
- others who have the same computer.)
-
- Now back to work . . .
-
-
- If you've been following these articles for the past few months and
- have uncovered a reliable source for public domain software, your disks
- should be starting to fill up. You may not have reached the breakdown
- stage, but perhaps you're starting to worry. "Where are those files? How
- am I ever going to keep track of this stuff?" I guarantee things will get
- worse, so here are some programs to keep track of your files.
-
-
- [CATALOG PROGRAMS]
-
- Catalog programs build you a master catalog, a list of all your files
- and disks. You'll probably get a shock the first time you run one of these
- programs--I discovered that I had 800 files (over 1000, now). But as long
- as you keep the catalog up to date, you can quickly find out what disks any
- file is on and what files are on any disk.
-
- These programs work best if you have a hard disk so that you can
- search the catalog at any time without having to swap disks. I don't have
- a hard disk, so I put my catalog program and master catalog on my utility
- disk (the catalog itself runs about 30K). That's a little inconvenient but
- not too much so.
-
- The two public domain cataloging programs--MCAT45 and YANC23--both
- work in the same basic way. Both require that you number each disk by
- putting a special file on it, one whose filename begins with a hyphen (-)
- and whose filetype is a number from 000-999 (-DISK.101 or -DBASE.237, for
- example). Both programs read the number of each disk and the directory of
- files on it, and then build a file called MAST.CAT, which lists all your
- files, in alphabetical order, together with the number of the disk each
- file is on. In MAST.CAT, a file will be listed once for each disk that
- it's on; if you have WS.COM on three different disks, WS.COM will have
- three entries in MAST.CAT.
-
- [MCAT45] (Master CATalog version 4.5), by the prolific Irv Hoff, is
- actually a set of programs. MCAT45.COM catalogs the disks, reading the
- disk number and file names and building the MAST.CAT file. After
- cataloging each disk, it gives you the option of going on to another disk
- or exiting the program.
-
- XCAT42.COM reads the MAST.CAT file and builds a cross-reference file,
- which consolidates multiple entries so that each file is only listed once,
- followed by the numbers of every disk it's on. XCAT42.COM can send this
- cross-reference file either to the printer or to a disk file, MAST.LST.
-
- With MCAT45.COM and XCAT42.COM, you'll use a third program, CAT2.COM.
- With CAT2.COM, you can quickly search MAST.CAT to find a particular file or
- the contents of a particular disk. You can use wildcards when searching
- with CAT2.COM so that the command [CAT2 M*.COM] will locate MDM740.COM,
- MEX112.COM, and MCAT45.COM, while [CAT2 *.* *.103] will show you all the
- files on disk 103.
-
- [YANC23] (Yet ANother Catalog program, version 2.3), by Paul Sittler,
- has all the functions MCAT45 does, plus a few more, combined in a single,
- menu-driven program--YANC23.COM. From its menu, you can catalog a disk,
- send any output to your printer, search for any file in the catalog (with
- wildcards), list the contents of any disk in the catalog, see the directory
- of a disk in one of your disk drives, put a number on a previously
- unnumbered disk, and create a new (empty) MAST.CAT file. After each
- function, YANC23 takes you back to the menu, and like MCAT45, it lets you
- process a whole series of disks without having to exit the program.
-
- Both of these programs work well, and they make a classic software
- confrontation--the integrated, menu-driven YANC23 versus the modular,
- command-driven MCAT45.
-
- YANC23 is easier for a novice to use because it has a menu and doesn't
- require the user to decide which of several programs to use, as MCAT45
- does. It's also more convenient in some ways, since it allows you to start
- a new catalog and label a disk without leaving the program, things MCAT45
- requires you to do separately. This last function, labeling a disk, is a
- great convenience, since I occasionally forget to label one or accidentally
- erase the label. If I try to catalog an unlabeled disk with MCAT45, it
- refuses, forcing me either to exit and label the disk or to put the disk
- aside to be labeled and cataloged later.
-
- On the other hand, MCAT45 is smaller--a total of 16K for MCAT45,
- XCAT42, and CAT2, versus 34K for YANC23. It's also noticeably faster, for
- two reasons. First, the MCAT45 programs were written in assembly language,
- so they run faster than YANC23, which was written in the C language.
- Second, once you know how to use MCAT45, you can do things more quickly
- because you don't have to go through a menu after every step.
-
- Also MCAT45 requires no installation. YANC23, however, requires an
- accompanying terminal parameter file to adapt it to your terminal type.
- YANC23 comes with parameter files that will suit many terminals, but a
- complete novice might need some help setting up a such a file for a special
- terminal.
-
- After starting with MCAT and then switching to YANC, I'm now switching
- back to MCAT45, just because it runs faster (cataloging disks is tedious)
- and takes up less space on my disk. If you opt for YANC23 instead, you can
- still use XCAT42 and CAT2--all the MCAT45 programs can read YANC23's
- MAST.CAT file, though YANC23 seems to choke on a MAST.CAT written by
- MCAT45.
-
- Usage Note: I reserve disk numbers 000-099 for back-up disks so I can
- tell from a glance at the catalog whether I've backed-up a particular file
- or not.
-
-
- [LIBRARY PROGRAMS]
-
- Library programs are not, as you might expect from the name, another
- kind of cataloging program, but they can help you keep track of your files.
- Library programs allow you to build and maintain library files, which have
- the special filetype LBR. The LBR file consists of several smaller files
- that have been grouped together so that they appear to be a single larger
- file. The library file MCAT45.LBR, for example, might contain the files
- MCAT45.COM, MCAT45.DOC, MCAT45.SET, XCAT42.COM, and XCAT42.DOC.
-
- You usually save a little space by combining files into a library, but
- your most important gain is that you can easily keep related files
- together. For example, I keep back-up copies of the source files for
- several communications programs that I use. I have no problem keeping the
- files I need for COMM725 together because they all have similar names--
- COMM725A.ASM, COMM725B.ASM, COMM725C.ASM, and COMM725D.ASM. But the files
- I need for MODEM903 all have unrelated names--MODEM903.ASM, +8251.ASM,
- CONSOLE.ASM, DEFF.ASM, FILES.ASM, FINISH,ASM, MAIN.ASM, SENDRECV.ASM,
- START.ASM, and TERM.ASM. If I had these files mixed in with others on a
- disk, I'd waste a lot of time just trying to remember which files I needed
- for MODEM903. However, since I have them grouped together in MODEM903.LBR,
- I can just copy them from the library to my work disk and get started--I
- know I have all the files I need.
-
- The disadvantage of grouping files into a library is that you can't do
- much with them once they're there. You can't edit a text file that's in a
- library, though you can view it. You can run a program that's in a
- library, but the process is awkward, requiring an extra program called
- LRUN.COM, and slow. In all, libraries work best for storing backups and
- other files you don't use very often.
-
- To build and work with LBR files, you can use either the combination
- of LU310 and LSWEEP13 or the single program NULU11. LU310 (Library Utility
- version 3.10)--by Gary Novosielski, the originator of LBR files--lets you
- create library files, extract member files from the library, and add,
- delete, or rename individual members. Its command style makes it awkward
- to use, so you'll probably want to use LSWEEP13 also.
-
- LSWEEP13 (Library SWEEP version 1.3) looks and works like NSWP and
- SWEEP, the well-known file-handling programs, except that you log into and
- "sweep" a LBR file instead of a whole disk. It's much easier to use than
- LU310 for working with LBR files, but it can't create the files as LU310
- can, so many people use the two as a set.
-
- NULU11 (NU Library Utility version 1.1), by Martin Murray, combines
- the functions of LU310 and LSWEEP13 and adds a few more, all in less space
- than LU310 alone (NULU11 = 16K, LU310 = 20K, LSWEEP13 = 16K). It's also
- easier to use and faster than either of the other two, which should make it
- an easy choice, except that rumors of bugs surface now and then, as they
- often do with new programs. I use NULU11 a lot, I love it, and I've never
- seen it do anything the least bit odd or mishandle a file in any way. The
- only reported bug that Martin Murray, the author, has been able to document
- won't affect most people and is easily avoided in any case; it's described
- in the file NULU-NUS.001.
-
- LATE NOTES: Recently, two new files, NULU12 and NSWP208, have
- appeared on the bulletin boards as updates of NULU11 and NSWP207
- respectively. Normally, I'd be the first to grab updated versions of two
- favorite programs, but now the word is that these are not updates by the
- original authors (Martin Murray and Dave Rand). I suggest you lay off
- these two for a while and stick to the old versions.
-
- Also, Eric Gans has now released WINDEX20, an update of WINDEX12, the
- WordStar indexing program I described a few issues ago. Unlike WINDEX12,
- WINDEX20 allows you to index both words and phrases by marking them in the
- text, as well as by entering them from the keyboard or from a file. That
- removes my only major criticism of this program and makes it easily the
- best of the public domain indexers.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Ted Silveira is a freelance writer and contributing editor to several
- computer-oriented publications. He appreciates suggestions or feedback
- and can be reached through the KAY*FOG RBBS (415)285-2687 and CompuServe
- (72135,1447) or by mail to 2756 Mattison Lane, Santa Cruz, CA 95065.
-
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