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- Symphony Fix 1.00 help file
- © Martin Ebourne, 1993
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- This software is COPYRIGHT, but has been released as FREEWARE. Please see the
- end of this file for conditions of use and distribution.
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- It's a well known fact that the window tools on Digital Symphony, while
- better than the normal RISC OS ones, are dire. This is a great shame because
- Symphony is an otherwise excellent program.
-
- I know one reviewer critisised this aspect heavily, and quite rightly so with
- the program exhibiting such non-RISC OS characteristics. I am amongst those
- (along with Acorn) who believe firmly that consistency is of upmost
- importance in making RISC OS look nice, feel nice and be easy to use.
-
- Anyway, it seems that Oregan think quite the opposite. When asked about the
- window tools they replied along the lines of ‘if you want it to use the WIMP
- then hack it yourself’. So that's what I did.
-
- Symphony Fix is dead easy to use; just run it before Symphony itself and when
- you open a window - as if by magic - it will suddenly have your nice
- favourite window tools. There's nothing else to it really.
-
- Points about Digital Symphony, Symphony Fix and life in general...
-
- • As far as I know, Symphony Fix works on all versions of Digital Symphony,
- and unless Oregan deliberately prevent it from working (which would be very
- stupid) it ought to work for many versions to come.
-
- • On Symphony version 1.20 (or presumably later) the volume bar on the
- control panel will not go quite to the right hand end. This is due to
- Symphony not expecting the window to have got scrolled, and is both
- extremely awkard to sort out, and very minor. Hence it can stay there.
-
- • Symphony Fix performs two operations:
- • Reset the colours of the window to be sensible (they even changed the
- scrollbar colours for the pane windows - yuck!). This is done to all
- windows, but at worse should force another one of these dodgy programs to
- use the correct colours. :-)
- • Add a real title bar and buttons. This happens to any window which has a
- title foreground colour of 255. This is very unlikely to affect any other
- program because if the title colour is set as such the WIMP does not draw
- any window furniture at all. Hence unless you are deliberately replacing
- it then such a setting is of very little use.
-
- • The scrollbar colours are still not quite right. This is done on purpose in
- order to hide the border round the window on the panes, which makes it look
- even worse than the scrollbars. Besides, this problem does not occur if you
- have re-defined your toolsprites. (Which is highly likely since even I
- would prefer the Symphony ones to the standard RISC OS ones!)
-
- • There are still no scrollbars. These would be very useful, especially for
- the big windows, but due to the fact that they nearly all have pane
- windows it is not possible without a fairly major re-write of the program
- itself. (ie. It could not sensibly be ‘hacked in’.)
-
- • And all this for the measly sum of 596 bytes! I dunno, first class bargain!
-
- • Perhaps if Oregan heard it from the people who bought (or are thinking of
- buying) Symphony that the tools were unpopular (this is definately the case
- with all the people I know), they might actually do something about it.
- After all, if they are THAT keen on these sprites, why not just provide a
- tools file which can then be *ToolSprites'd so all the windows can benefit?
- (Or even if they put an option in the Preferences window to remove them it
- would be ok. Then all those people who couldn't be bothered to upgrade to
- RISC OS 3 can still have 3d toolsprites if they are keen. [Not upgrading to
- RISC OS 3 - bad move. Not to be encouraged])
-
- • Other minor points about Digital Symphony (just in case Oregan get hold of
- this):
- • The re-sync on mode change routine is painfully slow, especially when
- changing from a normal to a multisync mode. It was well under a second on
- ProTrack, so why does it take several on Symphony? Come on guys, you've
- done it once, do it again!
- • Also Symphony seems to break up occasionally. ie. Under fairly intensive
- disk operations it doesn't seem to get its interrupts. Again, ProTrack
- managed it, so why not Symphony?
- • If they sorted these problems out (and the window tools) I'd be rather
- keen to buy Symphony, since this demo version is a real pain quitting
- when it feels like it. (Plus saving would be a bonus.) As it is, I'd be
- tempted to buy Desktop Tracker, which in all other respects is an
- inferior program. (In my opinion, of course. I don't want to be taken to
- court for libel - I can't afford it!)
-
- • I think it's about time you went and listened to your favourite tracker
- using Symphony (unless you are already doing that!) so I'll finish after
- this bit...
-
- *************
- * READ THIS *
- *************
-
- Copyright notice:
-
- This program is copyright Martin Ebourne. It is *not* Public Domain, but it
- *is* Freeware. This means that you may use it yourself, and may distribute it
- to others provided that you pass it on *as is*, with all the files with which
- it came. You may not distribute it any way which leads to you or anyone else
- making profit from it. This means that you can only charge enough to cover
- the costs of media and postage involved in distribution, and you may not use
- it as an incentive to buy something else. If in doubt, contact the author at
- the address below.
-
- The author's permission *must* be obtained before this program is included on
- any magazine disc or such like, and it would be greatly appreciated if PD
- libraries could do likewise.
-
- And don't forget - ignorance is no defense!
-
-
- Thanks for the copyright notice Tom, I knew you wouldn't mind! :-)
-
- I can be contacted at the following address:
-
- 1 Malvern Road
- Acocks Green
- Birmingham
- B27 6EG
-
- or via the net term time:
-
- mje@soton.ac.uk (until I either fail my exams [guess what I should have been
- doing when I wrote this... ;-)] or finish my course in 1995 sometime.)
-