home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Magnum One
/
Magnum One (Mid-American Digital) (Disc Manufacturing).iso
/
d21
/
dvopen.arc
/
READ.ME
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-01-12
|
3KB
|
57 lines
When I first started using DESQview, the process of getting used
to managing multiple applications involved figuring out how to move
quickly between them. After playing around with scripts for a while, I
arrived at the conclusion that the one thing DESQview needed (but
didn't, and still doesn't have) was a way to tell it, "Open window QE,
or switch to QE if it's running". If it had that, I could put it into a
script on, say, F12, and always get to my editor in a couple of
keystrokes no matter how many applications were running. Alas, after
wasting an incredible amount of time dreaming up and trying various
convoluted ways to make this happen, I gave up, resigning myself to the
quick tap-tap Alt key round-robin, and sometimes using the Alt-window#
method, never really getting used to beeps when my editor wasn't in
window 3 because something else had beaten it there.
Years went by, and I was writing shareware for DESQview and
still living with this problem. Then, in late 1991, I got involved in a
project that demanded integration of an application I was writing with
another, stand-alone DOS application. I wanted F12 in the DOS app to
'pop-up' my new program, and ESC in the new program to go back to the
DOS app so that the overall effect would be that my program looked like
a pop-up, integrated feature of it's 'parent'. To make this work I
wrote a small program (what is now DVO.COM), and only when I was
finished did I realize that I'd created just the tool I'd needed so long
ago. A few modifications and a few hours later I had Vernon Buerg's
LIST program on F1, Semware's Q-Edit on F2, and so on, and all these
keys meaning "Open the application or switch to it, no matter what it's
window number is." It was an incredibly easy transition - instead of
resting my fingers on the number keys for the Alt-window# method, I
moved them up to the function keys. After a day with this new luxury
(no more beeps, no more doing the round-robin and flipping through three
graphics modes to end up having to resize the window I was trying to
reach...), I was wondering how I'd ever worked any other way, and if I
could gain such a quick increase in productivity with it, it certainly
wasn't something I should keep to myself!
For the 'official' version I added a few more features, mainly
access to the 'hidden' pif values that allow you to launch applications
in the background and/or hidden, and to control DESQview's not-famous-
enough built-in ability to 'tame' DOS applications that waste processor
time with excessive keyboard polling. I also decided that, instead of a
manual, I would put all the documentation on-line by building a help
system using Quarterdeck's Panel Design Tool. The entire result is this
package.
To proceed, please ensure you've received all the pieces by
reviewing the CONTENTS.LST file, then follow the installation
instructions in INSTALL.DOC, then run the Help/Tutorial (Open Keys OH as
shipped) for specific information on the ways you can use DV Open to
enhance the flexibility and performance of your DESQview system.
And by the way, thanks for trying shareware! Michael D. Weaver
CIS: 72210,2035
MCI Mail:422-7384