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- .f3 - # - Appendix A - Tutorial
- .rm70
- .tc
- .tc A. TUTORIAL ...........................................#
- APPENDIX A TUTORIAL
-
-
- .irTutorial;Tutorial - see Appendix A
- By following the instructions in these lessons, you will learn how to
- use the Word Fugue word processor. Although the lessons don't cover
- every aspect of the program, they will provide you with a good working
- knowledge of Word Fugue. In this tutorial you will learn the basics
- of:
-
- o Making a working disk.
- o Creating a file.
- o Entering text.
- o Saving and exiting.
- o Loading an existing file.
- o Moving around the screen.
- o Changing text.
- o Changing margins.
- o Copying, moving, and deleting text.
- o Finding and replacing text.
- o Using Help screens and menus.
- o Printing.
-
- To get the most out of this tutorial, you should be familiar with your
- computer and with DOS. If your knowledge of these areas is sketchy,
- please read "Introduction to Computers and DOS" in the User's Guide
- that came with your computer.
-
- If you wish to obtain detailed knowledge of all Word Fugue commands,
- you should register. This entitles you to updated versions of Word
- Fugue, and the Word Fugue Users Guide. The Word Fugue User's Guide
- gives detailed explanations of all Word Fugue commands. Refer to it if
- you need more information. As you become an advanced Word Fugue user,
- you'll discover powerful word processing techniques not covered in
- this tutorial.
-
- The instructions in this tutorial are for a computer with two disk
- drives. If your computer has only one disk drive, just change disks
- when your computer tells you to. If you have a hard disk, you can do
- this tutorial with your floppy disk drive. If you want to (use "C:"
- and a subdirectory name instead of "B:", for example). Now you're
- ready to start. If you haven't done so already, boot your computer
- with DOS. Place your DOS disk in drive A (the left or top disk drive)
- and turn on the computer. Enter the date and time if you are asked to.
- When the computer is ready, a DOS prompt will appear on the screen.
- The DOS prompt looks like this:
-
- A>
-
- Note: The DOS prompt may look like C> if you have a hard disk system.
- At the DOS prompt, you can type DOS commands (you'll learn some
- of these in the lessons) and the commands to start the Word
- Fugue edit program and print program. The notation <Enter> means
- that you should press the Enter key (also called the Return key)
- after you type the command. You can type DOS or Word Fugue
- commands in upper or lower case, or a mixture; it makes no
- difference. If you are asked to type text that is shown in quote
- marks, type the text but not the quote marks.
-
- The Esc key is the universal cancel key; use it cancel Word
- Fugue commands, and to back out of menus. To cancel generation of
- indexes or tables of contents you can also press the control key
- and the U key at the same time
-
- PCjr Users: The keyboard of the IBM PC contains certain keys that the
- PCjr keyboard doesn't. For a function key like F1, press the
- PCjr Fn key with the "1" key. For other keys, the PCjr command
- is contained in parentheses with the notation PCjr:.
-
- Lesson 1: Making a Working disk
- .tc Lesson 1: Making a Working disk ....................#
-
- Never work from the original disks that the program comes on. You
- should always back up these disks, and work from the backup disks. The
- originals should be put away in a safe place.
-
- To make your copies, you will require 3 blank, formatted floppies.
- Place the first Word Fugue disk into drive A, a blank disk into Drive
- B, and type
-
- COPY A: B:
-
- When the dos prompt returns, remove those disks, place the second Word
- Fugue disk in drive A, another blank disk in drive B, and type the
- copy statement again. Do this a third time for the third disk. Please
- label your copies so you know which disk is which.
-
- Now you can create a working disk to use for everyday editing and
- printing.
-
- Floppy Disk Users
- .tc Floppy Disk Users ...............................#
-
- High Density Floppies
-
- If you have a high density 3" or 5" drive, your floppy disk will hold
- either 1.4 Meg or 1.2 Meg, and all files will fit on one disk. Simply
- use the Dos COPY command to copy all files from the Word Fugue
- distribution disks onto a single high density floppy.
-
- Updating the Dictionary will require a second disk containing a copy
- of the dictionary, since the update program creates a new copy of the
- dictionary, renaming the old one to WF_MAIN.BAK
-
- 720K 3" Floppies
-
- This type of disk will fit most of the information on one disk.
- Everything you need for day to day use will fit. What you need is:
-
- WF.EXE
- WF.OVR
- WF.HLP
- WF.RLR
- *.MAC
- your choice of .PDF files
- WF_MAIN.LEX
-
- Installation of key strokes will need another (working) disk
- containing:
-
- WF.EXE
- WFINST.EXE
- WF.TXT
-
- Be sure to copy the updated WF.EXE and WF.HLP files to your main disk.
-
- Updating the Dictionary will require a second disk containing a copy
- of the dictionary, since the update program creates a new copy of the
- dictionary, renaming the old one to WF_MAIN.BAK
-
- 360K Floppies
-
- Word Fugue comes on three floppy disks. There is not enough room on
- the program disk for the help file. You can run using the disks as
- supplied, but you will not be able to use the online Help facility nor
- the Spelling checker. If you want to use these facilities, you will
- need to give some thought to the organisation of files.
-
- Note that if you wish to use Word Fugue's ability to save changes to
- default conditions (eg margins, screen colours etc) you will need to
- have the disk containing WF.EXE present
-
- StartUp disk
-
- This should contain
- WF.OVR
- WF.HLP
- WF.RLR
- *.MAC
- your choice of PDF files
-
- You will need a second drive containing WF.EXE (eg your B
- drive), while the startup disk is in drive A. Drive A should
- be the default drive (ie the dos prompt should show A:>) and
- you would start Word Fugue by entering
-
- B:WF
-
- Once Word Fugue has started, you do not need the disk with the
- WF.EXE file in drive B, and can replace it with your data
- disk. However, THE DISK IN DRIVE A SHOULD ONLY BE SWAPPED FOR
- THE DICTIONARY DISK (see below) WHEN YOU ARE CHECKING
- SPELLING, AND SHOULD BE REPLACED AS SOON AS SPELL CHECKING HAS
- FINISHED. You will not be able to obtain online help while
- checking spelling, because the help file will not be
- available.
-
- Dictionary Disk
-
- This should contain WF_MAIN.LEX. This file will almost fill up
- the disk. When you want to do spell checking, you would remove
- the data disk and replace it with the dictionary disk. As soon
- as spell checking has finished, you would remove the
- dictionary disk and replace it with the data disk.
-
- .CP5
- RAM DISK
-
- If you have a 640K machine, you could load a Ram disk when you
- turn on your computer, and copy the WF.OVR and WF.HLP files to
- that drive. (Typically E: It must be in your PATH statement) Refer
- to your Dos manual for information on setting up a ram disk. You
- will need approximately 200K set aside for these files.
-
- With these files loaded into a RAM disk, you can put the disk
- containing WF.EXE in drive A, and then replace it with the
- dictionary disk as soon as Word Fugue has started. The dictionary
- disk should contain
-
- WF_MAIN.DIC
- *.MAC
- your choice of PDF file
-
- If you have only one 360K drive, you will need to use a Ram disk to
- take advantage of Word Fugue's features.
-
- HARD DISK USERS
- .tc Hard Disk Users .................................#
-
- 1. Choose a directory to be your Word Fugue working directory.
-
- MD C:\dirname
- CD C:\dirname
-
- 2. Put the Word Fugue backup program disk in drive A. At the
- DOS prompt, type:
-
- COPY A:*.* C:
-
- 3. Put the word Fugue backup utilities disk into drive A. At the DOS
- prompt, type:
-
- COPY A:*.* C:
-
- 4. Put the word Fugue backup dictionary disk into drive A. At the DOS
- prompt, type:
-
- COPY A:*.* C:
-
- 5. Change your path statement so that the Word Fugue directory is
- included.
-
-
- You now have a Word Fugue working disk and are ready to continue the
- tutorial. If you had any difficulty copying the files, try the steps
- again.
-
- Make sure that you spell everything correctly, and that you leave
- spaces where indicated and don't add any extra spaces.
-
- Configuring Word Fugue for your machine
- .tc Configuring Word Fugue for your machine .........#
-
- Word Fugue comes configured for colour, and direct screen writes for
- IBM PCs and clones. If you wish, you can configure it to run in B/W or
- even to run on a Generic MSDOS machine.
-
- 1. Generic MSdos: at the DOS prompt, type:{.Œ}
-
- WF /G{.Œ}
-
- Please ensure that you type a capital G, not lower case g. This will
- cause Word Fugue to use MS Dos Bios calls to write to the screen.
- This is not as fast as direct screen writes, but ensures that Word
- Fugue will run on any MSDos machine. This option is active only for
- this one time, unless you save Word Fugue's settings. See below for
- this.
-
- 2. Colour or Black and white.
-
- Word Fugue automatically senses whether your computer is in Black
- and White mode or Colour mode, and will work in colours or black and
- white depending on what it finds. However, some older, non standard
- monitor cards can look like colour when they are not, or you may have
- a black and white monitor attached to a colour CGA card.
-
- You can cause Word fugue to always come up in black and white by
- entering
-
- WF /B
-
- at the Dos prompt. Please ensure that you type a capital B and not
- lower case b.
-
- 3. Vertical retrace.
-
- When Word Fugue writes directly to the screen, you may find that the
- screen sparkles and flickers, especially if you have an old IBM.
- This is nothing to worry about. It means that Word Fugue is trying
- to use the screen memory at the same time as the screen hardware is
- trying to. You can cure this by activating the Pull Down Menu (F10),
- typing in O for option, and then D for Display options. You should
- see a list of options, among them Snow control Off. Type in S and
- you should see Snow control On. Press ESC to return to the options
- menu, followed by S for save settings and continue with your edit
- session. You must make sure that you have a the file WF.EXE
- available, or you will not be able to save your settings
-
- Lesson 2: Creating a File
- .tc Lesson 2: Creating a File ..........................#
-
- Now, let's create a file called WRITING.TXT on the disk in the B drive.
-
- 1. Place your Word Fugue working disk in the A drive and a formatted
- disk in the B drive. If you have a hard disk, then all this should
- take place on the hard disk (normally C:) so you would substitute
- the hard disk identifier for B: in these instructions.{.Œ}
-
- 2. Make sure that a file called WRITING.TXT doesn't already exist. At the
- DOS prompt, type: DIR B:WRITING.TXT <Enter>
- If there is a directory entry for a file called WRITING.TXT on the
- disk, substitute another name, like TALE, for WRITING.TXT in this
- tutorial.
-
- .CP5
- 3. Now type:
- WF B:WRITING.TXT <Enter>
-
- WF is the name of the Word Fugue edit program. B: is the drive
- specification. This tells the edit program to create the new file on
- the disk in the B drive. Now the disk drives whirr and click, and the
- initial Word Fugue screen appears. This screen welcomes you to Word
- Fugue.
-
- As this screen comes up, Word Fugue checks to see if the file
- WRITING.TXT exists on the disk in the B drive. Since this is a new
- file, the edit area of the screen will be blank.
-
- If you accidentally typed WRITIN.TXT instead of WRITING.TXT, then when
- the edit screen comes up, you would press either F3 (function key 3)
- or <Ctrl> K D. Word Fugue will prompt you for the name of the file you
- wish to edit.
-
- The Top Line gives information about the program's activities,
- displays messages, and prompts you for information. Pay attention to
- this line as you edit. The second line indicates the name of the file,
- line and column numbers of the cursor, page number, and certain status
- indicators. It should display WRITING.TXT. Further over, you will see
- Line 1:1 which indicates the cursor is on line one of the file, at
- column one. You should also see Ins for insert mode on and Wrap for
- word wrap. These will be discussed further in later lessons.
-
- Lesson 3: Entering Text
- .tc Lesson 3: Entering Text ............................#
-
- In this lesson, you'll be asked to type some text. If you are familiar
- with word processing, you may not want to do this.
-
- Now the fun starts. Enter text just as you do on a typewriter. Use the
- Shift keys to capitalise letters. Press the Caps Lock key to type all
- capital letters (notice that only the alphabetic keys are affected).
- If you use a Shift key when Caps Lock is on, you get lower case.
- Follow the steps in this lesson to see how easy entering text can be.
-
- 1. The cursor (a blinking block that tells you where editing will take
- place) is at the top of the screen. Type this sentence, just as you
- would on a typewriter:
-
- 'Twas brillig, and the slythy toves did gyre and gymbol in the wabe.
-
- 2. Press the Enter key. The cursor will go to the beginning of the
- next line.
-
- Press the Enter key a second time to insert a blank line. Don't
- worry if you make any spelling mistakes, you will go back and
- correct them later.
-
- The Word Fugue program lets you enter lines of text this way (one
- line at a time, pressing the Enter key after each line), but it
- also lets you enter text in a simpler fashion, using two features
- called word-wrap and reformatting. Both let you keep on typing
- without pressing Enter at the end of each line. The program moves
- the words around to the next line, keeping them between the left
- and right margins. When you are editing text, press <Ctrl> B to
- reformat a paragraph you are editing. (This is also shown as ^B).
- Look at the Status Line. It may say Wrap. This means that word-wrap
- is on. If it does not, then press <Ctrl> O W, (^OW) to set word-wrap
- on.
-
-
- 3. Press the Enter key twice to start a new paragraph.
-
-
- 4. Type the following paragraphs using word wrap. Press the Enter key
- twice at the end of each paragraph. You'll use this story in the
- lessons that follow:
-
- Beware the Jabberwock, my son, the claws that bite, the jaws that
- catch, beware the JubJub bird, and shun the frumious bandersnatch.
-
- He took his Vorpal sword in hand, long time the manxome foe he
- sought. Then rested he by the tumtum tree, and stood a while in
- thought.
-
- And as in uffish thought he stood, the Jabberwock with eyes of
- flame came wiffling through the tulgy wood, and burbled as it
- came.
-
- One two. One Two. And through and though. His vorpal sword went
- snicker snack. He left it dead, and with its head, he went
- galumphing back.
-
- If you hold a key down, the character will repeat until you release
- it. This is handy for drawing lines of dots, hyphens, or periods.
-
- 4. Press the period and hold it down to make make a row of dots. Then
- press the Enter key twice.
-
- Lesson 4: Saving and Exiting
- .tc Lesson 4: Saving and Exiting .......................#
-
- All your work up to this point is stored only in the computer's
- memory. None has been copied to the disk. If you shut off your
- computer, all of it will be gone for good. To use the text another
- time, you need to save it on the disk.
-
- Word Fugue lets you save the text and continue editing, or save and
- then exit the edit program returning to DOS. The saved version
- replaces the older version when you edit an existing file. You should
- save the text frequently while you edit. Then, if you accidentally
- kick the computer plug out of the wall, you won't lose too much work.
- Let's learn how to save the text to the disk.
-
- 1. Press F10. The Pulldown Menu appears on the Top Line:
-
- File Edit Window Block Search Goto Options Miscellaneous Quit Help
-
- with File highlighted
-
- .CP5
- 2. Press F, the file menu option. Another menu appears, showing among
- other commands New Quit Save. Press S for the Save option. As the
- edit program saves the file, the top line will show "Working". You
- could have achieved the same by pressing <Ctrl> and K at the same
- time, followed by S. When the file is saved, you are returned to
- edit mode, and may continue editing.
-
- If you had finished editing, you would type <Ctrl> K D , or by
- pressing function key 3 (F3), or from the Pulldown menu F(ile),
- D(one). When Word Fugue is done saving the file, it will ask "Name of
- File to edit?" and shows you the name of the file you just saved .
-
- You can change this to a new file, or press ESC if you do not wish to
- edit any file. In this case the menu will appear. You could select
- Quit to finish.
-
- Now let's see how to exit the edit program and return to DOS.
-
- 3. First press F10 to get the PullDown Menu.
-
- Then press F for file, and then press Q to Quit. Had you been editing,
- WF would have asked you Save Changes Y/N? If you had entered Y, WF
- would have saved the file automatically. The DOS prompt will appear;
- you're out of the program. You could have achieved the same effect by:
-
- (i) pressing <Ctrl> K X{.Œ}
- or (ii) pressing F10
-
- You don't have to save a file before you exit the program. If you make
- a mistake and don't want to save it, press the F10 key, then the Q key
- twice (for Quit). When Word Fugue prompts you to Save Changes Y/N?
- just type in N for no. (Note, that if you have not made any changes to
- the text since the last time you saved it, you will not be asked if
- you want to save. Word Fugue knows that the text is saved, and simple
- finishes) This takes you back to the last saved it. You could achieve
- the same results by pressing <Ctrl> K Q
-
- Lesson 5: Loading an Existing File
- .tc Lesson 5: Loading an Existing File .................#
-
- Now let's see how to load an existing file.
-
- 1. At the DOS prompt, type:{.Œ}
- WF B:Writing.txt <Enter>
-
- Word Fugue checks for the file Writing.txt on the disk in the B
- drive. When it finds it, the Top line says:
-
- Reading
-
- When the program is done reading the file from the disk into your
- computer's memory, the edit screen comes up and the status line
- displays
-
- WRITING.TXT
-
- .CP10
- Lesson 6: Moving Around the Screen
- .tc Lesson 6: Moving Around the Screen .................#
-
- In this lesson, you'll learn how to move the cursor around on the
- screen and to move to different parts of your text file.
-
- On the far right side of the keyboard are four keys called the Arrow
- keys. The Up and Down Arrow keys move the cursor up and down one line
- at a time. The Left and Right Arrow keys move it left and right one
- space at a time. If you hold down an Arrow key, it repeats.
-
- 1. Experiment with the Arrow keys. Hold down the Down Arrow. The
- cursor moves down. Now move it up again with the Up Arrow. Do the
- same with the Right and Left Arrow keys.
-
- The other keys in this lesson are also on the right side of the
- keyboard. Home (PCjr: Fn Home) moves the cursor to the left margin.
- The End key (PCjr: Fn End) moves the cursor to the end of the line
- just after the last character or blank on the line.
-
- 2. Move the cursor to the last line of the second paragraph. Press the
- Home key and watch it move to the left margin. Now press the End
- key. Press the space bar 3 times, then the Home key, then End
- again. Watch where the cursor ends up.
-
- The PgUp and PgDn (PCjr: Fn PgUp and Fn PgDn) keys scroll the text
- down or up by one screen of text (20 lines).
-
- 3. Press the PgDn key and watch the text go up. Press PgUp and watch
- it go down. Hold them to repeat.
-
-
- Lesson 7: More About Entering Text
- .tc Lesson 7: More About Entering Text .................#
-
- The Word Fugue program has two "modes" for entering text. A mode is
- the way the computer responds to certain keystrokes. The two modes are
- Insert mode and Overwrite mode.
-
- When you start editing a file, the edit program is in Insert mode.
- This means that as you type new text, existing text to the right of
- the cursor is pushed to the right. The status line will say Ins if
- Word Fugue is in Insert mode. Otherwise it will show Ovr for overwrite
- mode. Press the INS key several times, and watch the Ins and Ovr
- appear and disappear. Every time Ovr appears, you are in Overwrite
- mode. Check that Ins shows at the top of the screen.
-
- 1. Place the cursor at the beginning of "Jabberwock" in the second
- paragraph. Press the space bar a few times. Watch "Jabberwock" move
- to the right. In Insert mode the space bar moves text to the right.
-
- 2. Now move the cursor to the first letter of the word "JubJub". Type
- "black" and press the space bar. As you type, the characters on the
- right are pushed over to make room.
-
- In Overwrite mode, you replace old text as you enter new text, writing
- over what is already there. To go from Insert to Overwrite mode,
- press the Ins key. Press it again to change back.
-
- .CP5
- 3. Move the cursor to the first letter of the word "vorpal". Press the
- INS key and ensure that the letters Ovr show in the status line.
- Type "trusty" and watch the letters write over the old characters.
- You are in Overwrite mode. Press the space bar 3 or 4 times. In
- Overwrite mode, spaces write over existing text.
-
- 4. If you press Shift and Function key 1, you will see the pulldown
- menu appear. Press G for Goto, and you will see a list of options
- available, including Top of file, Bottom of file, Line, Column, and
- so on. You can select an option by moving the arrow keys to
- highlight a word, and pressing return, or by typing in the capital
- letter that you see in each word. Try going to different places in
- the text by using different options, and see what happens.
-
-
- Lesson 8: Changing Text
- .tc Lesson 8: Changing Text ............................#
-
- There are basically two ways to change text:{.Œ}
-
- 1) add new text,{.Œ}
- 2) delete existing text.{.Œ}
-
- In Lesson 7, you learned how to add new text in Insert and Overwrite
- modes.
-
- Word Fugue gives you a number of ways to delete text. Press the Bksp
- (Backspace) key to delete the character to the left of the cursor.
- Press the Del (Delete) key to delete the character at the cursor.
-
- The Bksp Key
-
- The Bksp key is located above the Enter key. It may have a left arrow
- on it, but it is not the same as the Left Arrow key. If you mistype a
- character, press Bksp to delete it. The cursor moves back so you can
- type the correct character. Bksp moves the cursor just as the Left
- Arrow key moves it, but it also deletes the character to the left.
-
- Bksp also pulls the rest of the line to the left. The space bar pushes
- to the right in Insert mode, or overwrites and moves the cursor to the
- right in Overwrite mode, so Bksp and the space bar are complementary.
-
- 1. Move the cursor to the third paragraph of the Writing.txt. Make
- sure you are in Insert mode (see the previous lesson), then place
- the cursor on the period after the word "thought". Press the Bksp
- key 7 times until the whole word is gone.
-
- The Line Boundary
-
- Word Fugue places a line boundary character at the end of every line.
- This is an "invisible" character, like a space. Just as the A key
- inserts a letter "A", the Enter key inserts a line boundary. What
- happens if the cursor is at the start of a line and you press Bksp?
- You go to the end of the previous line, but you also delete the line
- boundary.
-
- .CP8
- 2. You may see several different characters in the right most position
- of lines. These each indicate different things.
-
- o The dot symbol indicates that the line has never been used. The
- only way of moving onto such lines is to use the Enter key.
-
- o The right double arrow Ø indicates that the line continues to
- the right of the screen. This happens if you enter text with
- Word Wrap off, and forget to move to a new line. If you move to
- the end of such a line, you will see similar markers Æ at the
- start of each line, indicating that the lines continue to the
- left of the screen.
-
- o The symbol Pt¯ indicates that this line will be at the top of a
- new page
-
-
- 3. Move the cursor up one line by pressing the Up Arrow key, then to
- the beginning of the line by pressing Home. Make sure you are in
- Insert mode. Press the Bksp key to delete the line boundary. Now
- press the Enter key to split the line again.
-
- The Del Key
-
- The other key that deletes one character at a time is the Del key.
- Its located in the bottom right corner of the keyboard. It deletes a
- character, but it doesn't move the cursor. It pulls the rest of the
- line from the right.
-
- 4. Move the cursor to the beginning of the word "uffish" in the fourth
- paragraph. Press the Del key 6 times to delete "uffish,". Compare
- this to the Bksp key.
-
- 5. An easy way to replace a longer word with a shorter one is to use
- Overwrite mode and Del together. Move the cursor back to the second
- paragraph. Switch to Overwrite mode by pressing Insert. Move
- the cursor to the first letter of the word "manxome" and type
- "bad". Now press the Del key 4 times to close up the gap. Press
- the Insert key to return to Insert mode.
-
-
- Lesson 9: More Ways to Change Text
- .tc Lesson 9: More Ways to Change Text .................#
-
- There are three more simple ways to delete text. Ctrl Bksp deletes the
- text on a line from the cursor to the end of the line. If the cursor
- is at the start of the line, Ctrl Bksp deletes the whole line. Ctrl T
- deletes one word at the cursor. Alt F1 deletes the word to the left of
- the cursor.
-
- 1. Place the cursor at the beginning of the word "foe" in the third
- paragraph. Press the Ctrl key and hold it while you press T. Watch
- the word disappear. Word Fugue considers the spaces after a word to
- be part of the word.
-
- 2. Place the cursor at the beginning of a line, and press Ctrl Bksp
- and watch the whole line disappear.
-
- .CP5
- 3. Move back up to the last paragraph. Place the cursor at the end of
- the last line and press Alt F1. Watch the word to the left of the
- cursor disappear.
-
- 4. If you wish to delete an entire line, press Ctrl Y. Watch the
- whole line disappear, and the lines below move up
-
- There are a few other ways to delete text; these are described in the
- Help screens and in the Word Fugue User's Guide.
-
- Undeleting
-
- When you delete text with Ctrl Y (delete line), Ctrl T (delete word),
- Del or Backspace (delete character), the text is moved to a part of
- the computer's memory called the Undo Stack. It stays in the Undo
- Stack until you put something else there or exit the file. There is
- normally room for 200 lines in the undo stack (unless you change
- this.) As you delete the lines, they are added to the top of the
- stack. If you press undo, (the Alt key and the Y key together), then a
- line is removed from the top of the stack and placed in the text where
- the cursor is. You can change the limit by using the pulldown option
- menu. Try this now - press F10 to activate the menu, followed by O for
- option, L for Load file options and U for undo limit. You will be
- prompted for a new limit. Press ESC 3 times to return to the editing
- screen.
-
- Note that unless you save the defaults (Save defaults on the options
- menu), your changes to the undo limit will be only be remembered while
- Word Fugue is running, and will be forgotten once you finish.
-
- 5. Move the cursor to a line. Press Ctrl Y to delete the line. Now press
- Alt Y and watch it reappear.
-
- As long as you don't place anything else in the Undo Stack or exit the
- edit program, you can move the cursor and undelete anywhere in the
- file. This is one way of moving a block of text. In Lesson 11 you'll
- learn another method. Characters deleted with Del or Bksp are also
- saved in the Undo Stack. If you delete a character, it occupies a
- single "line" in the undo stack, the same as when you delete a word
- with Ctrl T or a whole line with Ctrl Y. So if you delete a number of
- single characters they will very soon fill up the stack. When the
- stack is full, as more is pushed on the top, the ones at the bottom
- drop off. So if you delete 200 lines, they will be held in the undo
- stack, but when you delete line 201, it goes onto the top, while line
- number 1 drops off the bottom, leaving line 2 at the bottom.
-
- 6. Move the cursor to the beginning of the same line. Press Ctrl Y to
- delete the whole line. Now move the cursor a few lines down and
- press Alt Y. Watch the line reappear. {.Œ}
- {.Œ}
- 7. Now try deleting text by pressing Ctrl Y to delete lines, Ctrl T to
- delete individual words, as well as Backspace and Del to delete
- individual characters. Mix these up, and then move the cursor to an
- empty line and press ALT Y. Watch as the text reappears. Keep
- pressing Alt Y until all the deleted text reappears.
-
- .CP5
- The Ins Key
-
- What if you're in Overwrite mode and want to replace a short word with
- a longer one? You need to use the Ins key. It places you in insert
- mode. Press Ctrl T to delete the short word, and then press Ins to
- place the program into insert mode. Type in the new word.
-
- After a while you may pick some keys that you like for editing.
- Perhaps you will stay in Insert mode and mostly use the Bksp key.
- Maybe you'll stay in Overwrite mode and use Bksp with Ins and Del.
- Perhaps you'll use both methods.
-
-
- .cp6
- Lesson 10: Changing Margins
- .tc Lesson 10: Changing Margins ........................#
-
- In the last few lessons you made several changes to the WRITING.TXT
- file. Automatic reformatting has kept the text between the left and
- right margins. You can change the location of the margins by pressing
- Ctrl O L key for the left margin, and Ctrl O R for the right margin.
- Alternatively, you can use the pull down menu, Options menu, M for
- Margins sub menu and type L for left margin change, or R for right
- margin change. From the Options menu, pressing R allows you to control
- tab settings.
-
- Change the right margin to 45, and the left margin to 5, and type in
- some text. (Ctrl O L 5 and Ctrl O R 45). Watch how each line starts 5
- characters in from the left edge, and also how the text wraps around
- so that it will not go over the right margin. (This only works if Word
- Wrap is on. Check to see that Wrap appears on the status line. If you
- do not see it, press CTRL and O at the same time, followed by W.
-
- Word Wrapping
- .tc Word Wrapping ...................................#
-
- When you reformat a paragraph with Ctrl B, you arrange the text between
- the margins. As you enter new text, Word Fugue moves it to the next
- line when you reach the right margin unless you have word-wrap off.
-
- 1. Press Ctrl O W to turn word-wrap off. The Top Line now has a space
- instead of Wrap. Press the Enter key twice then type a long line of
- text. It does not wrap around; it keeps going off the screen.
-
- 2. Press Ctrl O W again. The Top Line says Wrap. Now word-wrap is on.
- Place the cursor in the middle of the line you just typed and type
- some new text. Notice that the text does not word-wrap even though
- word-wrap is on. Word-wrap does not reformat existing text when you
- edit it, only new text. Move the cursor to the beginning of the
- line and press the Ctrl B key. The line falls between the left and
- right margins. Move the cursor to the end of the line with the End
- key and type some new text. The text is formatted correctly as you
- type because word-wrap is on.
-
- 3. However, you can select automatic reformatting of text as you type.
- First turn word wrap off, and type in a long line of text (one that
- passes beyond the margins). Now place the cursor in the middle of
- the text and press Alt P. You should see Para displayed on the
- status line, and the long line will be reformatted to fit within
- the margins.
-
- Make sure that Insert mode is on, and type some text into the
- middle of the line. Note how the lines of text are reformatted as
- you type. Delete some text and you will see the lines below flow up
- to fit with the current line.
-
- 4. Press Alt P again and Para changes to Wrap. Some people like their
- text to reformat as they type, while others prefer to reformat text
- themselves. You will probably find that sometimes you prefer to
- have automatic reformatting on and other times just ordinary word
- wrap. Automatic reformatting can also be selected from the pull
- down menu - select Options, then Format options, and select auto
- reFormat (the F is highlighted - this selects auto reformat).
- Selecting it again toggles between Off and On.
-
- When you reformat a paragraph, Word Fugue treats all lines of text as
- part of the same paragraph until it encounters a blank line. It treats
- this line as the end of the paragraph, and will reformat all text
- between the cursor and the blank line. This makes paragraphs obvious
- to the eye - all lines that appear to be part of a paragraph, because
- there is no blank line, will be treated as one paragraph.{.Œ}
- {.Œ}
- If you absolutely must have paragraphs without any blank lines between
- them, you can use the pull down menu to get to the format Options sub
- menu of the Options menu, and then change the setting of the "Enter
- gives Paragraph" to ON. From now on, each time you press the Enter key
- a paragraph mark will appear in the text. Paragraph reformatting will
- stop when it hits the Paragraph mark. {.Œ}
- {.Œ}
- When Font Display is ON, paragraph marks will display as Ù. When font
- display is off, paragraph marks will display as a print function {.Œ}
- instead.
- .. This selects PC-850 on laser which shows as {.Œ} instead
-
-
- Justification of Right Margin
- .tc Justification of Right Margin ...................#
-
- Ordinary word wrap moves words to the next line when they will not fit
- on the current line. However, the ends of lines do not line up with
- the right margin - they are known as ragged right margin. This is the
- default. However, you can select Justified Right margin, which means
- that lines will be padded with spaces between words so that the ends
- of the lines all line up with the right hand margin.
-
- 5. Select justification from the pull down menu - Options, Format
- options, J for Justify, or press Ctrl O J. You will see Just appear
- after the wrap in the status line. Put the cursor on the first line
- of a paragraph, and press ctrl B to reformat the paragraph.
- Note how extra spaces are inserted between some of the words so
- that each line ends in the same column. If you have "Visible
- Padding" set to ON (F10 O D V), then these extra spaces will
- display as {.|˙} instead of spaces.
-
- 6. Turn justification off (press ctrl O J again), go to the start of
- the paragraph, and press ctrl B again. Notice that nothing changes.
- This is because the default word wrap does not remove the extra
- spaces that justification put in. However, this can be easily
- fixed. You simply tell Word Fugue that you want it to remove extra
- spaces between words when it wraps text.
-
- 7. From the pull down menu, select Options, then Format, and select
- "Squash line on wrap". It will change from Off to On. Now go back
- to the first line of the paragraph and press ctrl B and see the
- paragraph change. The extra spaces will be removed.
-
- Temporary Left Margin
- .tc Temporary Left Margin ...........................#
-
- Pressing function key 4 (F4) will set a temporary left margin at the
- column the cursor is in. Subsequent lines that wrap will wrap to the
- column. You will see a little triangle mark appear in the ruler line
- (the line below the status line) to indicate where the temporary left
- margin is located. Temporary left margins only remain while the cursor
- is within the paragraph that it was set from. Moving the cursor
- outside this paragraph (ie up or down to a blank line) will clear the
- temporary margin, as will pressing the enter key, or manually
- reformatting the paragraph (via ctrl B).
-
- 8. Press F4, and type in some text, enough to cause the lines to wrap.
- Then reformat the paragraph. Notice that the first line does not
- conform to the temporary margin, but the others do. Set the
- temporary left margin again and move the cursor around using the
- arrow keys. Notice what happens when you move outside the
- paragraph.
-
- Lesson 11: Copying, Moving, and Deleting Text
- .tc Lesson 11: Copying, Moving, and Deleting Text ......#
-
- In this lesson, you'll learn to move, copy, and delete blocks of text.
- A block can be any amount of text that's all together in one place. To
- copy a block of text from one spot in a file to another:
-
- 1. Place the cursor at the beginning of the fourth paragraph of the
- story. Press CTRL-K B and then the Down Arrow key three times.
- Press CTRL-K K. The text is highlighted. This is called a marked
- block. You can also use the Pulldown menu with Block Begin and
- Block End. Make sure that your cursor is on the line you wish to
- mark, and at the character you wish to include.
-
- 2. Move the cursor to the line that you want the text copied after.
- Press CTRL-K C (or from the pulldown Block Copy) You have copied
- the paragraph to the new location. Notice that the original stays
- marked. Press CTRL-K H to clear the marking.
-
- To move a block of text from one place to another:
-
- 3. Place the cursor at the beginning of the block you wish to move,
- and mark the block as before. Then move the cursor to the line that
- you want the block to appear after, and press CTRL-K V (or from the
- Pulldown Menu select Block and then Move).
-
- To delete a block of text:
-
- 4. Place the cursor at the beginning of the block you wish to move,
- and mark the block as before. Then press CTRL-K Y (or from the
- Pulldown menu select Block and then Delete).
-
- The text is not yet gone for good. It's in the Undo Stack. If you
- delete a block of text by mistake, you can bring it back again by
- pressing Alt Y once for each line that you deleted. They will appear
- where the cursor is situated. This only works until you empty the Undo
- Stack, since it only holds the last 200 lines that you deleted.
- (Unless you changed this using the Options part of the Pull Down
- Menu).
-
- Lesson 12: Finding and Replacing
- .tc Lesson 12: Finding and Replacing ...................#
-
- Another tool you'll find valuable is finding and replacing text. This
- feature lets you search for a piece of text and, if you want, replace
- it with other text. Before you can search, you have to tell Word Fugue
- what to search for. If you plan to replace it, you have to tell Word
- Fugue that too.
-
- .CP8
- To search for "and" in the text:
-
- 1. First, you must tell Word Fugue that you wish to search for text.
- You can do this in any of 3 ways.
-
- (i) Press function key F5{.Œ}
- or (ii) Activate the pull down menu. Press S for Search,{.Œ}
- followed by F for Find{.Œ}
- or (iii) Press CTRL Q F (this is a WordStar command){.Œ}
-
- 2. A box will appear on the screen with the word "Search For"{.Œ}
- Type in the letters and and press return.{.Œ}
-
- 3. The prompt will change to "Options (UBGWL)"
-
- The options available are:
-
- U Upper case - treat the string to search for and the file
- as if they are all in upper case. Thus and will match
- and AND anD AnD aNd . If you do not enter this
- option then the case of the letters will be important.
- This means that and will only match and
-
- B Backward - This tells Word Fugue to search backwards from the
- cursor position. If you do not specify this, then Word Fugue
- will search forward.
-
- W Word only - This tells Word Fugue to search for whole words
- only, and not to match bits of words
- Thus and will match and only.
- If you do not specify this, and will match with
- and band sand andalusium and so on.
-
- L Local to the marked block. If this is not specified, the
- search will start with the cursor and continue through the
- entire file until the text is found.
-
- G Global - Start at the beginning of the file or the end of the
- file, instead of the cursor position. If you also specified B,
- then the search will start at the end of the file, and work
- backwards, otherwise it will start at the beginning and work
- forward.
-
- n This is a decimal number. Word fugue will look for the nth
- occurrence of the search string.
-
- Press enter when you have entered the options, and Word Fugue will
- search for the letters and.
-
- The cursor stops on the first occurrence of "and".{.Œ}
- Press CTRL L to find the next occurrence. Keep pressing CTRL L.
- When Word Fugue stops finding "and", the Top Line says: {.Œ}
- Not found - Press ESC
-
- .CP5
- To search and replace:
-
- 1. First, you must tell Word Fugue that you wish to replace text. You
- can do this in any of 3 ways.
-
- (i) Press function key F6{.Œ}
- or (ii) Activate the pull down menu. Press S for Search,{.Œ}
- followed by R for Replace{.Œ}
- or (iii) Press CTRL Q A (this is a WordStar command){.Œ}
-
- 2. A box will appear on the screen with the word "Search for"{.Œ}
- Type in the letters and and press return. {.Œ}
-
- 3. Word Fugue will prompt with "Replace"{.Œ}
- Type the letters plus to search for "and" and replace with "plus".
- Word Fugue will then prompt you with "Options (UGWBLN)"
-
- 4. The options available are the same as for FIND above, with the
- following additions:
-
- G Global search - go to the top of the file, and search for
- all occurrences, and replace them. You do not need to
- press CTRL L for the next occurrence. If you also
- specified the B option, then Word Fugue will go to the end of
- the file and search backwards. It will continue searching
- until it gets to the other end of the file.
-
- n This is a decimal number. Word Fugue will only search for n
- occurrences, and will stop when it has encountered the nth
- occurrence.
-
- N Do not ask. The default when replacing is to ask you "Replace
- Y/N/A/Q", to which you enter y for replace this occurrence,
- and n for not this occurrence. If you specify N option, then
- Word Fugue will not ask you, but will replace every
- occurrence. Q indicates quit replace, while A indicates
- replace all further occurrences without asking.
-
- Press enter when you have typed in any options. (you do not
- need to type in options). The cursor jumps to the first
- occurrence of "and" and replaces it with "plus".
-
- Lesson 13: Help Screens and Menus
- .tc Lesson 13: Help Screens and Menus ..................#
-
- Now you know the basics of editing text with Word Fugue. If you forget
- a command and need some help, you can use the Help screens. You must
- have the help file available when you load Word Fugue, otherwise it
- will not display any help. The help file must be either in the
- directory from which you started Word Fugue, the Default directory, or
- any of the directories displayed in your path statement. If Word fugue
- could not locate the help file, you will be told "No help available"
-
- .CP4
- 1. Press F1 for help. The Pop Up help menu appears. This menu contains
- a list of Help topics. Select the one you want by pressing Enter
- when the topic is highlighted, or press the highlighted letter that
- starts it.
-
- .CP4
- These Help screens are not designed to teach you how to use Word
- Fugue. Instead, they will help you remember which key does what. Each
- of these Help screens covers a specific topic. To access the other
- Help topics, press one of Page Up or Page Down.
-
- 2. Press the Page Up and Page Down keys and look at the different
- topics
-
- 3. Press Esc to return to the editing screen.
-
- You can also obtain help about particular commands, by activating the
- pull down menu, highlighting a command and then pressing F1. You will
- see some help screens that relate only to the command highlighted. If
- you are on an item that is actually a sub menu, you will be told to
- select a lower level to obtain help.
-
-
-
- Lesson 14: Printing
- .tc Lesson 14: Printing ................................#
-
- Printing is probably the most satisfying part of word processing.
- Here's where you get to see all of your hard work pay off. You can
- print a file while you're editing another.
-
- To use the print program while you're editing a file:
-
- 1. Press F10 then F followed by P. (or CTRL K P)
- A pop up menu appears.
-
- Do not press <Enter> on the first menu selection, Print file now,
- until the other items in the box have been set to your
- satisfaction. Selecting the first item starts the print job.
-
- 2. After you select the second menu item, Name of file, a prompt box
- will request entry of the name of the file to print. When prompted
- for a file name, you may enter DOS wildcards or the name of another
- drive or subdirectory. In this case, another window will display
- the names of all matching files. You can select from this list by
- using the cursor keypad, or by pressing the first letter of the
- filename in which you are interested.
-
- If you wish to print a file that is currently loaded in memory, be
- sure to save any recent changes to disk before trying to print it.
- If you attempt to print a file that has unsaved changes, Word Fugue
- will prompt you to save it. If you select Yes to save it, printing
- will commence, but if you select No to not save it, the print menu
- will be abandoned.
-
- 3. Set Auto formatting OFF if you wish to have Word Fugue ignore
- formatting commands (. commands) in your text. In this case, text
- will print continuously with no form feeds or page breaks. Control
- codes embedded in the text will be written to the output without
- interpretation.
-
- By default, Word Fugue prints all pages of the document. You can set
- starting and stopping pages if desired.
-
- 4. Select from any of the available printer definition files (default
- extension .PDF) to find one that is appropriate for your printer.
- You can change to another file and use Options Save setup to
- regularly use that file.
-
- 5. You can also choose between sending the printed output to LPT1,
- LPT2, LPT3 or to a file. LPT1 etc refer to the computer port where
- your printer is attached. If the printer is attached to a serial
- port, you must select one of COM1 or COM2 instead.
-
- When output is printed to a file, all control codes are written out
- just as when they are printed. In this case, you must also specify
- the name of the output file using the prompt window. If you wish to
- remove the print codes and produce plain ASCII text, you can select
- the BLANK.PDF, which strips out the control codes.
-
- 6. Set Manual paper feed ON if you wish to have Word Fugue prompt you
- to insert a new sheet of paper after each page. This choice is also
- stored as part of the printer definition file for your selected
- printer.
-
- Set Use formfeeds ON if your printer accepts ASCII character #12 to
- eject each page. Otherwise, Word Fugue will fill out the end of each
- page with blank lines.
-
- 7. After making all selections, move the menu bar to the Print file
- now item and press <Enter>. If you decide not to print, just press
- <Esc>. Printing occurs as a background task. You can continue
- editing with minimal loss of performance while the print job
- continues.
-
- To stop a print job at any time, execute the Print File command
- sequence. Word Fugue will confirm whether you want to stop the print
- job.
-
- You can edit and store printer definitions from within Word Fugue,
- using the File Print menu.
-
- Select a printer definition file (default extension .PDF) using the
- Which printer menu item. Word Fugue will load this printer file into
- memory.
-
- NOTE - you can only print a file that you have saved to disk. If
- you are editing a file, press F2 (or CTRL K S) to save it
- first so that you can continue editing while printing. Any
- changes you make after saving will not be printed unless you
- again save the file and reprint it.
-
- Print formatting
- .tc Print formatting ................................#
-
- There are 2 types of print formatting commands - font selection
- commands and Dot commands
-
- .CP6
- Font Selection
- .tc Font Selection ...............................#
-
- Font command are special control commands in the text. The first
- command turns on a font selection, and the next occurrence of the same
- command turns it off. For example, if a Ctrl B character is found in
- the text, it will turn on bolding. The next occurrence of Ctrl B will
- turn bolding off. The appropriate printer control strings are stored
- in the *.PDF files.
-
- You can enter a Ctrl B character into the text in 2 ways:
-
- 1. Press Alt B, which will insert the character Ctrl B.
-
- 2. Press Ctrl P followed by Ctrl B. The control P command tells word
- fugue to accept the following character and place it in the text,
- even though it would normally be interpreted as a command
-
- The following are the default font commands, and the alternate methods
- of entering them:
-
- Font command Meaning You can type
-
- ^B On & Off - usually bold Alt B or Ctrl P B{.Œ}
- ^D On & Off - usually double strike Alt D or Ctrl P D{.Œ}
- ^S On & Off - usually underline Alt U or Ctrl P S{.Œ}
- ^T On & Off - usually superscript Alt T or Ctrl P T{.Œ}
- ^V On & Off - usually subscript Alt V or Ctrl P V{.Œ}
- ^A On & Off - usually compressed Alt C or Ctrl P A{.Œ}
- ^Y On & Off - usually italics Alt I or Ctrl P Y{.Œ}
-
- You will find others listed in the user guide.
-
- Fonts can be displayed on the screen, if you select to have font
- display on. This is on the pull down menu, under Options, then Display
- options. You can also type Ctrl O D to achieve the same effect. A text
- screen cannot actually display the different fonts as they would
- appear on the printed page, instead it displays them in different
- colours (if you have a colour monitor). If you select Colours from the
- options menu, you will see what colours are used for which fonts.
-
-
- Dot Commands
- .tc Dot Commands .................................#
-
- These commands appear in column one of your text, and determine how
- the text prints. They are covered more fully in your user guide, but
- some of the more common ones are considered here.
-
- Headers and Footers
- .tc Headers and Footers .......................#
-
- Headers are lines that print at the top of each page, while footers
- are lines that print at the bottom of each page.
-
- The first header is prefixed by .HE or .H1 the dot must appear in
- column one to be effective. The 2nd heading is prefixed by .H2,
- while the third is prefixed by .H3
-
- The first footer is prefixed by .FO or .F1 the dot must appear in
- column one to be effective. The 2nd footing is prefixed by .F2,
- while the third is prefixed by .F3
-
- Some special characters appearing in the heading or footing
- represent special values.
-
- # means print the current page number{.Œ}
- @D0 means print the current date: MMM DD, YYYY{.Œ}
- @D1 means print the current date: DD/MM/YY{.Œ}
- @D2 means print the current date: DD/MM/YYYY{.Œ}
- @D3 means print the current date: MM/DD/YY{.Œ}
- @D4 means print the current date: MM/DD/YYYY{.Œ}
- @D5 means print the current date: YYYY/MM/DD{.Œ}
- @D6 means print the current date: DD MMM YYYY{.Œ}
- @D7 means print the current date: dayname, DD MMM YYYY{.Œ}
- @D8 means print the current date: DD month YYYY{.Œ}
- @T0 print the current time: HH:MM{.Œ}
- @T1 print the current time: HH:MM:SS{.Œ}
- @T2 print the current time: HH:MM XX where XX = AM or PM{.Œ}
- @T3 print the current time: HH:MM:SS XX where XX = AM or PM{.Œ}
-
-
- Page Breaks
- .tc Page Breaks ...............................#
-
- .PA means start a new page at this line
-
- .CP n means start a new page if less than n lines remain on the
- current page. This is very useful if you want to ensure
- that a paragraph always prints together, rather than the
- first line at the bottom of one page, and the other lines
- at the top of the next page.
-
- .PN n means set the page number to n. This is good for printing
- chapters, where each chapter is a separate document, but
- they must have special page numbers
-
- .PL n means that the length of the page is n lines. This is very
- useful if you have A4 stationary, which can fit 70 lines
- instead of the US standard 66 lines
-
- .FI filename
- means include a file called "filename" at this point. This
- is very useful if you have a large document. You can break
- it up into chapters, and have a file that includes each
- chapter by the .FI command. When you print the file, each
- included files will print one after the other.
-
- The filename must include the drive and directory of the
- file if it cannot be found in the current (default)
- directory. If Word Fugue cannot find the file, you will be
- given an error message displaying the missing file name.
-
- You can even place .FI commands inside included files, up
- to 5 levels deep
-
- If you have a look at the WF.??? files that come with the distribution
- disks, they contain examples of almost all print formatting features.
- The top level file WF.DOC includes the other files at print time. This
- manual was prepared with Word Fugue, and the WF.??? files are a cut
- down version of this manual, and serve to illustrate how to set up a
- multifile document with fancy formatting.
-
- Have a look at these files, and try printing them. You should also
- experiment with printing small documents yourself, and using different
- commands.
-
- Lesson 15: Windows
- .tc Lesson 15: Windows .................................#
-
- When you edit a file, you can only look at a bit of it at a time
- (unless it is small enough). That bit is known as a window on the
- file. The window can be moved around by means of various commands,
- including the Page Up and Page down keys.
-
- For many word processing tasks, one window is enough, but not always.
- You may want to look at a previous letter you wrote, or at different
- chapters in a document to ensure that the wording is consistent. This
- is especially true if you are programming.
-
- Word Fugue gives you the ability to have up to 8 windows open at once.
- You can have them all on the screen, or zoom one to the foreground and
- drop all the others off the screen. Each window can look at a
- different file, or at any file in any other window. Any changes you
- make in one window will be reflected in all other windows that are
- looking at the same file.
-
- 1 Open a Second Window{.Œ}
- Press F10 followed by W for Window and O for Open. You can also
- achieve this with the sequence CTRL O A (^O A) or Shift F3. You
- will be prompted for a file name
-
- 2 Type in a file name, or press Ctrl X for no file. (more on no file
- later). If you type in the name of a file that you are currently
- editing, then the new window will look at that file as well. You
- can in this case be looking at different parts of the same file.
-
- 3 Close a Window{.Œ}
- Press F10 followed by W and C. You can also achieve this by typing
- the sequence Shift F4. If you have a file that you have made
- changes to, then Word Fugue will automatically save the file.
-
- 4 Switching Windows{.Œ}
- Press F9 or F10 followed by W and N (or CTRL O N ). If you have
- more than one window active, you will be transferred to the next one
- on the list. Each time you enter the command you will go to the
- next window that you have open, until you come back to where you
- started. Open another window and try it now.
-
- You can also cycle in reverse by pressing Shift F9 or Ctrl O P to
- go to the previous window.
-
- Open another window and try it now.
-
- .CP5
- 5 Zoom Window{.Œ}
- Pressing Shift F5 will make one window fill up the entire screen,
- and drop the others from view. Pressing Shift F5 again will restore
- the other windows to the screen. With one window zoomed, you can
- still switch between windows.
-
- When a window is zoomed, the status line will show >Z< in the left
- hand corner.
-
- 6 Resize Window{.Œ}
- If you have more than one window open, you can make the current
- window bigger or smaller. The minimum window size is 2 lines. To
- resize the window, press Shift F6 or Ctrl O S. You will be prompted
- to use the up and down arrow keys to move the window divider, and
- to press Enter when you are finished resizing the window. Make sure
- that you have more than one window open, and try it now.
-
- 7 Import Text From Other Window{.Œ}
- You must have both windows open, and editing files. (They may be
- the same file). Mark a block of text in one window that you wish to
- copy (or Import) into the other window. (^KB and ^KK). Then go to
- the other window (F9). Position the cursor at the position you want
- the text to come after. Press ^K C (CTRL K C) or F10 followed by B
- and then C. The marked text will be copied from its window into the
- current window, directly after the cursor.
-
- .pa
- Tutorial Summary
- .tc Tutorial Summary ...................................#
-
- Well, you've come a long way in your Word Fugue odyssey. Let's sum up
- the commands you've learned.
-
- Lesson 1: Making a Working disk
- Make a working Word Fugue disk. A>COPY WF.* B: <Enter>
- Configure Word Fugue for your screen A>WF /G for MSDos
- F10 O S to save settings
- Lesson 2: Creating a File
- See a directory of a disk. A>DIR B: <Enter>
- Edit a new file. A>WF filename <Enter>
-
- Lesson 3: Entering Text
- Enter text one line at a time. <Enter> at end of line
- Word-wrap on ^O W
- Paragraph reformatting ^B
- Auto reformatting Alt P
- Word-wrap off ^O W
- Repeat a character. Hold down the key
- Lesson 4: Saving and Exiting
- Save the file then return to editing. ^K S or F2
- Save the file and edit new file. F3 or ^K D
- Save the file and exit the program. F10 or ^K X
- exit the file without saving ^K Q
- Lesson 5: Editing an Existing File
- Get back into an existing file. A>WF filename <Enter>
- Lesson 6: Moving Around the Screen
- Move around by one line or column. Up/Down/Lt/Rt Arrow keys
- Move to the left margin. Home key
- Move to the end of a line. End key
- Jump up or down by one screen. PgDn or PgUp
- Lesson 7: More About Entering Text
- Toggle Insert and Overwrite modes. INS key
- Lesson 8: Changing Text
- Delete character left of the cursor. Bksp key
- Delete character at the cursor. Del key
- Lesson 9: More Ways to Change Text
- Delete from cursor to end of a line. Ctrl Bksp
- Delete the word at the cursor. Ctrl T
- Delete the word to left of the cursor. Alt 1
- Undelete text Alt Y
- Lesson 10: Changing Margins
- Reformat a paragraph manually. ^B
- Bring up Ruler line, change margins. ^O L or ^O R
-
- Lesson 11: Copy, Move, Delete
- Copy a block of text. ^KB at block start, then
- ^KK at block end, then
- ^KC at new location
- Move a block of text. Same as copy but use
- ^KV for move
- Delete a block of text. Same as copy but
- ^KY once marked
- Undelete block of text. Alt Y once for each
- line
- Lesson 12: Finding and Replacing
- Set find and replace text. F5 or F6
- Search for one occurrence.
- Search for and replace one occurrence.
- Search for/replace all occurrences. option G
- Lesson 13: Help Screens and Menus
- See the Help screen. F1
- See Main Menu. F10
- help for commands
- press F1 once menu
- displayed
- Lesson 14: Printing
- Print while editing. ^K P
- Printer Customisation Setup *.PDF
- Lesson 15: Windows
- Open a Window ^O A or Shift F3
- Close a Window Shift F4
- Zoom a window ^O Z
- Goto other window ^O N or ^O P
- Import Marked Text from another window ^K C
- You now have all the basic skills necessary to use Word Fugue.
-
- To become more proficient, use the program. Please also read the rest
- of this User Guide, and investigate the sample document files that
- come with the program. As you become more proficient, try some of the
- examples spread throughout the chapters and in Appendix C. Above all,
- experiment. That is the best way to become proficient with the
- program.
-