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- .f3 - # - Appendix B - Miscellaneous Utilities
- .rm70
- .tc
- .tc1
- .tc B. MISCELLANEOUS UTILITIES ............................#
- APPENDIX B MISCELLANEOUS UTILITIES
-
- This appendix discusses some of the utilities that are supplied with
- Word Fugue.
-
- .tc FI - File Descriptions Utility .....................#
- FI - File Descriptions Utility
-
- If you are using File Descriptions, and you do not have 4Dos, then you
- need this program to support your file descriptions outside of Word
- Fugue. It acts like a replacement for the DOS DIR command. It displays
- a browse list of files, and allows the addition of descriptions to
- files in full screen mode. Press Return to edit the description of
- highlighted file. The descriptions are stored in file FILEINFO.WF in
- the directory being browsed. The list can be scrolled up and down by
- use of the cursor keys.
-
- Filename : FI.EXE
-
- Syntax : FI <mask> /H/S/D/R/A/P/G/B/C/Q/I/1
- or FI /H/S/D/R/A/P/G/B/C/Q/I/1 <mask>
-
- Parameters:
-
- <mask> directory mask with wildcards * or ? (eg b:e*.t??)
- as for DOS wild cards.
-
- /H - include Hidden files
-
- /S - include System files
-
- /D - include Directories
-
- /R - include read only files
-
- /A - all files - use this instead of /H/S/R/D
-
- /P - pack the description file. As you add descriptions, delete
- files and so on, the description file will slowly accumulate
- garbage as descriptions build up that no longer relate to
- files. This option compares the file contents against the
- disk directory, and removes all entries that are not used.
-
- /G - use generic Bios calls. If your computer is not fully IBM
- compatible, you may find that the screen does not appear to
- work with programs that write directly to it. This parameter
- tells the program to use Bios for access to the screen. This
- is slower, but should always work.
-
- /B - use black and white colours. Some computers have colour cards
- connected to mono monitors, and can fool programs
- into thinking that the screen is capable of colour when it
- isn't. This option tells the program to use black and white
- colour regardless of what it believes the screen is capable
- of.
-
- .cp5
- /C - clear screen at exit. This option clears the screen after the
- program terminates. Otherwise it will not clear the screen,
- and the list of files will scroll up a few lines.
-
- /Q - old CGA monitor - eliminate snow by waiting for a vertical
- retrace.
-
- /I - convert old INFO.DIR file - if you subscribed to our earlier
- utility INFO.EXE to record file descriptions, then this
- option will read the INFO.DIR file in the current directory
- and produce a FILEINFO.WF file in the current directory. If
- you never used this utility, you will never need this option!
-
- /1 - use alternate colours instead of the default colour set. Some
- colours are easy on the eye, but hard to see on certain
- monitors. If you don't like our standard set, try this one.
-
-
- .pa
- .tc WF_2_4D - Convert FILEINFO To 4DOS Format ..........#
- WF_2_4D - Convert FILEINFO To 4DOS Format
-
- If you do convert to 4DOS, and you have been using file descriptions,
- then this utility will convert your descriptions from Word Fugue's
- proprietary FILEINFO.WF files to DESCRIPT.ION files.
-
- It only works in the current directory. If the 4Dos description file
- exists, the descriptions from FILEINFO.WF are added to the end. Since
- 4Dos restricts you to 40 characters of description, the conversion
- program truncates longer descriptions. You should edit them first
- using either WF or FI, and then run the conversion.
-
- If you already had a DESCRIPT.ION file, then after the conversion is
- finished, you should use WF to edit the file and verify that entries
- are not duplicated. Simply delete the duplicated line.
-
- Filename : WF_2_4D.EXE
-
- Syntax : WF_2_4D
-
- Parameters: none
- .pa
- .tc WFLEXMGR - Dictionary Maintenance Program ..........#
- WFLEXMGR - Dictionary Maintenance Program
-
- Changes may be made to the main dictionary by using the program
- WFLEXMGR. This program will either Add or Delete words from the
- dictionary, depending upon the input on its screen. It will always
- write a new dictionary, so as not to destroy the old one if things go
- wrong. Make sure you have enough disk space for 2 copies! You may
- allocate the new dictionary on another drive or directory. If the old
- and the new are in the same directory, and have the same name, the old
- will be renamed to a .BAK extension, otherwise it will simply write a
- new dictionary.
-
-
- …ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕ SPELL FUGUE - Word Fugue Main Dictionary Maintenance V3.0 ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕª
- ∫Source Dictionary : WF_MAIN.LEX__________________________________________ ∫
- ∫Target Dictionary : WF_MAIN.LEX ∫
- ∫Add or Delete records: A or C to convert dictionary formats ∫
- ∫Change File: WF_AUX.DIC ∫
- ∫ ∫
- ∫ ∫
- ∫ ∫
- ∫ ∫
- ∫ ∫
- ∫ ∫
- ∫ ∫
- ∫ ∫
- ∫ ∫
- »ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕº
-
- Fig B.1 - Dictionary Change Screen
- .tc1 Fig B.1 - Dictionary Change Screen ....................#
-
-
- The change file should have one word per line (like the auxiliary
- dictionary). The order of the words does not matter, since the
- maintenance program will sort the file first. All entries will be
- converted to lower case before being applied to the dictionary.
-
- You cannot add and delete in the same run, so if you have
- inadvertently added a word which you subsequently find to have been
- spelled incorrectly, you must first delete the erroneous word by
- putting it in a change file spelled exactly as it is in the
- dictionary, and directing the program to Delete words contained in the
- change file. Once this run has finished, you can then add the
- correctly spelled word by placing it in a change file and directing
- the program to Add words from the specified change file.
-
- It is also possible to use the program to convert the old format
- WF_MAIN.DIC file into the new format WF_MAIN.LEX file by setting the
- action to 'C' for Convert. In this case you will need about 700k disk
- space for the sort files as well as space for the new dictionary. If
- you run it on an XT at 4.7Mz, you can expect the process to take
- about an hour. You should not need to convert your old format
- dictionary unless you have added a large number of words to it.
-
- .CP15
- Filename : WFLEXMGR
-
- Syntax : WFLEXMGR
-
- Parameters: /Q/B/G
-
- /G - use generic Bios calls. If your computer is not fully IBM
- compatible, you may find that the screen does not appear to
- work with programs that write directly to it. This parameter
- tells the program to use Bios for access to the screen. This
- is slower, but should always work.
-
- /B - use black and white colours. Some computers have colour cards
- connected to mono monitors, and can fool programs
- into thinking that the screen is capable of colour when it
- isn't. This option tells the program to use black and white
- colour regardless of what it believes the screen is capable
- of.
-
- /Q - old CGA monitor - eliminate snow by waiting for a vertical
- retrace.
- .pa
- .tc ZIP - Shell for PKZIP & PKUNZIP programs ...........#
- ZIP - Shell for PKZIP & PKUNZIP programs
-
- If you are into compressing files with PKWare's PKZIP & PKUNZIP
- programs, and you also use file descriptions, then this program acts
- as a shell, letting you tag files to be added by "point and shoot"
- methods, and running PKZIP in such a fashion as to add the file
- descriptions to the ZIP file. It also lets you browse a ZIP file,
- showing the contents along with their descriptions. You can tag files
- to be extracted or deleted. If you are extracting files, then their
- descriptions are also extracted.
-
- The program supports both 4DOS DESCRIPT.ION files as well as Word
- Fugue's proprietary FILEINFO.WF files. The program can also
- automatically sense when you are running 4DOS, and switch accordingly.
-
- You need PKZIP & PKUNZIP to be able to use this program.
-
-
- Filename : ZIP.EXE
-
- Syntax : 1. ZIP <mask> archive options
- 2. ZIP archive <mask> options
-
- Parameters: <mask> is file mask using DOS wild cards
- archive is the name of the ZIP file to modify or browse
- Options:
- /4 = use 4Dos file descriptions - over-ride automatic
- sensing
- /m = move files to archive (and delete from disk)
- if not specified then files remain on disk
- /d = delete archive files (no extraction)
- /w = use WF file descriptions - over-ride automatic
- sensing
-
-
- Remarks:
-
- Format 1 lists files on disk that match <mask> and lets you
- tag the ones to be archived
-
- Format 2 lists the files in the archive that match <mask> and
- lets you tag the ones to extract or delete
-
- + Tag a file.
- - Untag file.
- space Toggle the tag
- * Tag all files
- Del Untag all files
- ESC Quit without processing
- Enter Execute command (Archive,Extract or Delete)
- F1 Help
- F4 Set or change archive name
- F5 View file (text mode)
- F6 Edit description (Disk Only)
- F7 Change the search mask
- F8 Change the path for extracted files
- F9 Toggle the delete switch (extract only)
- .pa
- .tc WFINST - Word Fugue Installation Program ...........#
- WFINST - Word Fugue Installation Program
-
- .imCustomising Word Fugue
- .ix Installing keystrokes
- This program has 3 different uses:
-
- ˛ installing of keystrokes
- ˛ installing the user name
- ˛ extracting the keystroke table from Word Fugue
-
- Filename : WFINST.EXE
-
- Syntax : WFINST - Install keystrokes
- WFINST /U - Change user name
- WFINST /C - Extract keyboard configuration table
-
- .tc Installation of Key Strokes .....................#
- Installation of Key Strokes
-
- This is the default if you do not include any parameters. It also
- recreates the help file so that the key sequences you have installed
- will appear correctly in the help text.
-
- At a minimum, you must have 2 files on the same disk:
-
- WF.EXE (Word fugue)
-
- WF.TXT (The source for the context sensitive help)
-
- If you have a 360K floppy system, there should be no other files
- on the disk, since WFINST will generate the file WF.HLP from the
- file WF.TXT. This file will take up about 110K, and will probably
- fill up a 360K floppy disk. In this case you must have WFINST on a
- second disk drive (not the default).
-
- Type in
-
- d:WFINST
-
- at the DOS prompt, where d: is the drive and directory where
- WFINST resides. The program will load and prompt you with:
-
- Perform fast entry of fully reconfigured keyboard (Y/N/enter for N)
-
- If you press Y for Yes, you may install the keyboard using the
- Fast Entry method. The default response, No, may be given by
- pressing N or Enter. If you answer No, you will be able to select
- the commands to change, but if you answer Yes, you will be
- prompted for each command.
-
- .cp10
- Fast Entry
-
- When you select the fast entry option, the following instructions
- will be displayed on screen:
-
- Press <enter> to accept default{.Œ}
- Press keys followed by <enter> for new key sequence{.Œ}
- Press <Bksp> to back up one keystroke, C to clear, R to restore{.Œ}
- Press <scroll lock> to toggle literal mode{.Œ}
- Press <escape> to quit entering commands{.Œ}
- Random Access editing is available when you are finished{.Œ}
-
- You can then either enter a new key sequence for each command or
- accept the current one by pressing Enter. Both the command name
- and the current key sequence are always displayed to the left of
- the cursor. You specify a new key sequence by pressing the keys
- you wish to use to invoke that command. Pressing Enter terminates
- your entry.
-
- You can correct mistakes in the current entry by pressing the
- Backspace key (delete last key stroke), C (Clear entry), or R
- (Restore previous entry). To specify either the enter key or a
- ctrl M, you must first press the Scroll Lock key, which indicates
- that keystrokes are to be interpreted literally; press it again
- when you have finished entering the key sequence. Pressing ESC
- stops the fast entry procedure and takes you to the random access
- entry screen.
-
- Random Access
-
- When you select the random access option, or when you have
- finished using the fast entry procedure, you can alter any or all
- of the default key sequences. The top line of the screen will show
- some basic instructions. The remainder of the screen shows (from
- left to right) the name of the command, the primary key sequence,
- and the secondary key sequence.
-
- Move the cursor to the key sequence you want to change and press
- enter. Use the Left Arrow and Right Arrow keys to select primary
- or secondary key sequences, and scroll through the list of
- commands using the Up arrow, down Arrow, Page Up and Page Down
- keys. Home takes you to the first command, and End to the last.
-
- You can correct mistakes in the current entry by pressing the
- Backspace key (delete last key stroke), C (Clear entry), or R
- (Restore previous entry). To specify either the enter key or a
- ctrl M, you must first press the Scroll Lock key, which indicates
- that keystrokes are to be interpreted literally; press it again
- when you have finished entering the key sequence.
-
- .pa
-
- ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕ Installing: WF.EXE ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕ
- ^≥-v≥-scroll PgUp-PgDn-page <Ÿ-modify R-restore defaults ESC-exit
- ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕ
- Character left P: <Lft> S: <CtrlS>
- Character right P: <Rgt> S: <CtrlD>
- Word left P: <CtrlLft> S: <CtrlA>
- Word right P: <CtrlRgt> S: <CtrlF>
- Line up P: <Up> S: <CtrlE>
- Line down P: <Dn> S: <CtrlX>
- Scroll up P: <CtrlW> S:
- Scroll down P: <CtrlZ> S:
- Page down P: <PgDn> S: <CtrlC>
- Page up P: <PgUp> S: <CtrlR>
- Top of window P: <CtrlPgUp> S: <CtrlQ><CtrlR>
- Bottom of window P: <CtrlPgDn> S: <CtrlQ><CtrlC>
- Cursor to left side P: <Home> S: <CtrlQ><CtrlS>
- Cursor to right side P: <End> S: <CtrlQ><CtrlD>
- Top of screen P: <CtrlHome> S: <CtrlQ><CtrlE>
- Bottom of screen P: <CtrlEnd> S: <CtrlQ><CtrlX>
- ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕ
- Go to line P: <CtrlJ><CtrlL> S:
- Go to column P: <CtrlJ><CtrlC> S:
- Go to page P: <CtrlJ><CtrlP> S:
- Go to window P: <AltF6> S: <CtrlJ><CtrlW>
- Top of block P: <ShiftF7> S: <CtrlQ><CtrlB>
-
-
- Fig B.2 - Installation of Keystrokes
- .tc1 Fig B.2 - Installation of Keystrokes ..................#
-
-
-
- Quitting the Installation
-
- When you have finished making changes, press Q to Quit, or W to write
- your changes to a disk file. If you choose the Write option, you will
- then see the message "checking for conflicts..." If you have
- accidentally assigned the same key sequence to two or more commands, and
- error message will be displayed, You can correct your mistakes by
- searching for highlighted items.
-
- You will also see an error message if the size of the list of
- keystrokes goes over 1023 key strokes. You can easily solve this
- problem by eliminating a few secondary key sequences.
-
- After WF.EXE has been modified, WFINST will generate a new help file
- (WF.HLP) to go with it. This file combines the text from WF.TXT (which
- must be present) with the keystrokes you selected for each command. A
- running line counter tells you how many lines of WF.TXT have been
- processed.
-
- .cp10
- .tc Changing the Registration Message ...............#
- Changing the Registration Message
-
- WFINST can also be used to change the registered name and message that
- display on program startup and termination. You need to have WF.EXE in
- the path, but you do not need the help files for this.
-
- Run the install program with the parameter /U where the U is CAPITAL U
- and not lowercase u:
-
- WFINST /U
-
- You will be prompted for the registered name, which can be edited.
- Pressing ESC will restore the old value.
-
- You will then be prompted for the registration message. After you have
- entered it, the new text will be written to WF.EXE
-
- The name and message are each restricted to 50 characters.
-
- .tc Extracting the Keyboard Table ...................#
- Extracting the Keyboard Table
-
- This option is supplied for upwards compatibility to save you having
- to reconfigure the keyboard layout each time you upgrade. If your
- current version is less than 2.01, the program will extract only the
- keyboard table, since other options have moved around in different
- versions. If your current version is at least 2.01, then all the
- configurable options will be extracted. Versions of Word Fugue after
- V2.01 will look for the configuration file WF.CFG in the default
- directory, and load in the options found there. If the configuration
- file is flagged as prior to V2.01, only the keyboard table will be
- loaded.
-
- Run the program as follows:
-
- WFINST /C
-
- where the C is a capital letter. It only works on the default
- directory, so be sure that the current drive and directory are the one
- that contains your old copy of Word Fugue.
-
- The program will display a message, extract the configuration file,
- and terminate. Go ahead and copy your new Word Fugue Files into the
- directory. When you load Word Fugue it will pick up the options you
- had set in the old version, (if you had a version 2.01 or greater) and
- the old keyboard layout you were using.
-
- If you were using a version prior to V2.01, you will still need to go
- in and set up the other options such as home directory. Saving your
- setup with the new version will write out all options to the
- configuration file in the current directory, as well as saving them in
- the executable.
- .pa
- .tc CHD - Full Screen Directory Changer ................#
- CHD - Full Screen Directory Changer
-
- This program can be used to display a tree of all directories on the
- disk, and permit changing to that directory by using "point and shoot"
- methods. In full screen mode it also permits creating, renaming and
- deleting of directories. In addition, if you start is with part of a
- directory name as a parameter, it will change to that directory which
- starts with the characters entered, and exit back to dos.
-
-
- File Name : CHD.EXE
-
- Syntax : CHD <new dir> /B/G/L/Q
-
- Remarks : The directory is saved in a file called CHD.DIR in the
- root directory of the drive the first time the program is
- run. You can cause it to recreate this file by re-reading
- the directory tree if you wish.
-
- Parameters :
-
- /B - use black and white colours
- (The program will sense if the screen mode is Black and
- White, but some users have a colour adaptor connected to
- a black and white monitor. This switch indicates to
- ignore the mode, and use black and white)
- /G - use Generic bios calls for screen IO (if you get a blank
- screen - try this one - used for screens that are not
- fully IBM compatible)
- /L - load directory tree by re-reading the disk (use this if
- you make changes to the directory structure outside the
- CHD program)
- /Q - eliminate snow on older CGA screens
-
- .tc Batch Mode ......................................#
- Batch Mode
-
- Run the program with the starting letters of a directory you to
- wish to change. If CHD finds a directory starting with those
- letters, it will change to that directory and return to the DOS
- prompt.
-
- eg Suppose you have a directory on your hard disk:
-
- QUATTRO\SHEETS\BUSINESS\AUG90
-
- you could change to it by entering:
-
- CHD aug90
-
- If you had more than one directory starting with AUG90,
- then the program will change to the first one it finds.
- Repeating the command will change to the next one.
-
- .CP10
- eg
- QUATTRO\SHEETS\BUSINESS\AUG90
- LOTUS\SHEETS\BUSINESS\AUG90
-
- entering CHD AUG90 will change to the one under QUATTRO
- the first time, and the one under LOTUS the second time.
- If you enter the command a third time, it will change back
- to the first one again.
-
- .cp10
- .tc Full Screen Mode ................................#
- Full Screen Mode
-
- If you run the program without a directory name as the first
- parameter, it goes to full screen mode and displays all
- directories for you to select.
-
- You can create new directories, delete them, or set them to be
- hidden from DOS commands, or Unhide them, or even rename them
- from the full screen mode, by pressing the first letter of the
- appropriate command:
-
- Load dir: Read the current drive and relog the directory
-
- Make dir: Make a directory under the highlighted one
-
- Delete dir: If the highlighted directory is empty, then delete it
-
- Hide dir: Set the hidden attribute so that the directory will no
- longer appear in the DOS DIR command. Hidden
- directories have a little fuzzy character (∞) displayed
- beside them
-
- Unhide dir: Reset the Hidden attribute to make the directory
- visible
-
- Rename dir: Rename the highlighted directory
-
- Orig dir: Return to the original directory from which the program
- was invoked, and display it.
-
- Version: Displays registration details
-
- New drive: Log a new drive
-
- ESC: Exit - to the default directory
-
- Enter: Select the directory you have highlighted and change to
- it. The program terminates.
-
- .pa
- .tc README - Full Screen File Browser ..................#
- README - Full Screen File Browser
-
- This program can be used to browse any file. It also permits scrolling
- of lines left and right as well as up and down.
-
-
- File Name : README.COM
-
- Syntax : README <filename>
-
- Remarks : This is a simple file browser that is supplied on the
- installation disks to view the README text file. All
- characters in the PC's character set are displayed. The
- file can be any size.
-
- Parameters : <filename>
-
- This is the name of the file you wish to browse. If it
- does not exist, the program will terminate with the
- simple message "File not Found"
-
- Commands : Up Arrow Moves the display window towards the top of
- the file.
-
- Down Arrow Moves the display window towards the bottom
- of the file.
-
- Left Arrow Moves the display window to the left
-
- Right Arrow Moves the display window to the right
-
- Page Up Moves the display window up one page (24
- lines)
-
- Page Down Moves the display window down one page (24
- lines)
-
- Home Moves to the top of the file
-
- End Moves to the bottom of the file
-
- ESC Exits to DOS
-
-