home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
MacWorld 1996 April
/
Macworld (1996-04).dmg
/
Shareware World
/
Utilities
/
Utilities
/
Monitors FKEY
/
About Monitors FKEY 1.0
< prev
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-10-04
|
4KB
|
75 lines
About the Monitors FKEY 1.0
After a few weeks of playing Marathon, I was sick of swapping resolutions
on my multiscan monitor... and tried to think of a cool way to shortcut the
process. I loved the "ToggleSndVol FKEY", and was inspired to do something
similar.
This tool doesn't replace the Monitors CP or Sound + Displays CP (in 7.5.2),
but provides a quickie shortcut. Now I can even disable the cool new Control
Strip Module on my 7500... I mean, who likes those damn floaters anyway? ;)
Installing:
The FKEY is packaged as a Font suitcase... why? Its a cool way to install
system resources without using ResEdit. Simply place the file in the Fonts
folder of System 7.1 or later -- no need to reboot! (System 7.0.x users
must still use ResEdit). To remove it, you must quit all open applications
before dragging the font suitcase from the Fonts folder.
This software requires the Display Manager 1.2, which is bundled with System
7.5.2 (as installed on the PM7200, PM7500, and PM8500). If you dont have
7.5.2 or the updater... you need to get the software from Apple's FTP site
(it's free!) at:
<ftp://ftptoo.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/mac/
display_periph_sw/MultipleScan%20Display%20SW%201.2.hqx>
Activating:
The FKEY is activated by pressing Command-Shift-Zero (ala FKEY zero) in
any application. Some things to note:
* If the current application doesn't have enough free memory to
load the dialog, the FKEY will try to free some. If it fails,
the computer will beep rather than display the dialog. The only
thing you can do is close windows or switch apps, then try again.
(This seems to happens more often in the Finder)
* PCI machines don't seem to return monitor information as quickly
as NuBus, so you will suffer a short pause while the FKEY loads
the resolution list on the first invocation. The information is
cached across calls, so you should only suffer this wait once
per startup (or until you reconfigure the monitors).
* "Optional" monitor modes are denoted by warning icons or italics
in the popup menu -- these are the special modes that may not work
with your video card/monitor. Try them at your own risk. Also, if
you are sure that such modes *do* work on your machine, you can
turn off the "Warning Messages" features. If your monitor doesn't
support multiple modes or all of the modes you have are safe, then
you won't see that "Warning Messages" checkbox.
* Resizing your monitor can cause the icons on your desktop to start
migrating toward the upper-left of the screen. If there is enough
positive response (esp. $), I may incorporate some icon fixing code.
* Notice that many things have key equivalents... such as arrow keys,
escape, return, and numbers (1=B/W, 2,4,8=2,4,8-Bit color, 9=16-bit
color, 0=32-bit color). Also watch the behavior of the "default"
button as you switch resolutions... its annoying at first, but it
does grow on you as a useful keyboard shortcut.
Distribution:
Its free to download and redistribute... but if you find yourself using it
*all* the time, you could consider sending me $5 or $10 as guiltware. :)
This is rather experimental software, although I have tested it on several
machines. As always, I don't warrantee or guarantee or anything... the
software is provided as is and I not responsible for any hassles it may
cause you. It works for me, and that's the best I can do.
Matt Slot (fprefect@umich.edu) - 10/3/95
PS - Watch for a Monitors AppleScript Extension... coming soon!