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-
-
-
- That Manual Thing
-
-
- Documenting: Mark My Words (version 1.0.2) © 1998 by Greg Swann
-
-
- 8/1/98
-
-
- Greg Swann
-
- gswann@kagi.com
- gswann@primenet.com
-
- USPS: 3608 West Cochise Drive
- Phoenix, AZ 85051
-
-
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introductory chatter...
-
- 2. Commercial, legal and other pertinent notices...
-
- 3. Using Mark My Words: the big picture...
-
- 4. Where the bodies are buried...
-
- 5. Gloats and flourishes...
-
- 6. Mark My Words in real life...
-
- 7. About Greg Swann...
-
- 8. Conclusion...
-
-
-
- 1. Introductory chatter...
-
- Mark My Words is a very elaborate MS-Word binary to XPress Tags text
- filter. It eats Word 4.0, 5.0 or 5.1 files, interactively or by Drag
- & Drop, and converts the binary to QuarkXPress tagged text.
-
- Answering the question: why?
-
- * The Word filter that ships with Quark would be half-witted with a
- little more schooling. No beef, really, they're doing the 80% job
- that one can expect of an import filter. But Mark My Words converts
- 100% of everything that can be produced in Quark, converts it
- intelligently, and gives the user a very high degree of control over
- the conversion, permitting, for example, the omission of unwanted
- styling or the conversion of word processor-like styling to desktop
- publishing-like styling.
-
- * Word has the potential to be an excellent "Story Editor" for Quark
- but for this: if you Save Text from XPress in Word format, you lose
- a _lot_ of styling Quark can produce but Word cannot. But if you
- save as XPress Tags, then edit in Word - _using_ Word styling such
- Cmd-Shift-B - then run it past Mark My Words, you retain all the
- original styling and all the new styling, plus you acquire the
- ability to do corrections in a familiar way with familiar
- keystrokes.
-
- * Moreover, when drafting, you can key in XPress Tags constructs for
- features that Word does not support. For example: you’re using
- oodles of drop caps, and you’ve set up the styles the way you want
- them in XPress. But you really want the drop caps to be scaled 80%
- horizontally. Before, you had to either do the scaling in XPress
- (inconvenient), or do all your styling with tags (mind-numbing). Now
- you can do all your normal styling the Mac-way, and just throw a
- <h80> and <h100> around your drop caps. Mark My Words will do the
- rest.
-
- * Most significantly: converting the file to a text form with all
- styling retained permits you to massage the text with Word, another
- editor, or one of my text-banger utilities like ShawBerry or
- Torquemada. If you import with the Word filter, you keep the styling
- - even where it's bad - plus all the crap. With Mark My Words, you
- can omit or convert the styling and you end up with a file that can
- be cleaned up with very efficient tools. Moreover, the new file can
- be run as is through XP8 to get a massive amount of quality
- improvement for a negligible investment of labor.
-
- Better filtration. Easier, faster editing. Infinitely better
- quality. Win, win, win - surely a better way of working...
-
- Mark My Words owes its origin to Shane Stanley. He wanted a way to
- work in Word and yet gain access to XPress Tags. At first I wasn't
- too sanguine about the idea, but I've learned to respect Shane's
- hunches. I wasn't all that hungry for the ability to style the
- Macintosh way, first because I don't create a lot of text for
- publishing, and second because I'm used to styling the text I get
- from clients directly in XPress Tags, using Torquemada. The bad part
- about doing things that way was that I was losing the italic and
- bold styling that the clients put into their files, which was a big
- pain. So despite my doubts, I was way sold on the concept after we
- finished WordLess Plus. I could keep what I wanted and throw away
- the rest.
-
- From the get, we knew we wanted to support Em Software's Xtags.
- Xtags is a plug-compatible XPress Tags filter that offers a rich
- superset of the XPress Tags commands. It is highly recommended to
- Power Users of QuarkXPress. In MMW, we are supporting Xtags' ability
- to create in-line text and picture boxes in a tag stream. The
- advantage to this is, if you own Xtags, you can retain any pictures
- or in-line tables that are in your Word files.
-
- One of the original design goals was to permit iterative re-editing
- (that is, taking a Word file, putting it through MMW, cleaning it
- up, then doing additional edits back in Word, continuing to use
- Word's styling commands, then putting it through MMW _again_, to
- convert the added styling). WordLess Plus supported this after a
- fashion, but Mark My Words does a much better job of it.
-
- And: Shane wanted a way to insulate himself and others from bad
- selections when editing. Suppose you have a Word file with explicit
- tags in it, typed or inserted by Mark My Words, and you mis-select
- some part of those tags and change the styling. For example, you
- have:
-
- <I>Lepton Local<I>
-
- and you decide to make the title of that fine piece of software
- Bold-Italic instead of just Italic. You mis-select, making this much
- of the text bold:
-
- >Lepton Local
-
- If Mark My Words were not watching for exactly this kind of error,
- you would get:
-
- <I<B>>Lepton Local<BI>
-
- which would choke the XPress Tags filter and elicit a nasty note
- from Xtags.
-
- Such deep thinkers are Shane and I that we've been pondering this
- problem since MMW was a gleam in Shane's eye. Instead of the
- erroneous tags above, MMW will produce:
-
- <I><B>Lepton Local<BI>
-
- No extra charge.
-
- Finally, Shane and I went through about a bazillion rounds of User
- Interface development. What we wanted was a UI that would permit
- Power Users to take control over every little last thing but would
- not present a dizzying array of choices to users less frenetic in
- their pursuit of the arcane. I'm very proud of the results, and I
- wish to thank Shane publicly, as so many times before, for the
- gentle pushing he does in behalf of end-users (starting with
- himself, of course (grin), but good products are made by designers
- who are also hungry users).
-
- I can't say enough good things about Shane, but I'll never stop
- trying. If there's anything you hate in software by me, blame me.
- But for anything you love, you can expect that at least part of the
- credit owes to a light on in a house - and a mind - in Nar Nar Goon,
- Victoria, Australia.
-
- Mark My Words was tested by Shane, Mary Jo Kostya (requiescant in
- pace), Kip Shaw, Mike Arst, Brad Walrod and Chris Ryland. Shane,
- Mary Jo and Kip were the chief victims of a terrible anomaly found
- late, since it affected only 68040 machines. This manual was looked
- over by Shane, Mary Jo, Kip and Mike. None of them should be held
- accountable for any part of it, of course, since I always do what I
- want, despite excellent advice to the contrary.
-
- On the subject: this file is written as plain text in DOS-like
- fashion (i.e., every line ending is a carriage return). It is
- produced in a FreeWare Programmer's editor called BBEdit by Rich
- Siegel (which is recommended). I've had mail about this, so I'll
- explain: I produce documents this way because doing so makes no
- presumptions about what software and fonts you might own. _Most_
- word processors can open, e.g., MS-Word files. But _all_ word
- processors can open _this_ file.
-
- The original FreeWare WordLess Plus is available and will always be
- available for free. But: Mark My Words is commercial software: you
- can't use it (for long) without paying me. The copy of Mark My Words
- in this archive is a DemoWare version that will permit up to 32
- launches and then forevermore refuse to do anything but be an
- automated salesman. It is a _fully functional_ demo. Nothing is
- crippled. A little bit of advertising is tacked on at the end of
- each file, but everything works exactly as documented here. The only
- inhibition is the one named: 32 launches, max. See "Commercial,
- legal and other pertinent notices" below for information on how to
- purchase unrestricted copies of Mark My Words.
-
- TechnoBabble: Mark My Words is compatible with Systems 8, 7 and 6.
- It is AppleEvent-aware, so, presumably, you could script to it. It's
- 32-bit clean, MultiFinder-aware, doubles on sax (turn up the
- volume!), leaves no filmy residue on your fine china - all the usual
- stuff. In short (there will be much more later), it's everything you
- expect of up-to-the-microsecond Macintosh software.
-
- And: this manual presumes a certain adeptitude with QuarkXPress and,
- especially, XPress Tags (if you’ve never used them before, take a
- look at Appendix C in the XPress manual). But to benefit from MMW,
- you need only a basic understanding of how tagging works.
-
- If you've been following my meteoric rise to obscurity, you know
- that I'm an XPress Tags fanatic. If not, some explanation is due:
- XPress Tags is a Text Only language built into QuarkXPress (since
- version 3.0) that permits Quark to express and interpret almost
- everything it can do. As such, it is richer than any other file
- format Quark can import, and, hence, it allows users to do far more
- styling and clean-up using automated tools such as my own Torquemada
- and XP8. If this sounds like the "bad old days" to you, you're right
- - it is. XPress Tags is a mark-up language, exactly like those used
- in mainstream type systems and dedicated word processors. But: in
- this one case, things were better when they were worse. If you get a
- file that uses multiple spaces to pseudo-align columns, you can
- spend all afternoon selecting those space and typing tabs, or you
- can feed the file to XP8 and do the whole job plus a lot more in 10
- seconds. If you want to get really radical with XPress Tags (not
- necessary to the use of Mark My Words, but potentially very useful
- in your daily work), a good place to begin is David Blatner's "The
- QuarkXPress Book" (Peachpit Press).
-
-
-
- 2. Commercial, legal and other pertinent notices...
-
- As mentioned above, this is a DemoWare version of Mark My Words,
- fully functional but limited to 32 launches. The full unrestricted
- commercial release can be obtained from Greg Swann at:
-
- gswann@kagi.com
-
- or
-
- gswann@primenet.com
-
- or
-
- Greg Swann
- 3608 West Cochise Drive
- Phoenix, AZ 85051
-
- Licenses are sold per machine, with a single license costing $50;
- 2-10 licenses are $45 each; and for 11 or more licenses you're
- better off buying a site license. All of this is explained in the
- registration software supplied with this archive.
-
- Why is this version DemoWare? As with everything in my life, there
- is philosophy here: I don't like crippled software. I don't think
- much of ShareWare. And I almost never buy "a pig in a poke". In
- deciding on a marketing scheme, I looked for something that would be
- most appealing to _me_, were I in your shoes. This is what I've come
- up with: a fully functional demo that lets you _find out_ if Mark My
- Words is a useful tool in your working environment. If it is (and
- obviously _I_ think it will be), then pay me. If it isn't, then
- ditch it when it starts to offer to make coupons for you as a
- full-time gig. A good deal all around, I think: no guilt for you, no
- guilting for me; maybe useful software for you, maybe useful money
- for me (grin).
-
- Mark My Words, its source and executable code, and this poor excuse
- for a manual are Copyright (C) 1998 by Greg Swann. All rights are
- most emphatically reserved.
-
- The unrestricted (non-DemoWare) version of Mark My Words is licensed
- for use on one machine by the person who paid for it. If you didn't
- pay for it, please do! I am one person, with a long-suffering
- family, not Conglomerated MegaSoft (not to imply that there's any
- virtue in ripping _them_ off!).
-
- Mark My Words is delivered "as is", without any warranties,
- expressed or implied. It is not warranted to be useful _to_ anyone,
- _for_ anything, and in no wise am I to be held responsible for any
- unfortunate consequences resulting from its use or misuse. And I
- _hate_ having to say things like that. I do my best to write useful,
- simple, elegant, bug-free solutions to difficult problems. If you
- take it into your head that I represent your big chance to "strike
- it rich", you will pay a lot in legal fees to discover that you have
- miscalculated.
-
- And: to those to whom the above disclaimers do not apply: forgive me
- for having to make them. It's _you_ whom I'm working for, for pay or
- for free. I appreciate your patronage and your support, and I wish
- we all could just comb the others out of our hair...
-
- (Hey, it's a real 'personal' software company! (grin))
-
-
-
- 3. Using Mark My Words: the big picture...
-
- Mark My Words works on batches of files by Drag & Drop (under System
- 7 or above) or interactively from its main dialog (the Open...
- button). Drag & Drop operation is relatively smart. In practice, the
- program will only stay resident in memory if you are demonstrably
- interacting with it. If you are doing no more than D&D batches, it
- will quit at the end of each batch. Works like this:
-
- D&D only: Quits
-
- Double-click launch, then D&D: Quits
-
- Double-click launch, then Open...: Stays resident
-
- Double-click launch, hit any setting/menu, then D&D: Stays resident
-
- We did it this way so that, if you are making temporary changes to
- settings, you can still D&D, _but_ if you are just doing a D&D batch
- (the likely normal procedure), MMW will get out of memory without
- any effort on your part (nothing worse than having to Quit from a
- bunch of small things to permit PhotoShop to launch).
-
- Whatever the current state of your settings, you can get a Text Only
- translation by holding down the Option key at the time that
- execution begins. With the Open... button, you would hold down
- Option as you hit the button. With a D&D batch, you would hold it
- down as the batch begins. The override of the settings will affect
- only that file or batch.
-
- Mark My Words has a very large footprint in memory. Every major
- decision came down in favor of speed, so we are consistently trading
- memory for speed. The consequences are these: MMW is _substantially_
- faster than WL+, even though it's doing a _lot_ more; and it eats
- memory in big bites: the minimum memory required is approximately
- 384K + (sizeOfFile * 4). We ship with a 768K default, which is
- adequate for most files. If a file is too large, you'll get an Alert
- telling you how much to allocate.
-
- The Preferences menu is familiar to anyone who's used anything
- recent by me. "Restore defaults" restores all controls to their
- "factory" default settings. "Restore saved prefs" resets all
- controls to their state at the last time the preferences were saved.
- And "Save preferences" saves the currently established settings;
- these are the settings that you will see with subsequent launches
- and after you hit "Restore saved prefs".
-
- Where appropriate, CMD-C (Copy), CMD-X (Cut) and CMD-V (Paste) work,
- even though there is no Edit menu.
-
- The settings in the dialogs are fairly self-explanatory. Everything
- is driven by the pop-ups in the Mark My Words Settings dialog box.
- Operations can be controlled in a gross fashion with the pop-ups,
- and, where appropriate, finer adjustments can be made in
- sub-dialogs.
-
- The Output format pop-up is interesting. Text Only is obvious.
- XPress Tags is also familiar enough. But we are also, optionally,
- parsing to Em Software's Xtags, a superset of XPress Tags. The
- effect of other switches within the dialogs will depend on the state
- of this pop-up. For example, if you have Retain Pictures checked,
- embedded pictures will be saved to disk. If you are writing XPress
- Tags, it will be up to you to get those pictures into Quark. But if
- you are writing Xtags, we're plugging in Xtags coding to embed the
- picture in the stream. (Necessarily, pictures are never other than
- PICTs (i.e., RIP-crashers), because that's all that Word will store;
- they are named intelligently ("YourFileName¶001", etc.) and live in
- the same folder as the _original_ Word source file; with Xtags, the
- size, scaling, and aspect ratios are maintained, but you are advised
- to examine them to make sure they'll fit in your text link.)
-
- In the same respect, the effects of tables and other in-line
- elements depend on your choice of formats. With Xtags, we are doing
- as much as possible to maintain the original coding. As above,
- you'll need to make sure that things fit.
-
- And: this may seem like overkill, given that most people don't use
- these features of Word. They're included because: 1. some people
- _do_, and 2. given that we now have a convenient way of doing this
- stuff (by means of Xtags), it seems reasonable to suppose that we'll
- find ways of taking better advantage of these features. For example,
- Word's multi-cell tables, in conjunction with Xtags and Torquemada,
- give us a way of producing side-by-side tables such as we haven't
- seen in a while. (Take note that this feature is not supported by
- Quark's Word filter.)
-
- IMPORTANT: a Word file converted by Mark My Words to Xtags will
- choke the XPress Tags filter and vice versa. In theory, these two
- Xtensions are identical except for the Xtags extensions to the
- XPress Tags language. In practice, there are subtle differences,
- with the result that an MMW file written for one filter will not be
- compatible with the other. Not such a big deal: you just have to
- remember to use the filter you selected in MMW.
-
- Output file type enables you to select the creator type of the TEXT
- files MMW will produce. This is one of those features that's more
- icing than cake, in my opinion. It means that you can double-click
- on a file created by MMW and have your editor of choice launch,
- instead of Mark My Words or the editor of _my_ choice (BBEdit). But:
- given that we live in the age of Drag & Drop (don't we?),
- double-click access to your editor is less vitally necessary than it
- was under System 6.
-
- The Style sheets pop-up lets you control how much of Word's style
- definitions go out to the new file. Include definition writes out
- the full definition at the start of the file with any
- omitted/unsupported values omitted, which means they'll default to
- Quark's values for the BasedOn style. We surmise that people can
- have changed their default Normal in Quark, and, moreover, Normal
- can't be redefined from tags. So when we Include definition, we are
- showing Word's Normal as WordNormal=[S"Normal"]. That way, if there
- are exceptions to Word's Normal, they'll be preserved in the
- definition when the file gets to Quark. And if you've made changes
- to Quark's Normal, those will be retained where they are not
- overridden by exceptions in WordNormal. Note that all other styles
- BasedOn No Style continue to be BasedOn No Style. Also: when we are
- defining styles, we don't know yet if that style is actually used in
- the text. So all defined styles are shown, and you may want to chop
- some out prior to Getting Text.
-
- Include name shows only the name of the style as it is called in the
- text. This is the one to use if you want to retain Word's naming
- convention, but expect to write all the style sheets in Quark (which
- policy is recommended). In this instance, Word's Normal is shown as
- Normal (i.e., BasedOn No Style), since there are no exceptions to
- preserve.
-
- All to normal ignores all style definitions and calls and simply
- shows everything in the Normal style (which is either Quark's or
- your own edited default).
-
- Ignore completely ignores styles, period. Use this when you have
- edited a previously Marked file and want to leave the styles alone.
-
- The next three pop-ups are where the bullet hits the bone. And they
- demonstrate rather nicely, I think, why Shane and I deserve to win
- the award for User Interface design of the year (grin). What's going
- on is this: by means of these pop-ups, you can effect either
- wholesale or retail control over the conversion. "Retain all",
- "Retain defaults" and "Omit all" are wholesale controls, while
- "Custom settings..." permits you to tailor the conversion to your
- needs and tastes.
-
- This is slick and quick. It keeps the number of choices in the main
- dialog to a manageable minimum and gives less-experienced users a
- lot of control without requiring a lot of hirsute knowledge. But
- there is more at work here: we are actually storing and accessing
- the settings in two ways. If you go into a "Custom settings..."
- sub-dialog and make some changes, then hit Okay, then change that
- pop-up to "Retain all", then "Save preferences", what will happen is
- this: both the settings in "Custom settings..." and the state of the
- pop-up will be saved as preferences for future use. When you convert
- a file, the state of the pop-up ("Retain all") will be honored, but
- the settings you established within the "Custom settings..."
- sub-dialog will persist, ready for easy access with the pop-up when
- you need them. There's a similar kind of speed-up going on _inside_
- the "Custom settings..." sub-dialogs by means of the "All on", "All
- off" and "Prefs" buttons. Mark My Words is very fast at doing its
- job, converting Word files to Tagged text. But it's also designed to
- be very quick in its User Interface.
-
- This is global information about the effect of the settings for the
- "Paragraph styling", "Character styling" and "Ancillary coding"
- pop-ups:
-
- Retain all treats all check boxes as checked, treats all pop-ups as
- though the second selection were picked, and enables all text edit
- regions as their current settings. Retain defaults uses the factory
- defaults, which is what you see if you Restore Defaults then examine
- "Custom settings...". "Custom settings..." presents a dialog in
- which you can change things to your liking. Omit all treats all
- check boxes as unchecked, treats all pop-ups as though the first
- selection were picked, and ignores the contents of the text edit
- regions.
-
- Within a "Custom settings..." sub-dialog, the "All on" button treats
- all check boxes as checked, treats all pop-ups as though the second
- selection were picked, and ignores the text edit regions. The "All
- off" button treats all check boxes as unchecked, treats all pop-ups
- as though the first selection were picked, and ignores the text edit
- regions. The "Prefs" button resets all controls, including the text
- edit regions, to their state when "Save preferences" was last
- selected.
-
- Repeating: the custom settings are honored _only_ if the "parent"
- pop-up is set to "Custom settings..." If you make changes, hit OK,
- then select Retain all, the custom settings will be preserved but
- ignored during conversions, with the Retain all settings being used
- instead.
-
- The "Paragraph styling: Custom settings..." is the simplest of the
- bunch: L&R indents, Leading, Alignment, Space before/after, Keep
- w/next, First Line indents, and Tab settings are all obvious.
-
- Important note about tabs: Word stores up to 50 tabs positions per
- paragraph, while Quark stores only 20. One Word tab (the vertical
- bar) can't be coded in Quark, so that saves us some slots. But: when
- we get to the 21st tab we're done; no others are (or can be)
- preserved. Moreover, the XPress Tags filter (as of version 1.5)
- inadvertently throws away the 20th tab, so, in effect, with XPress
- Tags (as of this writing) you have only 19 tabs; with Xtags, you
- have the full 20.
-
- For Keep together we are ignoring Word, which asks for <*ktA>, and
- showing <*kt(2,2)> instead; the change reflects the difference
- between word processing and desktop publishing.
-
- Rules/Borders is a mutant: it's based on the Borders style in Word.
- If a Border is established in a style's definition, we are showing
- it as either a rule above and/or rule below, which means that the
- rule(s) will show up in every paragraph in that style; nothing we
- can do about that, since it comes with the style. However, when a
- border is specified as an exception, we are showing the rule above
- only above the first paragraph affected, and the rule below only
- after the last paragraph, thus simulating as much as possible the
- effect of the box in the original file. Since Word users can be way
- stupid with boxes, and since, most often, their emphasis is entirely
- redundant, my advice is to turn this off. At best, it flags
- paragraphs thought worthy of emphasis by the WP operator.
-
- There are a few things to discuss in "Character styling: Custom
- settings..." Style changes, Size changes, Font changes, and Color
- changes are obvious.
-
- The encapsulated font look-up table is used with Word 5.x files, so
- you'll get true font names even though the fonts may not be loaded
- or their numbers may be different. The font procedure for 4.0 files
- is the same as that documented with WL+ - local system name if
- fontID is loaded, fontID as text if not; that's what there is to go
- by, alas.
-
- The colors are the same brain-dead colors as in WL+ - nothing for
- it, since that's all the colors there are.
-
- Tracking changes: we're preserving this, but it's less than
- perfectly useful. Word "tracks" with absolute values expressed in
- quarter-points, range -7 to +56 quarter points. Too big for small
- sizes, too small for big sizes, too stupid for words. We are
- translating quarter points directly to Quark relative units. This is
- not always awful, but it does always require follow-up scrutiny.
-
- Super/subscript are translated Greg's way: <V> or <V->, IOW Superior
- or Superior/Subscript. This seems to me to work better than Quark's
- Superscript and Subscript styles, which I find to be too horsey, and
- which frequently crash with the lines above and below. I have my
- preferences set this way: 33% offset and 50% horizontal and vertical
- scaling. Word uses pseudo-sub/superscripts in places (e.g.,
- footnotes referenced by text instead of counters), and these are
- treated as any other styled text (which is what they are).
-
- In the pop-ups: Hidden text: Omit throws it away. Retain retains the
- Hidden text as text, with no additional styling. Shade 0% retains it
- shaded 0, the way WL+ did it. Strike-thru retains it in the </>
- style. This option is there for this reason: Word's Table of
- Contents and Indexing tools use Hidden text, of course. If you elect
- to retain these features, you need some way of getting at the hidden
- entries. </> is a very uncommon styling option (with good reason!),
- so I selected it as a way of flagging this stuff. Why? I have hopes
- that some enterprising Xtension developer will take advantage of
- this free mark-up to write TOC and Indexing for Quark.
-
- The Underlines conversion is pretty straightforward. Word has four
- types of underlines, while Quark has only two. The deficit is hardly
- to Quark's disadvantage - when was the last time you had a burning
- need for a dotted underline? In any case, each of Word's underline
- types can be either Ignored (i.e., passed as plain text), converted
- to Italic, converted to the Underline style, or converted to the
- Word Underline style. By default, Mark My Words converts all of
- Word's undlerlines to Italic, since this is usually what is meant
- (in DTP terms) by underscored text.
-
- Ancillary coding... is where the rubber meets the road. You may be
- asking yourself, "Why all this damned UI?" The reason is this: if
- you know what you're doing, you can control every little last thing.
- If you don't, we're trying to make it easy for you to stay out of
- trouble. Ancillary coding... is the home of the stuff that it's
- fairly dangerous to play with (grin).
-
- TOC entries and Index entries are discussed above. These switches
- control whether or not the Contents and Index subdocuments and the
- Index/TOC markers (".i.", ".c.") will be emitted into the text
- stream.
-
- Page breaks allows or disallows page breaks (expressed as <\c>) in
- the text, including the Page Break Before styling command.
-
- Headers/Footers controls whether or not these subdocuments will be
- emitted into the text stream.
-
- Date/Time entries permits or forbids the insertion of text
- translations of Word's date/time variables. If checked, the dates
- and times will reflect the time of the conversion. This feature
- takes account of your current Control Panels settings for dates and
- times, so, presumably, they'll be dancing in the streets of old
- Budapest tonight...
-
- Footnotes allows or disallows inclusion of the footnotes
- subdocument. Calls to footnotes in the text will remain, as is, in
- the text.
-
- In-line pictures is Xtags coolness #1. If there are pictures in the
- file, if this box is checked, and if the output format is Xtags, the
- pictures will be saved to disk as PhotoShop PICTs and the
- appropriate Xtags coding will be plugged into the text. If the
- format is XPress Tags, the pictures will be saved to disk, but the
- user will be responsible for placing them. Equations made with
- Word's equations editor are encapsulated QuickDraw PICTs, which
- means they can be edited with a QuickDraw editor like MacDraw or
- Canvas, and they will produce device-independent, object-oriented
- images. Likewise, since PICTuresque can create PICTs with
- encapsulated PostScript, this feature is at least slightly more than
- interesting window dressing (grin).
-
- In-line text boxes is Xtags coolness #2. This controls what happens
- with Word's in-line tables and Word 5.1's (incredibly stupid) drop
- caps. If checked, if Xtags, in-line text boxes will be parsed into
- Xtags boxes with the appropriate coding. The boxes are sized
- arbitrarily, so you'll either have to drag them out by hand or write
- Torque sets to change them. If not Xtags, in-line text is emitted as
- styled text. In the case of tables, cell and row boundaries are
- flagged with tabs.
-
- MMW comments inserts readable comments into the text, where
- appropriate, if a feature is turned off. For instance, if Date/Time
- entries is turned off, and a date is found, the text "{{Date}}" is
- inserted at that spot. If you don't want comments inserted, uncheck
- this box. This is the list of possible comments:
-
- {{Table cell}}
-
- {{In-line box}}
-
- {{Picture: NameOfFile¶000}} <-XPress Tags
-
- {{Picture}} <-Text Only
-
- {{Date}}
-
- {{Time}}
-
- {{Page number}}
-
- {{Footnote separator}}
-
- {{Footnote continuation}}
-
- {{Formula}} <-refers to formula glossary text not equations
-
- Many of the Ancillary coding switches, including MMW comments, have
- meaning even in a Text Only translation. For example, if Date/Time
- entries is checked, then the dates and times will be converted. If
- not, but MMW comments _is_, then the comment will be inserted. IOW,
- Text Only means what it says: any controls that would create new
- XPress tags are disabled, but the others remain in effect unless
- explicitly switched off.
-
- Below all this are two text edit regions, one for the default XPress
- Tags version tag, which is also honored by Xtags, and one for the
- default Xtags translation table. Note that either of these can be
- "switched off" merely by deleting the text. Note also that each, if
- present, is inserted anew into a file, each time it passes through
- Mark My Words. So, if you mark a file, then take it back to Word for
- further editing, then mark it again, the old version and Xtags &tt2
- tags will be ripped out and replaced by whatever is the currently
- established default. FWIW, while the version tag for 3.2 will be
- 1.6, MMW is writing XPress Tags 1.5/Xtags 1.0 compliant tags. Filter
- 1.6 offers very little new coding, and most of it is not relevant to
- Word. The only 1.6 construct in MMW is
- [S"BasedOnStyle","NextStyle"], used only in XPress Tags
- translations. Filter 1.5 ignores this construct, but filter 1.6 will
- accept it _if_ your version tag is set for 1.60.
-
-
-
- 4. Where the bodies are buried...
-
- * I wish I had greater control over the in-line text boxes. I was
- compelled to use arbitrary box sizes because of the idiotic way Word
- stores the sizing information.
-
- * The formula glossary text is far from ideal, largely because Word
- is interpreting formulae on the fly (and has a lot of positioning
- controls Quark doesn't have).
-
- * The Rules/borders solution is the best answer we could come up
- with to an ugly problem.
-
- * As regards running the same text through MMW more than once, the
- feature is robust but not fool-proof. If you're just doing text
- editing, set Style sheets to Ignore. Any character or paragraph
- property exceptions you introduce will be honored, but the style
- sheets won't be parsed. If, OTOH, you want to define new styles, you
- can. Just Include definition. Take note, however, that WordNormal
- and any other default styles you have defined (i.e., present in all
- new documents) will be parsed again. You'll need to go through the
- styles and chop out the replacements. This is important because
- Quark does not redefine styles; the first definition found for a
- particular name is the one used, and later definitions under that
- name are ignored (this, essentially, is why you can't redefine
- Normal).
-
-
-
- 5. Gloats and flourishes...
-
- * Word, like Quark, is massively redundant. We are watching what
- we're doing as we work and we issue styling only where an actual
- change has occurred. No harm comes of writing extremely redundant
- Tags, as does the QXPTags export filter, but doing it this way makes
- things a lot easier on us wetware types.
-
- * If you've used Quark's Word filter, you know that Quark and Word
- do not agree about what happens to character styling at style
- boundaries. Word retains the exceptions, while Quark wipes the slate
- and baselines everything to the style. Taking account of this
- conflict, Mark My Words reissues any pending styling exceptions when
- a style boundary is crossed. IOW, MMW tags behave like the Word
- file, and not like the Word-filter imported text.
-
- * We are doing everything we can to shoehorn Word's 50 tabs into
- Quark's 20 slots. The sequence for an exception is delete, compact,
- add, sort, compact, with the whole point being never to waste a
- slot. Word's (wonderful!) vertical line tab is omitted, of course.
- But, at bottom, when we get to the 21st tab, we're done - the rest
- are tossed.
-
- * It's _real_ fast... (grin)
-
-
-
- 6. Mark My Words in real life...
-
- The mis-selection business works like this: before we apply any
- styling, we are looking at the raw text. Where we spot an open angle
- bracket, we are looking ahead to see if it is legally terminated. If
- it isn't we are insulating it as "<\<>" (the XPress tags way of
- showing an open bracket as text). We are doing the same thing for
- illegal closing angle brackets ("<\>>"). That way, we can be assured
- that every angle bracket found in the text is part of a legal XPress
- tag. Then, when we get around to looking for improperly nested tags
- (e.g., <I<B>>, as shown above), we can easily switch things around
- without worrying that we're hosing good text.
-
- Important: the MMW tag insulation is not as good as XP8's. We're not
- striving to identify improperly formatted tags, but, rather, to
- insulate the genuine impostors. Likewise: unlike XP8, we are not
- doing anything about "@" and "\" when they are used as text.
- Properly, these should be shown as <\@> and <\\>. To be safe(r), you
- should still run the MMW file through XP8. Then use Xtags, of
- course, since, while XPress tags filter 1.6 will be a lot better
- about this than 1.5, Xtags' error-reporting still blows it out of
- the water.
-
- Moreover, you are ever and always on your own when it comes to tags
- that are legal but illogical. If you have this as text:
-
- <<B>>
-
- Mark My Words will know enough to make it look like legal XPress
- tags (<\<><B><\>>), but that <B> in the middle is legal and will
- pass the test of quality in MMW, in XP8, in XPress tags and in
- Xtags. Everything after it will be bold until it is turned off. In
- other words: while software can protect you from obvious,
- identifiable errors, it can never be a substitute for an active
- human intelligence.
-
- On the same planet: if you have a file (like this one) that is
- filled with clearly legal XPress Tags that are _not_ intended to be
- interpreted as XPress Tags, you need to insulate them on your own,
- since no software is going to reject perfectly legal tags. You can
- search for, e.g., "<" and replace with "<\<>", but that seems to me
- to beg for errors. What I do is this: I search for "<" and replace
- with "«" (option-backslash; closing form is shift-option-backslash).
- That keeps approximately the same look, and it's easy enough to
- switch back when I get to XPress. The point is this: if it's not to
- be interpreted as a tag, it can't _look_ like a legal tag.
-
- Next up: Xtags looks for pictures only by absolute path (like
- Quark). I omitted paths in the picture specifications so you _could_
- move the pics if you wanted; otherwise Xtags would insist they
- remain where birthed, and Quark would still only let you move them
- into the same folder as the Quark file without relinking. Ergo, move
- a standing Quark file or Save a new file into the folder where the
- pictures reside prior to doing Get Text With Xtags.
-
- IMPORTANT (and easy to forget): If the Quark file and the pictures
- are not resident in the same folder, Xtags won't find them.
-
- On the point: those Xtags text and picture boxes are cool, but each
- one is a Quark object. That means that each one takes time to
- create, and more time, ever and always, for Quark to manage. A word
- to the wise is sufficient: if you create a file with thousands of
- objects, expect to do a lot of waiting...
-
- And: if you don't have an Xtags translate table, delete the text for
- it in in Ancillary coding and Save Prefs. If no text, no tag. I
- myself have a table named "YourTableName" (grin - but I'm not
- kidding).
-
- Mark My Words will not process Fast Saved files. Sorry. We had
- wanted to do it with this version, but I deliberately walked away
- from it because Word files are entirely too attenuated as it is. If
- you select or D&D a Fast Saved file, MMW will display an Alert then
- get on to the next task.
-
- There are a certain few other occasions where Mark My Words will
- fail (ever gracefully) to process a file. For example, files
- produced by versions of Word earlier than 4.0 are politely refused.
- And: files that are excessively complicated are deflected. In the
- former event, open the file from Word and Save As in a version less
- historic. In the latter case, chop the file up into smaller chunks
- and feed them to MMW in a batch. For reference: a file will be
- refused on the grounds of complexity if it entails more than 8192
- character styling or 8192 paragraph styling changes. This limit is
- eight times that imposed by WordLess Plus, and you may be delighted
- to hear that we haven't been able to hit it in extremely complicated
- testing files weighing in at over a quarter-megabyte. In other
- words, complexity is mostly a non-issue.
-
- Real life: Word plus Mark My Words make a better front end to Quark
- than anything we now have available. In the long run, I intend to
- make something better, but this will do for now. The advantages are
- these: You can draft as Styled Text, using the familiar Keyboard
- Equivalents, as opposed to typing verbose and obscure XPress Tags.
- Moreover, the people who type for you can give you what you need
- without your having to teach them very much. The resultant files can
- be run through Mark My Words, Torquemada, and XP8. And then, if you
- want, you can open them _again_ from Word, do the edits as Styled
- Text, run through Mark My Words again, etc. You can work with tags
- without having to type (and _check!_) each and every one.
-
- If you are lucky enough to have people typing for you who do what
- you say, you can introduce their files to Torquemada and have a
- great deal of the up-front labor of your jobs done for free. For
- example, if some words of a paragraph need to swap out to a PMS
- color, you can have the keyboarder style that text as "Blue", then
- search in Torquemada, replacing "Blue" with the true name of the
- color. Or you can use XP8's mnemonics or a code of your own devising
- to flag special situations and dingbat characters, then use XP8 or
- Torquemada to plug in the true XPress Tags coding.
-
- Unless you turn this feature off, every Mark My Words file begins
- with the XPress Tags version tag ("<v1.60><e0>"). This is included
- because Mark My Words makes use of the Baseline Shift tag ("<bXX>"),
- and Quark varies its interpretation of that tag based on the
- presence or absence of the version tag. Without it, the file is
- interpreted as being a Quark 3.0 file, and the effect of the
- Baseline Shift is inverted (viz., positive values shift down instead
- of up, replicating a bug in the XPress Tags filter that shipped with
- Quark 3.0). If you are still running XPress 3.0 (why?), you will
- need to do two things: lose the version tag and invert the signs of
- all baseline shifts. These Torquemada strings should serve to do
- both:
-
- <v^?^p {nothing} Omit the version tag
-
- -b^# |b^# Mark the negative values
-
- b^# -b^# Invert the positive values
-
- |- {nothing} Remove the marks
-
- In the same neighborhood: the second half of the version tag
- ("<e0>") is a language identifier. If you are working with a
- non-English version of Quark, you may need to change this to the
- code shown when you Save Text as XPress Tags from within Quark.
-
- Likewise: we are converting the QuickDraw colors in Word using their
- English names (e.g., "Black", "Blue"). I don't know if non-English
- versions of Quark tags use non-English names for the QuickDraw
- colors, but, if they do, and if you're competent with ResEdit, you
- can "internationalize" these colors fairly simply by editing STR#
- resource number 133. Change only the literal name of the color,
- leaving the quote marks alone. Sequence is significant, so translate
- the color names "in place" (e.g., "Schwarz" for "Black", not
- "Blue"). If you work in multiple languages, you can spawn versions
- of MMW, one for each language you use. Presumably, nothing else
- about XPress tags is language-sensitive, but if that turns out not
- to be the case, do please let me know. We strive to make our
- software as international as possible, and we fail through ignorance
- rather than lack of trying.
-
- And one more: as a default, we are showing Word's numbered footnotes
- in Quark's Superior style. Alas, there is no clear-cut way of
- dealing with footnotes flagged manually with user-supplied text.
- These are being shown the way that Word is storing them. For
- example, they might come across as "<z9.0b3.0>". If you have
- footnotes of both types in the same file, you'll need to search to
- bring them into concordance.
-
- Useful: Word 5.x does an excellent job of filtering a number of
- alien file formats. It sees all its own historical versions, of
- course, plus all of the many version of DOS Word. But it also does a
- great job with, e.g., WordPerfect for Mac and DOS. The best thing to
- do with an alien file is to get it into Word in some way, preferably
- from Word 5.x, from MacLink or Software Bridge otherwise. Then Save
- As a Word 5.x file and run the resultant file through Mark My Words.
- This is the most efficient means you have of retaining the maximum
- amount of supplied paragraph and character formatting.
-
- Eminently nerd-like hack: every piece of software by me that has a
- Preferences menu (Shane the Plane, Clip 'n' Save, ShawBerry, and
- Mark My Words) stores its preferences in the resource fork of the
- software itself. The Default prefs are stored in 'PREF' resource
- 128, and the Saved prefs are stored in PREF 129. When you Save
- preferences, PREF 129 is re-written with your new settings. If you
- are comfortable with ResEdit, you can use it to give yourself two
- sets of stored preferences. Do this (on a _copy_ of Mark My Words,
- of course):
-
- 1. Establish your second-favorite settings and Save preferences.
- Quit.
-
- 2. Open the copy of Mark My Words from ResEdit, and navigate your
- way to PREF 129. Select all and Copy.
-
- 3. Open PREF 128, Select All and Paste. Save and Close the file. The
- two resources are now identical, with both containing your
- second-favorite settings.
-
- 4. Launch Mark My Words again and establish your (first-)favorite
- settings and Save preferences. Now when you do Restore defaults,
- you'll get your second-favorite settings, and when you do Restore
- saved prefs, you'll get your (first-)favorite settings, which will
- also be loaded automatically with every subsequent launch.
-
-
-
- 7. About Greg Swann...
-
- Okay, here's the deal: I'm not just a developer, I'm a user of
- software as well. I make about half of my money doing Desktop
- Publishing. In consequence, I have a pretty clear idea of how to
- focus utilities designed to plug gaps in the functionality of major
- applications. I am quite sure there are a _lot_ of developers
- brighter than I am. But the evidence of experience suggests that few
- of them have my advantage of living on both sides of the line, so to
- speak.
-
- What does this mean?
-
- First, it means that I have written a _lot_ of mission-critical
- utilities in support of the software categories of interest to me:
- file management, font management, automated text processing,
- PostScript-processing, and automated DTP-software preparation. All
- but four of these utilities are FreeWare (the exceptions being Mark
- My Words and the three packages discussed below) and are available
- from Info-Mac and other electronic information services (including
- any service offering access to the Arizona Macintosh User's Group
- BBS-In-A-Box CD-ROM).
-
- Second, it means that if you are likewise interested in these
- software categories, it behooves you to support my work. Fanmail is
- always nice, of course, but remuneration is the sincerest form of
- flattery (grin). Seriously: this is a business, even if a
- microscopically small one. It has been worthwhile so far because the
- other things commanding my attention have not been as lucrative. But
- that is changing (of course, and obviously, _because_ of all the
- software). I can make a _lot_ of money writing custom software for
- contracted clients. And I can streamline my own production work
- without having to monkey-proof and document my tools. So: if I am to
- keep doing this, I have to make it pay. If you _want_ me to keep
- doing it, you have to pay me. It's that simple.
-
- In many ways, retail software is simpler. You pay or you don't play,
- and no one has any illusions. The difference is, the developer needs
- a _much_ larger capital commitment, and he needs to surround himself
- with babbling morons in suits who might - just possibly - be good
- for something other than chuckling about football. Electronically
- distributed software gets around that trap, but introduces the
- problem exposed here: the ambiguity of the sales transaction results
- in a lot of prostrate begging by developers. I don't beg, but I
- don't work for free except on my own terms for my own good reasons.
-
- There are three possible "futures" for authors of electronically
- distributed software. 1. The rewards do not justify the effort, so
- the author goes and plays tennis or something. 2. The author
- produces software as an after-work hobby and continues to do so more
- or less irrespective of user-response (some of the best and worst
- FreeWare comes out of this category). 3. The author's growing
- reputation results in him getting more contracted custom programming
- work, worth more money, to the point that he no longer has time to
- produce electronically distributed software.
-
- It is the last that is happening to me, and this is why you need to
- support my work, if you want it to continue. I'll do all right
- whether I'm working on problems that confront you or on the problems
- of some corporation. But: if you are using software by me that has a
- commercial version (and all of them are discussed here), and if you
- want me to _continue_ thinking about your problems, rather than the
- problems of Consolidated MediCalc - you know what to do...
-
- These are my commercial programs:
-
- XP8 - a very intelligent file filter that cleans up and makes the
- filthiest text QuarkXPress-ready. Among many other features, it
- offers DOS-file reformatting, financial-text clean-up, garbage
- disposal, typographic quality enhancement, and the best quote
- conversion we know of. The ShareWare version of XP8 (v1.0.0) can be
- found in CompuServe's Desktop Publishing Forum (GO DTPFORUM),
- Library 5, under the name XP8.SEA or in the Info-Mac archives as
- GST-XP8Demo.sit. The current commercial version is v1.0.7 and offers
- a great many enhancements over the ShareWare version.
-
- Torquemada The Inquisitor - batch global search and replace software
- with wildcards, pattern matching, string substitution, et very
- cetera. With Drag & Drop under System 7 and above, you can run up to
- 640 searches on up to 128 files in one batch. Features the most
- intelligent case-conversion we know of. The most-recent FreeWare
- version (1.1.0) can be found under the name TORQUE.SEA in Library 5
- or in the Info-Mac archives as GST-TorqueDemo.sit. The current
- commercial version is 1.3.0, offering a great many enhancements,
- including new "wildthings" and a _lot_ of new User Interface power.
- The commercial version ships with Torquemada's Ghost, a scriptable,
- backgroundable Torquemada. A DemoWare version of Torquemada's Ghost
- is available as TGHOST.SEA in Library 5 or in the Info-Mac archives
- as GST-TGhostDemo.sit.
-
- Shane the Plane 2.0.2 - file and font attribute editing utility.
- Interactively or in Drag & Drop batches, permits you to change the
- Creator/Type of files, their created/modified dates and times, a
- host of significant Finder flags, plus a lot more. Makes files
- invisible/visible, makes fonts behave like files by removing their
- BNDL resources, batch "pastes" custom icons, intelligently renames
- and/or "slugs" files, et very cetera. A demonstration version (fully
- functional but limited to 32 launches) can be found in Library 12
- under the name SPDEMO.SEA or in the Info-Mac archives as
- GSU-STPDemo.sit.
-
- Mark My Words - a very elaborate MS-Word binary to QuarkXPress Tags
- text filter. It eats Word 4.0, 5.0 or 5.1 files, interactively or by
- Drag & Drop, and converts the binary to QuarkXPress tagged text. You
- can elect to include or omit any feature of Word's styling, and many
- features can be converted from their WP-like form to their DTP-like
- form (e.g., underscoring to italic). With Em Software's Xtags
- Xtension, picture and text boxes (including Word's tables) can be
- retained. A demonstration version (fully functional but limited to
- 32 launches) can be found in Library 12 under the name MMWDEM.SEA or
- in the Info-Mac archives as GST-MMWDemo.sit.
-
- (While I've vectored all the files toward CIS and the internet, my
- primary haunt, they are also available on other services, and on any
- BBS which has the most recent version of AMUG's BBS-In-A-Box CD-ROM
- on line.)
-
- All of these programs are sold on the same terms: (US)$50 each, per
- license. Two to 10 licenses are $45 each. For 11 or more licenses
- you're better off buying a site license. All of this is explained in
- the registration software supplied with this archive.
-
- These programs are included on the distribution disk for the
- unrestricted version of Mark My Words:
-
- * Mark My Words v1.0.0 - discussed here at some length (!)
-
- * XP8 v1.0.0 - ShareWare version of the commercial software
-
- * Torquemada the Inquisitor v1.1.0 - FreeWare version of the
- commercial software
-
- * A Sort of a Kind - very fast, very robust text file sorting
- utility
-
- * FontFischer - font specimen book creation utility
-
- * PixPex - Drag & Drop Xtags picture box creation utility
-
- * ShawBerry - text file merging utility
-
- Plus some other stuff...
-
-
-
- 8. Conclusion...
-
- Jeez, haven't you had _enough_...? (grin)
-
- Seriously: that's it. If you have any questions or problems, the
- easiest way to get hold of me is by email at:
-
- gswann@kagi.com
-
- If you can't do that, you can snail mail me at:
-
- Greg Swann
- 3608 West Cochise Drive
- Phoenix, AZ 85051
-
-
-
- Very Best,
-
-
-
- Greg Swann
-
- 8/1/98
-