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1992-05-03
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Celerity User Documentation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This file is a brief explanation of a few features of Celerity which would be
of value to any user of Celerity. It should also help illuminate some of the
more complex features.
1. Configuring your account.
2. The command prompts.
3. Color "pipe" commands.
4. The QWK reader.
Afterword
Configuring Your Account
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Celerity BBS features a high level of configurability not only for sysops, but
for users as well. From the configuration section, users can tailor the BBS'
interface to their specifications by enabling and disabling features, changing
colors, and selecting areas to scan for newscans.
The configuration section is made up of five distinctly seperate sections.
The general configuration screen, the personal data screen, the newscan
configuration screen, the feature toggles, and the file listing setup.
The General Configuration Screen is characterized by terminal-specific
functions. At the upper left of the screen are sections for terminal
emulation (TTY (none), VT52, Atari VT52, VT100, ANSI, and Avatar are currently
supported), display length (24 or 49 lines standard), whether or not your
terminal requires linefeeds, and a toggle for the help level (explained
below).
Below this are selections for the eight colors used by Celerity. The first
seven are usually some color (1-15) on black, and the eighth color is an
inverse color (non-black background). There is no rule against having other
colors be inverse, however. Note that for users of Hercules/MDA adapters will
find some color selections indicitive of underlining. TTY and VT52 have no
color control, and Atari VT52 and VT100 have limited color control.
On the lower left of the general configuration screen are commands for linking
other configuration pages.
The Personal Data Screen allows users to edit their age, mailing address, user
note, signature, and password. The user note is shown to other users on posts
from you, and in a listing of users. The signature will be appended to posts
and email.
The Newscan Configuration Screen allows you to define two types of newscans:
the global newscan, which scans all selected message bases then all selected
file sections, and the detailed conference configuration. The main screen for
this section lists both the message and transfer conferences, and allows you
to type a key (1-5) to include that conference in your global scan. The [T]
key toggles between transfers and message conferences.
Typing [D] will take you to the detailed conference configuration. This
enables you to specify the individual sub-boards in each message conference
that you wish to scan, and those you want to skip. Note that when new subs
are added to the board, they are NOT scanned by default.
The feature toggles dialog contains a list of ten features which can be
adjusted to your preferences:
1: Use Color. If you use the VT100, ANSI, or Avatar terminal emulations, you
can enjoy color in nearly all portions of the BBS. For some people, the
color is too garish. For others, color slows the data transmission down
too much. Turning this option OFF will make the BBS function in a
monochrome mode.
2: Editor Type. This option allows you to select between a normal line-based
editor and a limited full screen editor.
3: Prompt Format. Prompts can be "normal", where they appear a line or two
below the last bit of text displayed before the prompt, or they may be
"floating". A floating prompt always positions itself at the bottom of
your screen. Again, some users prefer floating prompts, some prefer non-
floating. Experiment to see which you prefer.
4: Key input. This option allows you to toggle between normal and "single-
key" input. See the section on "Command Prompts" below for more details.
5: Linefeeds. This duplicates the selection on the main configuration
screen.
6: Scan Network Subs. If you are a user on multiple boards carrying
CelerityNet, you probably only want to read messages on the one you call
most frequently. Although you may skip them individually by de-selecting
them in the detailed scan, this is a quick and easy toggle to skip the
networked subs in your newsans.
7: Update QWK message pointers. If you use the QWK message handler (see the
section on it below), you may want messages exported to a QWK packet to be
marked as "read" on the BBS. To do so, you must enable this option.
8: Multinode Chat Paging. On systems with multiple nodes, there are times
when other users incessantly page you for a chat. If you do not want to
acknowledge these chat requests, you can flip this option off and you will
not see their chat requests.
9: Use Yes/No prompts. Celerity has a unique Yes/No toggle which can be
selected by pressing Y, N, or the space bar. This is a flashy feature
which looks nice, but isn't enjoyed by all users. This option will
commute the flashy Yes/No prompts to a simple "Y/n"-type prompt.
10: Help Level. Celerity caters to users of varying degrees of familiarity
and skill with the software. At the "Expert" level, users are presented
with bare prompts, and must type a question mark (?) to see a menu or an
area/conference list. At the "Intermediate" level, users are shown area
lists when they change xfer or message areas, or when they change
conferences. They must still type a question mark (?) to see a full menu.
At the "Novice" level, users are given area lists, and are given a list of
available key commands available at a certain prompt. A question mark
brings up the normal menu. If a user selects the "Beginner" level, a
full (or abreviated beginner) menu is displayed at every prompt, and area
lists are always given. The higher help levels (Novice and Beginner) can
be helpful to users who are just starting to use the software, but can
become an annoyance rapidly. Make sure you know how to change the help
level.
The final configuration screen is the file list configuration. This was
another unique Celerity feature which has since spread to many other software
packages due to its intrinsic value. This feature allows users to select
which data they wish to see in file listings, as there is more data than can
be displayed in a single line. Users may select file name, extension, program
name (very helpful for multiple-file uploads of the same program), file size,
file download cost, date uploaded, who uploaded it, the disk nuost, dconfs. I, was
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