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- Columbus.txt
- Text of the Columbus Demo
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 1.
-
- Welcome to MAPIT's Columbus Demo
-
- To gain an overview of MAPIT, click each successively numbered
- triangle with the Left Mouse button to follow MAPIT's Columbus Demo.
-
- Data behind a triangle is called "hidden text" and can be viewed by
- clicking on the triangle with the Left Mouse button. Clicking again
- hides the text.
-
- You can also print and follow along from the text of the demo found
- in the file COLUMBUS.DOC.
-
- The data you are now reading was copied from the file COLUMBUS.MP3
- into EXTENDED.MP3 for display by MAPIT. When you've finished with
- the Columbus Demo, remove it by deleting EXTENDED.MP3
-
- The top of the screen has Mouse-activated pull down menus.
-
- The bottom of the screen holds the MAPIT status line displaying Zoom
- Factor, the approximate map scale, the distance across the center of
- the screen, and the Latitude/Longitude of the Mouse pointer. Sometimes
- command instructions or information are written to this status line.
-
- Click the Mouse once to exit this window and again on triangle 2 to
- begin the Columbus Demo.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 2.
-
- Let's follow Columbus's 1492 journey by zooming in on the
- Atlantic Ocean bounded by points 3 and 4 (Hudson Bay and The
- Sahara).
-
- Choose menu option "ZOOM/In by Corners" and DRAG the Mouse from
- point 3 through point 4.
-
- Dragging the Mouse involves moving the mouse to a point (corner),
- depressing the Left Button, dragging the mouse with the button
- STILL PRESSED to the second point (corner), and finally releasing
- the button. (If you press and release the button without moving
- the mouse, nothing happens.)
-
- Now zoom in between points 3 and 4.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 3.
-
- Zooming in reveals additional details: major rivers, national
- borders, and state borders in the US.
-
- The status line shows a zoom factor between 3 and 4 and a central
- screen width covering about 5000 miles.
-
- Measure the distance of Columbus's total journey from Spain to
- the Canaries to the Bahamas by choosing TOOLS/Distance and
- depressing and dragging the mouse from one point to the next,
- releasing at each point. (This gives a Great Circle distance,
- not that of a constant-compass-bearing straight line.)
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 4.
-
- If you should want to express the distance of Columbus's
- transatlantic leg, some 3600 miles, in either nautical miles or
- kilometers, choosing DISPLAY/Statute Miles gives you the
- alternates in a third-level menu.
-
- Note that choosing one immediately updates the status line.
- You'll have to make the distance measurement over.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 5.
-
- MAPIT enables you to navigate over the face of the globe by ZOOM
- and POSITION.
-
- ZOOM controls the zoom factor - the width of the displayed area
- and POSITION, where the displayed area is centered.
-
- You can POSITION by Centering, Dragging, or by entering explicit
- Latitude/Longitude coordinates.
-
- Choose POSITION/Center and click on the New World end of the
- Columbus voyage (approximately 24 N, 74 W according to the status
- line).
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 6.
-
- The background latitude/longitude grid, which is painted on your
- screen in gray, can be hard to see unless your terminal controls
- are adjusted just right. This grid can be toggled on and off
- with DISPLAY/GRID. Toggle it off, noting that the command takes
- effect immediately.
-
- Similarly turn off the Political labels from the DISPLAY menu.
-
- Country and state names don't immediately disappear. Choose
-
- ZOOM/Redisplay to redraw the screen.
-
- Go to 6A.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 6A.
-
- Draw a circle 2,000 miles in diameter centered on Cuba using the
- TOOLS/Circle menu. (Tools/Fast circle may work better if your
- computer doesn't have a math coprocessor.) As you drag the mouse
- increasing the circle's radius, notice that the radius appears in
- the foot's lower left corner. The area within the circle is also
- displayed. (You are witnessing a fact which disturbed the
- President during the early 1960's.)
-
-
- Why isn't the circle circular as it increases in size? You are
-
- witnessing distortion in the higher latitudes due to the map's
-
- Mercator projection. Later try measuring large circles and
-
- distances at the Standard World (Zoom = 1). As curves flip over
-
- the poles, they do strange things.
-
- Go to 6B.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 6B.
-
- MAPIT supports two forms of output: .PCX screen dumps and HP-GL/2
- plotter output.
-
-
- Create a .PCX file by choosing TOOLS/Plot PCX. You can plot
- either full or partial screen and can, if you so desire, invert
- (turn black to white) before plotting the screen. At a later
- time (or now if you're running MAPIT in a Windows' DOS box and
- opt to ALT TAB to another task) you can import the newly created
- .PCX file into a paint brush program for further processing or
- output to your printer. (Children love flood-filling the oceans
- blue in paint.)
-
-
- Plot HP-GL/2 supports more detailed pen plotter type output to
- either files, HP LaserJet III laser printers, or pen plotters.
- You can import HP-GL/2 files into more advanced word processors
- (e.g. MS Word for Windows ver 2.0c) to create high-quality
- compound documents.
-
-
- Go to 6C.
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 6C.
-
- There are several ways to ZOOM. You've already ZOOMed/In by
- Corners which changes both the zoom factor and the center of the
- screen. You can ZOOM/In by or Out by a Factor, such as 2. You
- can ZOOM/To Standard World, the initial whole-world display
- centered on lat/long 0 0.
-
- Don't confuse ZOOM/To Factor X with ZOOM/To Scale X. Scale is an
- inverse relationship with respect to zoom factor and will give
- unexpected large zooms if small numbers are entered.
-
- Choose ZOOM/To Factor X and enter "40" to move in.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 7.
-
- The first thing you probably noticed was the lack of detail in
- the islands. They look like narrow triangles! A considerable
- amount of data is required to support even a moderate zoom of 40.
- The shareware version you're using supports a world-wide zoom of
- only 6. Even the MAPIT Basic World Data supports only zoom 24.
- (These islands, however, look much better at that detail.) Notice
- that Cuba, supporting detail to approximately 750, is provided as
- an example of the Detailed Data optionally available by continent
- with MAPIT.
-
- The Morrison Track of Columbus's voyage supports the traditional
- landfall on San Salvador (Watling Island). See hidden text
- following the landfall date for the source of the alternate site
- and Judge Track.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 7A.
-
- You can move figures (simple line drawings) to new locations
- quite easily.
-
- Move Columbus's ship figure by choosing the EDIT/Change/figure
- menu options, dragging a rectangle around the ship to select it,
- and selecting Move from the figure change menu.
-
- Cross hairs appear at the "origin" point of the ship figure. If
- you pressed the left mouse button without moving the mouse, the
- ship would go right back where it originally was. Move the
- cross hairs to a new location and press the left button. You've
- moved the ship!
-
- Choose POSITION/Drag to move that portion of Cuba at the lower
- left of your screen where Columbus landed to the center of your
- screen. Do this by clicking on your point of interest and
- dragging it to the screen's center.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 8.
-
- Notice the cities of Cuba. The ones marked by stars are
- provincial capitals. (Havana, the national capital, is off the
- screen to the north west.) Selecting a city with the Left Mouse
- button displays that city's population.
-
- If cities of all sizes were always displayed, they would clutter
- the screen beyond recognition. Therefore cities are made visible
- by zoom factor according to size.
-
- zoom min size
-
- 10 500,000 or national capital
- 30 50,000
- 300 5,000
- 750 all (Italic font)
-
- You can display city markers only or completely ignore cities
- altogether. Choose DISPLAY/Cities and "City markers only" from
- the third menu level. Then repaint the screen by choosing
- ZOOM/Redisplay.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 9.
-
- The Tab key has a special meaning in MAPIT. It will toggle you
- back and forth between your current position and your last one.
-
- Enter the Tab key twice.
-
- You can also save up to 36 locations with the regular alphabetic
- and numeric keys. Choose "POSITION/Save as" and enter the letter
- "A". The current location is now saved in "A".
-
- Tab to the last location and then enter "A". You will find
- yourself right back "here". Unlike the tab key, however, "A"
- will always bring you back to "here" unless you redefine "A".
-
- ZOOM/In by Corners on the small bay on the southeastern shore of
- Cuba south of Guantanamo near 20N 75W. (You may need to select
- cities of all sizes back on.)
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 10.
-
- The US Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, American's toe-hold in Cuba,
- is delineated by a red international border.
-
- ZOOM/In by Corners to that the naval reservation fills the entire
- screen. This will put you at a zoom factor of about 2500.
-
- Zoom in and investigate the two areas named Fonts and Colors.
- Then look at hidden text 11.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 11.
-
- You can choose from one of seven different style type faces each
- time you enter stroked text. Face One, because of its
- simplicity, is the default. Face Seven is a complex Old English
- face requiring more time to display, especially for those without
- a math chip.
-
- One of 16 colors is assigned to each of the 256 layers on which
- MAPIT entities are written. Find out which is the "current
- layer", the one onto which new objects will be drawn, by choosing
- EDIT/Current Layer. The status line gives the current layer and
- its color. Type a return by itself to retain the same current
- layer.
-
- You can assign any color to any layer or turn layers on or off
- with EDIT/Set Layers.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 12.
-
- You can tailor a map to a certain use by choosing which features
- to display.
-
- Turn off the display toggles DISPLAY/Grid and Major Rivers.
- They're off when the check mark isn't visible. Major Rivers
- won't disappear until the next screen repaint.
-
- Reposition to mid-US by choosing POSITION/Lat/long and entering
- Latitude 40N, Longitude 95W, and Zoom 5. Don't forget the Zoom!
- Then click on Go.
-
- The Lat/long method of positioning may not be quick the first
- time, but the last settings are remembered making it an easy way
- to return to a precise location.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 13.
-
- Without rivers, the display of the US and southern Canada
- emphasizes the political.
-
- Now overlay rivers onto this display by toggling ON DISPLAY/Major
- Rivers and OFF DISPLAY/National Boundaries and State Boundaries.
-
- Be careful to choose ZOOM/Overwrite to overlay the current
- display WITHOUT first deleting it.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 14.
-
- The rivers are now emphasized over the political boundaries by
- overlaying them.
-
- Without making any changes to the DISPLAY options, choose
- ZOOM/Redisplay to contrast the results when a clear is done
- first.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 15.
-
- Different mapping objects are assigned to different layers. You
- can achieve the same toggle effect in a more round-about way with
- EDIT/Set Layers/off.
-
- You can even make the rivers turn to blood as in Moses's day by
- EDIT/Set Layers/color and entering the Major Rivers layer 1 and
- setting it to color 12 (noting its default color 9).
- Zoom/Redisplay for full effect and then set layer 1 back to color
- 9. Don't forget to toggle on DISPLAY/State and National
- Boundaries and Grid.
-
- Use ZOOM/In by Corners to zoom in on the Havana, Cuba area (near
- 23N 82W) at a zoom factor of 300.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 16.
-
- EDIT/Insert brings up a third-level menu of objects which you can
- insert into your personal database. MAPIT uses two databases:
- the main database (world.mp3 or demo.mp3) and a personal database
- defaulting to "extended.mp3". When you add objects to the map,
- they are appended to the extended database.
-
- Choose EDIT/Insert/figure using the figure "truck". (Figures
- must be preloaded by program FIGEDIT into the file "std.fig".)
- The figure appears in temporary graphics for sizing purposes.
- Accept the default scale factor of 10%. Insert truck figures at
- three locations south of Havana using the Left Mouse button. Quit
- when finished with the Right button.
-
- Note that the figure was entered on the current layer in that
- layer's color. You can organize and color your objects by
- entering them on different layers. (There are 14 colors
- defaulting to different layers.) Layers 120 through 255 are
- reserved for the user. The lower layers are used for objects in
- the main database.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 17.
-
- EDIT/Delete is a DANGEROUS command. With it you can delete
- objects from only the extended database.
-
- Choose EDIT/Delete DRAGGING a rectangle around one of your three
- truck figures. All objects to be deleted will be highlighted in
- bright white. If only a single truck is highlighted, answer "Y"
- to the question "Are you sure?"
-
- The truck is removed. The deletion frame remains in case you are
- working with multiple complex objects. ZOOM/Redisplay to get rid
- of it.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 18.
-
- There are two types of text in MAPIT: Stroked and Hidden.
-
- Choose EDIT/Insert stroked text. You are asked to select a
- temporary location to view text as you enter it. Enter "Special
- Havana Shipment". If you make a mistake, the backspace key
- deletes back a character-at-a-time. The Enter (return) key is
- accepted as text taking you to the left margin of the next line
- for multi-line entry. End text entry with the Escape key.
-
- A number of menu selections are displayed. The Min and Max Zoom
- Factors refer to the range of zoom factors for which the text is
- visible. Leaving them at 0 defaults visibility to the threshold
- zoom at which the text becomes legible.
-
- Valid Fonts are 1 - 7. Note that complex fonts take longer to
- display.
-
- The Size is a magic number related to the current zoom factor.
- Remember the default size (0.0167) so you can go back to it. Map
- Relative Text can't be larger than 10. Try making it 0.1 and
- changing the font to 7.
-
- Map and Screen Relative refer to fixing the text relative to the
- map so that zooming will change its size or to the screen so that
- text size will be zoom invariant.
-
- Stroked text can be rotated at any angle, positive or negative,
- about its origin (rounded to the closest 2 degrees).
-
- Go to 18A.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 18A.
-
- The text origin is important in inserting, displaying, or
- capturing (copying/deleting) text. The origin is at the baseline
- left of the first character - the point you select when you
- insert text.
-
- For text to be displayed, the origin must be on the screen. This
- explains why long text, whose front end is no longer in view on
- the screen, disappears, and why you can't see more than the lower
- left corner of the first letter of text which is too large.
-
- When you delete text, the rectangle must be around the text's
- origin, not necessarily around the text itself.
-
- Choose Location to insert a single instance of your "Special
- Havana Shipment" text below the trucks.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 19.
-
- Choose EDIT/Insert hidden text. A full screen window is
- presented into which you can type up to a whole page of
- information. (Scrolling is not supported.)
-
- You are actually in a mini editor with the arrow keys allowing
- you to navigate through your text to make changes. This editor
- supports word-wrap. If you change the window's width, lines
- within paragraphs automatically adjust to fill the line measure.
- Because of this feature, you shouldn't type "Enter" (return) at
- the end of each line. The return character is the paragraph
- delimiter.
-
- End text entry with an Escape.
-
- The Min Zoom Factor is that point at which the Hidden Text
- marking triangle, which is screen relative (constant size),
- becomes visible. Visibility defaults to about 2/3 of the zoom
- factor in effect when the hidden text was entered. A value of 0
- insures it is always visible.
-
- Window Width and Height display two values each. The first is
- the current and the second, the computer's "suggested" setting.
- There is interaction between width and height. The computer
- calculates the minimum width based on the longest line and the
- screen width, and given that width, calculates the required
- height. If you enter a new width or height, the computer
- recalculates its suggested values. Sometimes several iterations
- are necessary to fill the page as you want. At any time you can
- View/Edit Text to review the current arrangement or to edit the
- text. VIEW/Edit (Autosize) resets actual values to computer
- preferences.
-
- Go to 19A.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 19A.
-
- For the purpose of this demo, enter text describing the contents
- or logistics of the Special Havana Shipment.
-
- Choose Location inside one of the truck bodies and Right click to
- exit.
-
- Verify that your hidden text is as you've entered it by clicking
- with the left button.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 20.
-
- Choose EDIT/Insert line. Enter a multi-segmented line between
- Havana and Guines representing a road.
-
- As you move the cursor during this command, notice that the
- latitude and longitude on the status line are continually updated
- to aide in accurate line positioning.
-
- Hold down the Left Mouse button and notice the temporary rubber
- band graphics tying the starting point to the current Mouse
- position. Releasing the Left button fixes that line segment.
-
- If, while you are close to the end of that last segment, you
- press the Left button again, you'll begin a new segment connected
- to the last. If, on the other hand, you click the Left button
- when you are a distance from the end of the last segment, the
- line is ended and temporary graphics replaced by a permanent
- line.
-
- If instead of clicking the Left button you click the Right, one
- segment of temporary graphics is deleted for each press and
- release. If you try to back up beyond the start of the first
- line segment, the entire command is aborted.
-
- There are limits of approximately 100 feet to the accuracy of
- data entered into the database. If you try to enter data more
- closely spaced than this, the temporary graphics will look good
- but will not be reflected in the database.
-
- Now enter the "road" between Havana and Guines.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- 21.
-
- Congratulations! You have completed your overview of MAPIT and
- have exercised most of the commands.
-
- One last exercise will show the usefulness of the EDIT/Copy
- command. The instructions for the MAPIT demo were supplied in
- COLUMBUS.MP3 and copied from there to EXTENDED.MP3. You have
- inserted your own text and graphics into EXTENDED.MP3 mixing it
- with the demo text and graphics. We will separate the two.
-
- Exit out of this program and at the command prompt
-
- > ren extended.mp3 combo.mp3
- > mapit combo
-
- Zoom back into the Havana area with a zoom factor of 300.
-
- EDIT /Set Layers off 133, the layer on which the demo graphics
- resides.
-
- EDIT/Copy DRAGGING a rectangle to encompass your Special Havana
- Shipment objects and answering "Y" to the prompt. This command
- copies objects from the main database (COMBO) to the extended
- database.
-
- Exit MAPIT, compare the sizes of COMBO.MP3 and EXTENDED.MP3, and
- run MAPIT with DEMO.MP3 to show that you've successfully
- separated your Special Havana Shipment.
-
- This also shows how easy it is to share custom graphics and text
- with others.
-