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File List | 1990-03-12 | 8.3 KB | 219 lines |
- ÅHELP: MESSAGE MENU
-
- LDÄ Aè)rea change
- LDÄ Mè)AIN MENU
- LDÄ Nè)ext msg
- LDÄ Pè)rior msg
- LDÄ Cè)urrent msg
- LDÄ Eè)nter message
- LDÄ Rè)eply
- LDÄ =è)read non-stop
- LDÄ -è)read original
- LDÄ +è)read reply
- LDÄ Lè)ist (brief)
- LNÄ Sè)can
- LDÄ Iè)nquire
- LDÄ Gè)oodbye
- LNÄ Kè)ill message
- LSÄ Hè)url (move)
- LPÄ Fè)orward (copy)
- LNÄ Uè)pload
- LSÄ Xè)port to disk
-
- ÅWhich command do you need help with (Press ENTER to exit)? èRANMPCER=+-LSIGKHFUX|
- LDUC ÅCURRENT MESSAGE
- LDUC
- LDUC èThis key will allow you to read the current message again.
- LDUC
- LDUC ç
- LDUA ÅAREA CHANGE
- LDUA
- LDUA èThis command allows you to change areas. Opus allows whats called
- LDUA "Ästackingè", this simply means that you can type ÄA3 36 èto go directly
- LDUA to message area 3, message number 36.
- LDUA
- LDUA At the message area menu prompt, type A and then the prompt
- LDUA will ask you which area, or ? for a list of areas. Typing the ?
- LDUA mark then would show you a list of available areas to choose from.
- LDUA
- LDUA ÅExperiment with it! Won't cause any harm!
- LDUA
- LDUA ç
- LDUL ÅLIST
- LDUL
- LDUL èThe L)ist key can be used in several ways, ÄL, LV, LV*, èand ÄL*
- LDUL èthe ÄL èalone will give you a brief listing as to who wrote
- LDUL the message, and to whom, and if it has been recieved,
- LDUL it also gives the date and time it was written. By using the
- LDUL V command with the L (ÄLVè) it will also show you the subject
- LDUL of the message; by using the * key, (L* or LV*) that would
- LDUL give you the same listing, but since your last call.
- LDUL
- LDUL For an example, lets say there are 210 messages in the area,
- LDUL but you want to L)ist the last 10 messages only, easy enough!
- LDUL Just type ÄLV200è or ÄL200è --- Experiment with its usage, it can
- LDUL save you time from reading unwanted messages!
- LDUL
- LDUL ç
- LDUI ÅINQUIRE
- LDUI
- LDUI èThe ÄI èkey, can save you a lot of time when looking for a familair
- LDUI name, or subject matter. It will be easier to first give you
- LDUI an example of what the I)nquire field looks for in it's search:
- LDUI
- LDUI ÅTo: ÄJohn Doe
- LDUI ÅFrom: ÄSteve Smith
- LDUI ÅSubject: ÄNuclear Medicine
- LDUI
- LDUI èThe -ÄI- èkey will look in those three fields to see if it can find
- LDUI a match for what your wanting. So if you typed: I Steve
- LDUI It would find the above example, and maybe even a STEVE Brown
- LDUI and a STEVE Black. When it finds what it's looking for, it will
- LDUI show you in CAPS and which message # to refer to.
- LDUI
- LDUI NOTE---The I command will NOT find a word or phrase in the body
- LDUI of the message!
- LDUI
- LDUI If you typed: ÄIcl èand OPUS found an entry with a Äcl èin it,
- LDUI it would CAP the cl like this ÄCLèue. Use of wildcards is permitted.
- LDUI
- LDUI ç
- LNUS ÅSCAN
- LNUS
- LNUS èThis is painfully slow, amigo! However it does a very good job of
- LNUS locating your mail, usually error free! More often than not, your
- LNUS System Operator (SysOp) will not have this command available to
- LNUS anyone, only due to it's slowness. But if you do have access to it,
- LNUS You can use the S)can command 4 ways:
- LNUS
- LNUS ÄS èwill scan ALL areas for messages you have waiting, and list them
- LNUS by area number, and message number.
- LNUS
- LNUS ÄSV èwill do a tedious job of locating all your mail, recieved and
- LNUS not yet recieved, and gives you a listing where they are located.
- LNUS
- LNUS ÄSV* èand ÄS* èwill do the same as above, except it looks for new mail
- LNUS since your last call.
- LNUS
- LNUS ç
- LDUG ÅGOODBYE
- LDUG
- LDUG èLog off of Opus; hang up.
- LDUG
- LDUG Type ÅGYY èto log off and leave SysOp a message.
- LDUG
- LDUG Type ÅGYN èto log off without leaving a parting message.
- LDUG
- LDUG ç
- LDUM ÅMAIN MENU
- LDUM
- LDUM èLeaves the MESSAGE Section and takes you to the MAIN MENU.
- LDUM
- LDUM ç
- LDUE ÅENTER
- LDUE
- LDUE èAllows you to enter messages to other callers. You might be surprised
- LDUE how writing a message will bring several replys!
- LDUE
- LDUE ç
- LDUR ÅREPLY
- LDUR
- LDUR èAllows you to enter a "reply" message to the last message you read.
- LDUR The message will automatically be addressed to the correct person.
- LDUR
- LDUR ç
- LNUK ÅKILL
- LNUK
- LNUK èAllows you to delete a message if it's written by you, or to you.
- LNUK
- LNUK If the message is available to all to read (not private) and
- LNUK is of interest to other folks, you may not want to kill it, as
- LNUK people can not respond to messages that are not there...just
- LNUK a thought you might concider!
- LNUK
- LNUK ç
- LDUN ÅNEXT
- LDUN
- LDUN èRead the next message forward from the last you read.
- LDUN Pressing ENTER will do this automatically, so you do not have
- LDUN to keep typing N at every message promt.
- LDUN
- LDUN ç
- LDU= ÅREAD NON-STOP
- LDU=
- LDU= èRead all messages non-stop, starting at the last message read.
- LDU= Opus will NOT pause between messages.
- LDU= This command is useful if your computer can capture text from
- LDU= the screen and store it on disk ("capture buffer"). You can
- LDU= capture all the messages available, hang up, and read them on
- LDU= your own time at your own pace.
- LDU=
- LDU= ç
- LDUP ÅPRIOR
- LDUP
- LDUP èRead the next message prior to the last you read.
- LDUP Pressing ENTER alone repeats the last P)rior or N)ext command.
- LDUP
- LDUP Remember, when you wish to go forward, you will need to type
- LDUP the ÄN èkey again. You can also go directly to a message by
- LDUP simply by typing the # of the message.
- LDUP
- LDUP ç
- LDU- ÅREAD ORIGINAL
- LDU-
- LDU- èAfter reading a "reply" message, the - command displays the message
- LDU- that it is a reply to. Reply messages are chained together; this
- LDU- command allows you to read backwards through the chain.
- LDU-
- LDU- ç
- LDU+ ÅREAD REPLY
- LDU+
- LDU+ èRead the "reply" message to the last message read, if there
- LDU+ is one. Reply messages are linked together like a chain. This
- LDU+ command allows you to read forward through the chain.
- LDU+
- LNU+ ç
- LNUU ÅUPLOAD
- LNUU
- LNUU èOpus allows text files to be uploaded directly into the
- LNUU Message Section. You do this by typing ÄU èat the prompt, then
- LNUU entering a message as you normally would, To, From, and
- LNUU Subject...Then there will be a prompt for you to begin the
- LNUU upload...ÄX-modem onlyè, and Ä3K èor less! Otherwise, OPUS will
- LNUU not accept the message. If it is accepted, it will save itself.
- LNUU
- LNUU This feature allows you to compose messages Äoff-lineè, and then
- LNUU come on-line and upload your message in a matter of moments! ç
- LNUU
- LNUU ç
- LSUH ÅHURL
- LSUH
- LSUH èLets you move a message from one message area to another.
- LSUH The source and destination file areas MUST be on the same drive.
- LSUH
- LSUH ç
- LPUF ÅFORWARD
- LPUF
- LPUF èCreates a new copy of a message and lets you select a new
- LPUF person to send To:. You also have the option of forwarding
- LPUF Matrix messages to another net/node.
- LPUF The new copy will contain information about the original
- LPUF From:, the original To:, and the net/node of origin.
- LPUF
- LPUF The forwarded message can be hurled to another area at the
- LPUF same time. The caller does NOT have to have access to the
- LPUF destination area.
- LPUF For a bombing run (mailing list), use the command ÄFBè.
- LPUF
- LPUF ç
- LSUX ÅXPORT TO DISK
- LSUX
- LSUX èThis option is normally reserved for the sysop. It allows you to
- LSUX save a message to a disk file for future reference. You may append
- LSUX messages to a disk file by typing a '+' before the disk filename when
- LSUX prompted.
- LSUX
- LSUX ç
- U|Q
- T
-