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-
- Usenet Mac Digest Thursday, May 12, 1988 Volume 4 : Issue 61
-
- Today's Topics:
- Word Perfect for the Macintosh 1.0 (2 messages)
- V
- Entertainment and bugs from Claris
- Generic SCSI tools.
- Translate PostScript to TeX?
- Flex problems
- Re: VersaTerm 3.2 (Was: VT100 emulators)
- VT220 Terminal Emulator Wanted
- CD-I revisted - Tale of the Uninvited
- Re: VT220 Terminal Emulator Wanted
- FullWrite Professional 1.0: First Impressions [long]
- FullWrite Color Menus
- Re: FullWrite on shelves (2 messages)
- Re: Mac Security
- Re: Programmer's Extender vs. MacExpress...
- PrintMgr Bug?
- Re: MultiFinder switch bug with custom WDEFs (3 messages)
- Mac Lint
- Turbo Pascal (2 messages)
- WDEFs in MPW?
- LSC Glue code
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: ELFJ@CRNLVAX5.BITNET
- Subject: Word Perfect for the Macintosh 1.0
- Date: 5 May 88 17:39:00 GMT
-
- Word Perfect for the Mac is a nice program for those who also use it on
- other machines (like IBM pcs, Vaxes, etc). But I don't think it was
- quite ready for release.
-
-
- Word Perfect Mac bugs, annoying features and weirdnesses:
-
- 1. If you have an IBM WP 4.2 doc with foreign characters, and open in WP
- Mac, you get the foreign character with the same ascii code, eg an ash
- (ae ligature) becomes e umlaut. (code 145). If you convert the doc back
- to 4.2, you get the same characters as on the Mac, eg e umlaut stays e
- umlaut I presume the difference comes in that Saving As 4.2 format goes
- through some type of conversion, while opening a 4.2 simply opens it.
- Someone named Kent from WPCorp is supposedly looking into this.
-
- 1a. By the way, why should we have to tell it creator and type to read
- in WP 4.2 file? Doesn't it know who it is?
-
- 2. While in WP, switch to Finder or other application. Partially cover
- the title bar of WP with another window, then move window away. Title
- in bar in messed.
-
- 3. Command W cycles through open windows, Command K is Close.
-
- 4. Start with blank doc. Turn on Bold (or any other style, by any of
- the documented means) and note how scroll box jumps. Well, that's
- somewhat explainable by the fact that a code has been inserted, but if
- you click in the grey area to move the box back to the top, your code
- gets deleted! This doesn't happen for all kinds of codes, but it does
- for all styles. In general, the scroll bar frequently acts strangely.
-
- 5. You cannot resize windows while in reveal codes, but the zoom box
- does work.
-
- 6. You can tell WP where to look for dict, thes, and macros, but help
- file
- must be in same folder (or desktop) as program.
-
- 7. You cannot use the mouse in the reveal codes window. Cursor can only
- be moved by doing things in the upper window or by arrow keys.
-
- 8. Clearing the ruler (via the little "x" box) does not revert column
- settings.
-
- 9. Searches go forward or back, don't wrap.
-
- 10. When hierarchical menus are "torn off" the secondary menu choices
- are sometimes numbered, sometimes lettered. Is it just the Merge codes
- submenu that is lettered, to be consistent w/ WP 4.2?
-
- In general, the program has some nice features, but suffers in greatly
- implementation from it other machine origins. To my mind, FullWrite has
- a far better user interface. No I haven't gotten the release version
- yet, but I check my mailbox eagerly each day!
-
- By the way, one thing I can't complain about re: Word Perfect. They
- have the best customer support in the business. Don't hesitate to give
- them a call if you have a problem.
- --
- Linda Iroff
- Humanities Computing Center
- Cornell University
- elfj@crnlvax5.bitnet
- elfj@vax5.ccs.cornell.edu
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: paulm@nikhefk.UUCP (Paul Molenaar)
- Subject: Re: Word Perfect for the Macintosh 1.0
- Date: 6 May 88 09:53:07 GMT
- Organization: Host: NIKHEF Organization: Personal Computer Magazine, Holland
-
- >1. If you have an IBM WP 4.2 doc with foreign characters, and open in
-
- Not in my april 12th 1988 version. 'Foreign characters' are converted as
- they should be...
-
- >1a. By the way, why should we have to tell it creator and type to read
- >in WP 4.2 file? Doesn't it know who it is?
-
- The File Management option is a horror. Why should WordPerfect give the
- user access to the bundle, hidden, protect etc. bits? When files are
- imported from an MS-DOS machine, there has to be a way of changing type
- and creator (since they are not automatically appointed on import) but
- WordPerfect Corporation should have made that a single button-action.
-
-
- >2. While in WP, switch to Finder or other application. Partially cover
-
- Again, not in april 12th issue
-
- >3. Command W cycles through open windows, Command K is Close.
-
- Close window has, as far as I know, only recently been assigned the
- cmd-W shortcut 'officially'. Cmd-K is a drag. I used ResEdit to change
- it.
-
- >9. Searches go forward or back, don't wrap.
-
- I think that's a joy...
-
- [Some mention of other bugs deleted. Most of them also present in april
- 12th version]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From:
- Subject: V
- Date: 6 May 88 09:53:07 GMT
-
- "Just checking the walls"
- - Basil Fawlty -
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: ephraim@think.COM (ephraim vishniac)
- Subject: Entertainment and bugs from Claris
- Date: 5 May 88 14:20:21 GMT
- Organization: Thinking Machines Corporation, Cambridge, MA
-
- I got a box from Claris this morning with MacPaint 2.0, MacWrite 5.0,
- and MacProject II 1.0. MacPaint's new features look good, MacWrite's
- new features are amusing, and MacProject has at least one cosmetic bug.
-
- MacWrite's biggest new feature is a "built-in" spelling checker. Sort
- of. It *does* check spelling, but it's *not* built in. It's just kind
- of tacked on. Here's what happens when you check spelling:
-
- 1. The spelling checker resizes the active window so that it
- doesn't overlap the area where the spelling window will
- open. Automatic window resizing? Not exactly Macish, but
- it has to do this because (as a tacked-on kluge) it has
- no control over the scrolling of the main window. It
- insists on placing its own window at the bottom left of
- main screen, even when there are acres of unused screen
- available.
-
- 2. It opens the "Find" dialog offscreen, where the user shouldn't
- see it. It has to do this because (as a tacked-on kluge)
- it can't locate words in the document any other way.
- "Offscreen" is only a short distance to the left of the
- main screen, which happens to be onscreen for the second
- monitor of the system I was using. Very tacky.
-
- 3. It does a "Select All" and "Copy" to get the text of the
- document into the clipboard. Again, it doesn't have any
- direct access to MacWrite's data structures, so it can't
- get the text any other way. As a side effect, this wipes
- out the clipboard contents without warning. Ouch. Do a
- "Show Clipboard" before checking spelling to watch this
- action.
-
- 4. It does the actual checking against the clipboard contents,
- using the Find dialog to locate and highlight words in the
- real document. It's not smooth, but it works.
-
- MacProject II is much less entertaining. For a simple bug demo, try
- this: Display the top left portion of one of the small samples on your
- 19" monitor. You'll have all of page one and part of page two (which is
- blank) on the screen. Use the layout menu to adjust the chart size down
- to one page. Except for the portion that was covered by the chart size
- dialog, page two remains white until the next time the whole screen is
- redrawn. The part that was covered turns to desktop pattern, just as
- the rest of the page should. No real problem here, but it looks bad.
- --
- Ephraim Vishniac ephraim@think.com
- Thinking Machines Corporation / 245 First Street / Cambridge, MA 02142-1214
-
- On two occasions I have been asked, "Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put
- into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?"
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: rfortier@palladium.UUCP (Richard W. Fortier)
- Subject: Generic SCSI tools.
- Date: 3 May 88 20:04:29 GMT
- Organization: Epoch Systems, Marlboro MA
-
- I'm looking for source and/or binaries for SCSI formatters and drivers
- for the Mac II. We have lots of different types of SCSI drives in
- house, so I need software that is generic as possible; it must read
- parameters from the drive(s) rather than wiring in constants; in
- particular, many of the driver's and formatters floating around wire in
- drive capacity.
-
- Drivers must be able to deal with synchronous-mode drives, and should
- handle drives which want to disconnect and reconnect.
-
- As I said, we have many drives but two in particular I'd like to handle
- are the CDC Wren IV (CDC 94171, 312MB) and the Fugitsu 2246A (130MB).
-
- Any information anyone has on making these work with A/UX would also be
- appreciated.
-
- Rich
-
- --
- ---
- Richard W. Fortier, Epoch Systems Inc. (617) 481-3717
- 313 Boston Post Rd. West, Marlboro MA 01752
- {linus!alliant, harvard!cfisun}!palladium!rfortier
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: KSN@PSUVM.BITNET (Peter A. Krupa)
- Subject: Translate PostScript to TeX?
- Date: 5 May 88 21:45:37 GMT
- Organization: The Pennsylvania State University - Computation Center
-
- Does an application exist to convert PostScript laser printer output to
- TeX or imPRESS (Imagen 8000) language? I myself, and now my boss, are
- interested in downloading our Mac printouts to the lab's laser printer.
- Any information you could provide would be greatly appreciated.
-
- If such an application doesn't exist, is there anyone who's interested
- in helping me to develop it?
- --
- Spiny_Norman (alias Peter A. Krupa)
- ksn@psuvm (till the end of the week)
- ksn@psuarlb (year round)
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: skeller@wheaton.UUCP (Stephen D. Keller)
- Subject: Flex problems
- Date: 2 May 88 20:55:38 GMT
- Organization: Wheaton College, Wheaton Il
-
- I love the screensaver FLEX, but it does not allow me to download
- in the background. I have tried downloading files with the
- "enable background tasks" button checked and unchecked. When
- checked, the download fails; when unchecked, the download is
- interupted when the screen dims, and continues when I terminate
- the screensaver. Has anyone else run into problems with this?
- Can it be fixed in the 'next release?' I have used AutoBlack
- without any problems at all, so I guess I'll go back to using that.
-
- --
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
- Steve Keller Wheaton College
- ihnp4!wheaton!skeller Wheaton, IL
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: thomas@uvabick.UUCP (Thomas Fruin)
- Subject: Re: VersaTerm 3.2 (Was: VT100 emulators)
- Date: 5 May 88 22:24:54 GMT
- Organization: uvabick
-
-
- Jeff Meyer writes:
-
- > 3.2 also has [...] Remote file transfer (haven't read up on this, but
- it
- > seems that if you have a Mac running unattended with VersaTerm 3.2
- and a
- > modem set up for auto answer, you can call up from another Mac and do
- > file transfer using this.
-
- This is also potentially very dangerous! I've just been reading the
- specs, and it turns out _anybody_ can dial into your Mac, and download
- just about everything on your (hard) disks. VersaTerm does NOT prompt
- you for a pass- word, and you can even use wildcards when downloading.
- Since you can type any pathname, the remote volume is up for grabs.
-
- You can turn off this option by unchecking the 'Enable Remote File
- Access' option in the everexpanding Extras dialog, but hear this: by
- default (right out of the box) this option is ENABLED...
-
- OK ok, dialing in still requires a modem connected in auto answer mode,
- but this is still leaving the back door wide open. I recommend
- everybody turning this option OFF now, including Lonnie Abelbeck if he
- is listening.
-
- One last thing: the caller can also upload. I haven't checked yet if
- that lets people overwrite any file on your remotely accessible volume.
- It would be the most silent way to install a virus :)
-
- -- Thomas Fruin
-
- fruin@hlerul5.BITNET University of Leiden
- thomas@uvabick.UUCP University of Amsterdam
- hol0066.AppleLink
- 2:512/114.FidoNet The Netherlands
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: krk@ihlpl.ATT.COM (Kevin Kinnear)
- Subject: VT220 Terminal Emulator Wanted
- Date: 6 May 88 13:32:16 GMT
- Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories - Naperville, Illinois
-
- A friend of mine is looking for a terminal program for the Mac that
- emulates the DEC VT220 terminal. He is connecting to a VAX running VMS
- and would like to emulate the same terminal that he uses at work. I
- think function key compatibility is important, too.
-
- This is important-- if he can't find this capability on the Macintosh he
- may decide to buy an IBM compatible PC (shudder) instead!
- --
- <Kevin Kinnear
- (312) 979-6502
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: czei@accelerator.eng.ohio-state.edu (Michael S. Czeiszperger)
- Subject: CD-I revisted - Tale of the Uninvited
- Date: 6 May 88 20:08:07 GMT
- Organization: The Ohio State University Dept of Electrical Engineering
-
- [This contains somewhat interesting stuff about the latest development]
- [in home entertainment. Please forgive the somewhat boring intro ]
-
- I got a call this week from a CD-I developer, who claimed he got my
- number from a friend who reads USENET. He was all excited about telling
- me the latest happenings with CD-I, except he thought us USENET chaps
- didn't know anything about CD-I and proceded to run down the entire
- last two years of CD-I history.
-
- After I got it through his head that the green book standards and the
- formulation of American Interactive Media were by now well-known events,
- he managed to explain who he was and why he was calling. I think his
- last name was Feldman, although I'm not sure because he talked so fast.
- He claimed to be an employee of the company that makes the computer
- games "Deja Vu" and "The Univited", and that he was *at this very
- minute* working on CD-I versions of these games.
-
- He went on to claim that there were about a hundred companies working on
- CD-I titles, and that most of the titles weren't games, but a new kind
- of entertainment. For instance, there is one disk that is a home audio
- mixing session. The CD-I disk contains the raw tracks from a well known
- rock group's recording session, and the home user gets to mix down and
- arrange the tune any way they like. It was mentioned in Keyboard
- magazine that some of the high end players will include MIDI outputs, so
- the home recording enthusiast could use his home recording setup.
- Theoretically one could record the MIDI output from the CD-I disk
- directly into a MIDI sequencer and then re-arrange the whole tune, or
- examine how all the licks were put together. A written score of the
- album could even be generated from the MIDI output, so the hobby
- musician could have an *exact* musical notation of the original music,
- not the cheesy version featured in those books.
-
- One thing we talked about was the present mis-conception about the
- possibilities of interactive entertainment. Some people are unable to
- comprehend anything interactive that doesn't function like the Dragon
- laserdisc game that was out a couple of years back. In that game, the
- user could only decide between left, right, and straight, and the game
- just jumped between tracks on the laserdisk. This way of operating is
- not in any way representative of CD-I, or of interactive media in
- general.
-
- For instance, the CD-I version of Dark Castle will function *exactly
- like the regular Dark Castle*, except for a bunch of added features. For
- another thing, it will be in full color, and the audio will feature
- longer, more complicated, better recorded sound effects. Beyond that,
- it will be try to be more than just a computer game. If the user just
- wishes to watch, for instance, Dark Castle will cease to be a game, and
- will become more like a movie, presenting a story with dialog,
- characters, and a plot that takes place on the backgrounds of the game.
- As you can imagine, THIS IS NOT ANYTHING LIKE DRAGON'S LAIR. Not one
- bit.
-
-
- About the players themselves.....
-
- The manufacturers of CD-I players have pledged to make the first units
- cost under $1000. There are rumors that base units with no extra
- features could initially cost as low as $750. Philips is getting ready
- right now for CD-I by including a CD-I port on all of their regular CD
- Audio players. If you've purchased a Philips CD player in the last two
- months it probably has this port. When CD-I finally hits in about a
- year, Philips will sell a cheap expansion box that contains the heart of
- the CD-I system.
-
- The basic units will come with:
-
- 1. The ability to play regular CD audio disks.
- 2. A video output to hook up to your TV.
- 3. A joystick.
-
- One of the problems with using CD's as a storage media is that it's
- impossible to write on the darn things. How are people going to store
- data such as their highest Dark Castle scores? The players themselves
- will have 16k of battery backed memory, that should take care of a small
- amount of data. An alternative is to include an extra video output so
- that the player could record the data directly to videotape. Assumming
- that the kind of people that would by CD-I players are the same kind of
- appliance happy people that buy VCR's, this should a workable solution.
- :-)
-
-
-
- Just bringing the USENET community the latest news.....
-
- -czei
-
- --
- Michael S. Czeiszperger | "The only good composer is a dead composer"
- Systems Analyst | Snail: 2015 Neil Avenue (614)
- The Ohio State University | Columbus, OH 43210 292-
- cbosgd!osu-cis!accelerator.eng.ohio-state.edu!czei 0161
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: hpoppe@scdpyr.ucar.edu (Herb Poppe)
- Subject: Re: VT220 Terminal Emulator Wanted
- Date: 6 May 88 20:22:22 GMT
- Organization: Scientific Computing Division/NCAR, Boulder, CO
-
- White Pine Software has several DEC terminal emulators for the Mac:
-
- Mac220 VT220 emulation $129 (retail)
- Mac240 VT240 text and graphics emulation $199 (retail)
- Mac241 VT241 color text and graphics emulation $299 (retail)
-
- White Pine Software, Inc.
- 94 Route 101A
- Amherst, NH 03031
- 603-886-9050
-
- I do not use any of these products nor do I know anything about White
- Pine Software other than that they recently have established a very
- close relationship with DEC and are planning to bring out an X Window
- System server that runs under the MacOS at the end of the year.
- --
- Herb Poppe NCAR INTERNET: hpoppe@scdpyr.UCAR.EDU
- (303) 497-1296 P.O. Box 3000 CSNET: hpoppe@ncar.CSNET
- Boulder, CO 80307 UUCP: hpoppe@scdpyr.UUCP
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: chow@batcomputer.tn.cornell.edu (Christopher Chow)
- Subject: FullWrite Professional 1.0: First Impressions [long]
- Date: 7 May 88 01:04:33 GMT
- Organization: Cornell Theory Center, Cornell University, Ithaca NY
-
- Recently, the computer store which I work at just go in several copies
- of FullWrite Professional 1.0. Since I had really liked the demo
- version of FullWrite, I had looked forward to playing with the release
- version.
-
- Unfortunately, it appears that FullWrite 1.0 has a few problems:
-
- One of the first things I did when a Word Perfect rep came to campus to
- demo the alpha Word Perfect a couple of months ago was to test Word
- Perfect's ability to work with large files. Essentially what I do is I
- start with a short document, and then repeatily do:
- select all, copy, paste I generally try to get a document greater than
- 50 pages to play with it. Naturally, this was one of the first things I
- did with FullWrite. Well, I was working on a 2MB Mac II under normal
- finder (6.0), and everything was fine (except a bit slow) at 30 pages,
- but FullWrite crashed when I attempted to go from 30 -> 60 pages. At
- least it could have told me that it didn't have enough memory to do the
- paste instead of just crashing an unsaved document.
-
- Later on that day, someone came in and inquired about FullWrite's
- ability to do outlines. After he left, I decided to explore outlining a
- bit further by myself. What I did was I took "Newsletter" example file
- from FullWrite and made it into an outline with three main topics:
- FullWrite, dBase Mac, and FullImpact. None of the original text was
- used in the headlines as I typed in my own headlines. Each main topic
- had a few subheading. Again, the subheadings are original text: all
- the original text encompassed by the outline was in the outline body.
-
- Initially, I was impressed. The outlining made sense and seemed pretty
- useful. After playing around for a while, however, I decided to see how
- well FullWrite could handle changing the outline structure (and all the
- associated text in the body). Well, it crashed (deadlocked) pretty
- easily. All I had to do was to swap the first two main topics a few
- times, and then swap the third main topic with either of the first two
- and then the watch cursor would continue to spin forever. Or at least 2
- minutes, at which time I gave up and hit the interrupt button. This
- happened both under Multifinder (with the application partition
- increased to 1350K) and under Finder. It appears to be a bug in dealing
- with larger outlines as a trivially small outline (all headlines and
- body consisting of one line) I constructed did not crash. I was also
- able to get FullWrite to deadlock on another large outline I created
- from importing an MS Word 3.01 file.
-
- Now back to FullWrite's handling of large files: Although my first
- attempt at creating a large file crashed FullWrite, I decided to try
- again. Initially, the document I copy-pasted contained some graphics
- created by FullWrite. This time, I choose to import an MS Word 3.01
- file which only contained text. Using the copy-paste routine, I built
- up the file to about 75 pages. With large files, FullWrite can
- sometimes take a long time to scroll, especially if you take the
- elevator box and just plop it down somewhere in the document. I then
- tried spell checking the document, which worked well.
-
- However, there is a problem. During a long operating, FullWrite just
- moves the watch hand on the mouse cursor: unlike MS Word, it does not
- give you a %complete indicator so you don't know if the work you asked
- for is being done. Note that this means the only way you can detect a
- deadlock is to wait, and wait, and wait... The spinning watch is no
- indication of useful work being done, since during both the initial out
- of memory crash, and the outlining deadlocks the watch was spinning.
-
- Aside from what I mentioned already, I also found a few miscellaneous
- bugs: On a Macintosh II, FullWrite doesn't use color resources
- correctly. I.e., when displaying an icon in a dialog, even if you have
- installed a cicn for the icon FullWrite will still use the plain b/w
- icon. If you changed the window coloring scheme (I make the title bar
- lines blue) FullWrite still uses the normal black and white lines.
- Selected text is covered with black instead of the color choosen by the
- "Colors" cdev. All this mismanagement/ignorance of color resoures is
- inexcusable since the FullWrite programmers obviously knew about color
- quickdraw: If you select "About FUllWrite", the Aston-Tate Icon is in
- red! Finally, there is a non-Mac II specific miscellaneous bug which I
- found: FullWrite does not allow Larry Rosenstein's (sp) ApplicationMenu
- INIT to work.
-
- So, how long until version 1.0.1?
- --
- Christopher Chow
- /---------------------------------------------------------------------------\
- | Internet: chow@tcgould.tn.cornell.edu (128.84.248.35 or 128.84.253.35) |
- | Usenet: ...{uw-beaver|ihnp4|decvax|vax135}!cornell!batcomputer!chow |
- | Bitnet: chow@crnlthry.bitnet |
- | Phone: 1-607-253-6699 Address: 7122 N. Campus 7, Ithaca, NY 14853 |
- | Delphi: chow2 PAN: chow |
- \---------------------------------------------------------------------------/
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: shulman@slb-sdr.UUCP (Jeff Shulman)
- Subject: FullWrite Color Menus
- Date: 11 May 88 14:38:29 GMT
- Organization: Schlumberger-Doll Research, Ridgefield, CT
-
- As has already been noted by someone, FullWrite does not use color menus
- even if you set them up on your Mac II with the Kolor CDEV. The reason
- for this is twofold: First, they supply their own mctb resource. An
- applications own mctb resource will override (rightly so) the global
- mctb put in the System file by Kolor (same with all other color
- resources).
-
- Thus, you might think removing this resource from FullWrite will give
- you color menus. It does, sort of. You will get your menubar colored
- and the items in the Apple menu. However, the items in the other menus
- will remain B&W. This is due to the non-standard MDEF the use to handle
- their menus.
-
- Their MDEF (as also already noted by someone) does not follow the Apple
- interface guidelines by putting triangle arrows at the top and bottom of
- long scrolling menus (such as the Font menu). One thing in their favor
- though, their menus do scroll much faster than Apple's.
-
- Jeff
- --
- uucp: ...rutgers!yale!slb-sdr!shulman
- CSNet: SHULMAN@SDR.SLB.COM
- Delphi: JEFFS
- GEnie: KILROY
- CIS: 76136,667
- MCI Mail: KILROY
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: chuq@plaid.Sun.COM (Chuq Von Rospach)
- Subject: Re: FullWrite on shelves
- Date: 8 May 88 23:39:19 GMT
- Organization: Fictional Reality
-
- >I hope it was worth the wait.
-
- I think so, so far. I picked up my copy at ComputerWare for about $260.
- I haven't played with it a lot yet, but I have pored through
- documentation and done a little prodding and pushing, and I think I'm
- going to really like Fullwrite.
-
- It's definitely not perfect, but it has the power of Word 3.0. It's also
- a very intuitive program. As you read through the manual, you start to
- realize just how intuitive it is (in many ways, you don't need to read
- the manual. For a program of this power, that says something).
-
- There are some areas that I've flagged as things to be aware of. Some of
- these are plusses, some minuses. This isn't in any particular order
- (yet):
-
- + The documentation is generally well written. There are two volumes: a
- learning guide and a reference manual.
-
- - However, the manual does not have a tutorial. There are a bunch of
- samples
- on the disk, but no structured tutorial introduction. The learning
- manual is
- basically a "take a look at this" and assume's you're poking at it
- on your own. A structured tutorial would help the startup time.
-
- - The manual is incomplete in some areas. It mentions, but never
- explains,
- stationery (read-only documents that are used as templates). It
- barely mentions something called background files, which are (I
- think!) used to import stuff like EPS files into stationery. I
- really don't understand what they do, how, or why. I'm hoping that
- the examples shipped with the program explain it, since the manual
- ignores them. This looks to be, also, the only way to get postscript
- code into your documents. Hope I'm wrong on that one.
-
- - Style sheets are functional, but more limited than Word 3.0. No "based
- on"
- or "next style" options. Styles seem to be additive, also: if they
- set up a bold/italic style and impose it on underlined text, it
- comes up bold/italic underlined.
-
- + They've implemented something called a variable. A more generalized
- flavor
- of the various page/date/time icons in Word headers. you can define
- your own, too (I'm not sure why yet, though). One that I find
- missing is the # of words (variables exist for pages and
- characters).
-
- - You don't seem to be able to save drawings from the draw layer
- independently. You can grab them via the clipboard, but you could
- almost obsolete the need for a separate drawing program if you could
- save it conveniently.
-
- - Startup is rather slow, and it brings up a copyright message every
- time.
- Not really bad, but it stays up long enough to be irritating, and I
- almost get the feeling AT has a wait loop in the initialization code
- for the startup screen. If that's true, I hope someone finds a patch
- for it. If not, there's a lot of initialization going down.
-
- + Change bars. Real, honest to god, decent, integrated change bars. You
- can
- turn them on or off, reset them after every save, reset them on
- request, all sorts of things. You may not care about change bars,
- but once you've worked with them in a serious writing project,
- you'll hate to lose them. It's nice to be able to scan through and
- edit only those parts that have been changed, rather than having to
- search for all the new text (and probably missing some of it).
-
- + Bookmarks. In a large document (or even, for that matter, a small one)
- how
- many times have you found yourself bouncing between two or three
- places, verifying one thing, rewriting another, checking to make
- sure the narritive matches in disparate parts of the story? On
- paper, you just keep the pages next to each other. On computers,
- you go crazy. Bookmarks let you set a pointer to a specific place in
- the document, and reference it by name. A "go to " label for your
- writing. I wish I'd thought of it.....
-
- o Performance seems reasonable. Once it's started, that is. I'm also not
- hurting for memory. You have to have 1Meg to run it, 2 meg to run it
- with Multifinder. This won't work very well on a floppy system,
- either -- I wouldn't try less than a hard disk.
-
- o Spell checker is on a part, probably a little better, than the Word
- checker. A little less powerful, a little more intuitive. Goodenuf,
- as they say.
-
- o A thesaurus. I'm not terribly convinced a computer thesaurus buys you
- anything over a desk model (and the desk model is cheaper). But
- we'll see.
-
- o Imports Write and Word files. Exports only Write files. Initially I
- was
- bothered by this, but it makes sense. The Word 3.0 file structure
- is an amazing bitch to work with. And if you're exporting, you lose
- most of the special features -- and you're likely setting things up
- to import into another program that is also likely to read Write,
- not word files (or both). Macwrite is the primary text-transfer
- format for the Mac -- even Word reads it. So there's no real reason
- to export in anything else.
-
- All in all, it looks to be a definite step up from Word 3.0. Easier to
- use, a lot more writer friendly, a lot more intuitive. It is definitely,
- definitely a word hacker's program, not for the casual writer. But it
- set itself off for the high end, and it seems to have achieved it. This
- is a first impression, though. I'll tell you more when I have a couple
- of weeks under my fingers.
-
- chuq
-
- Chuq Von Rospach chuq@sun.COM Delphi: CHUQ
-
- I come to preach to a religion that doesn't exist. It has no
- members.
- It has no clergy. It has no doctrine. It has no collection
- plate.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: dorourke@polyslo.UUCP (David M. O'Rourke)
- Subject: Re: FullWrite on shelves
- Date: 9 May 88 16:34:04 GMT
- Organization: Cal Poly State University -- San Luis Obispo
-
- In article <52428@sun.uucp> chuq@sun.UUCP (Chuq Von Rospach) writes:
- >I think so, so far. I picked up my copy at ComputerWare for about $260. I
-
- I agree I've been using the Pre-Release version since I got it, I
- liked it better than word, even with the bugs.
-
- >It's definitely not perfect, but it has the power of Word 3.0. It's also a
-
- It kind of grows on you, as you learn the program it keeps getting
- better.
-
- >There are some areas that I've flagged as things to be aware of. Some of
- >these are plusses, some minuses. This isn't in any particular order (yet):
-
- It's there to support background pictures. You can have FullWrite
- print a picture on every page, or just the first page. It's a simple
- way to add fancy boarders or letter head to a document, and since it's
- a picture you don't have to worry about where it is in relation to text.
-
- >+ They've implemented something called a variable. A more generalized flavor
-
- Variables are wonderful, when you insert a variable in several places
- in the document, and then you want to change what the variable says, you
- don't have to do a search and replace, you can just change it in the
- variable dialog, and boom, all references to that variable are
- automatically updated. Try it it's real nice.
-
- >- Startup is rather slow, and it brings up a copyright message every time.
-
- I agree, anyone at Ashton-Tate reading this.
-
- I love FullWrite! I have found it to be more than very useful in the
- past 5 months, and now the release version is out. Thank god!
-
- David M. O'Rourke
- --
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
- | dorourke@polyslo | Disclaimer: All opinions in this message are mine, but |
- | | if you like them they can be yours too. |
- | | Besides I'm just a student so what do I |
- | | know! |
- |-----------------------------------------------------------------------------|
- | When you have to place a disclaimer in your mail you know it's a sign |
- | that there are TOO many Lawyer's. |
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: jts@demon.siemens-rtl (Jim Sasaki)
- Subject: Re: Mac Security
- Date: 6 May 88 14:01:35 GMT
- Organization: Siemens Research and Technology Labs, Princeton NJ
-
- You might try SilverLining by LaCie. It allows you to password-protect
- a hard disk. (It prevents you from mounting the disk until you enter
- the password.) You can't circumvent this by booting from a floppy.
-
- It also comes with a utility that lets you partition your disk into
- separate logical volumes. Different volumes can have different (or no)
- passwords. The utility also lets you specify which (if any) volumes are
- to be mounted at boot time. A desk accessory lets you mount volumes
- while you're in an application. (So if you want, you can drag a
- non-boot volume to the finder, get a cup of coffee, come back, and use
- the desk accessory to remount the volume.)
- --
- Just a satisified customer, etc.
-
- -- Jim Sasaki (jts%siemens.com@princton.edu)
- --------------------
- Any opinions above are my own, and not necessarily those of Siemens RTL, for
- whom I consult.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: beloin@batcomputer.tn.cornell.edu (Ron Beloin)
- Subject: Re: Programmer's Extender vs. MacExpress...
- Date: 5 May 88 14:00:39 GMT
- Organization: Ecosystems Research Center, Cornell University, Ithaca NY
-
- In article <1146@cadre.dsl.PITTSBURGH.EDU> jas@cadre.dsl.PITTSBURGH.EDU
- (Jeffrey A. Sullivan) writes:
- >Has anyone had any experience with Programmer's Extender or MacExpress or
- >any of these COMMERCIAL generic application/apptools kinds of products? I
- I purchased programmer's extender (Invention Software), both volumes I
- and II, to help me develope a relatively simple application. After
- spending several frustrating days tracting down bugs in Invention
- Software's code, I decided that I would have been better off without it.
- There were several bugs, some of which would not allow procedures to
- work at all, others would cause data loss to the user of your program.
- One by one I abandoned their code and wrote my own procedures. (In that
- sense, it's a good learning environment!) They don't give you all of
- the sources, so I wa lucky that the bugs didn't show up in compiled code
- (although they may yet). Now my app is about 5% Invention's code, and if
- I ever do a major rewrite, I will purge all of it out.
- --
- Ron Beloin, Ecosystems Research Center, Corson Hall, Cornell, Ithaca,NY 14853
- >> opinions << BITNET:BELOIN@CRNLTHRY; INTERNET:beloin@tcgould.tn.cornell.edu
- >> are mine << UUCP:{cmcl2,shasta,uw-beaver,rochester}!cornell!tcgould!beloin
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: alan@metasoft.UUCP (Alan Epstein)
- Subject: PrintMgr Bug?
- Date: 5 May 88 17:14:48 GMT
- Organization: Meta Software Corporation, Cambridge MA
-
- i think i may have discovered an elusive bug in the print manager, print
- glue or printer drivers (notably but not restricted to the LW). all this
- relates to Design/2.0 which is built using LightSpeed C (v2.15).
-
- what i am doing is constructing an ordinary grafport which contains a
- collection of boxes and polygons numbering less than 60. the polygons
- are each about 38 bytes in size (about 6 vertices). when 'update' time
- occurs, i write the objects to the device (screen or printer) using
- FrameRect and FramePoly trap calls. all according to guidelines.
-
- i have been able to construct cases where one or more of the polygons is
- printed incorrectly -- part way thru the drawing, the polygon is drawn
- to some incorrect position, indicating that the points vector had been
- damaged. the next polygon is always fine. on the other hand, using the
- same basic code, drawing the same set of polygons to the screen never
- fails.
-
- i have walked thru some of the print manager code and discovered that
- when an offending polygon is being sent to the print driver (via
- FramePoly), a call to PFDumpBuf() is invoked by PFOut() (both I assume
- internal print manager or glue routines for which i have no
- documentation). there appears to be a direct correlation between polygon
- failures and calls to PFDumpBuf().
-
- my hypothesis is that under certain circumstances, during a FramePoly
- call, part of this polygon is written to the print port, the buffer
- becomes full, requiring it to be flushed, and upon returning, PFOut is
- no longer able to remember where it left off and writes some bogus
- polygon segments for the remainder of the count.
-
- this occurs on a Mac II (4Meg) or a Mac + (2Meg). it matters not whether
- the polygons are locked prior to calling FramePoly (although i see that
- FramePoly locks them anyway), nor is the presence of a printer idle
- routine important.
-
- although the problem manifests without any special debugging tools, it
- is possible to exacerbate the failures (cause them where they were not
- otherwise occurring), by using the TMON 'heap scramble' option. again,
- the problem occurs without scramble.
-
- i'm interested in learning from anyone who may have seen anything
- remotely related to these bugs. i'd also like to hear from anyone at
- apple who knows the internals of the printer manager & drivers since i
- think that's where the problem lies.
-
- feel free to call if you'd like further information.
-
- alan epstein
- meta software corp
- (617) 576.6920
-
- [ alan%metasoft@bbn.com ] or
- [ bbn!metasoft!alan ]
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: herbw@midas.TEK.COM (Herb Weiner)
- Subject: Re: MultiFinder switch bug with custom WDEFs
- Date: 5 May 88 00:02:29 GMT
- Organization: Tektronix, Inc., Beaverton, OR.
-
- --------
-
- Perhaps someone could explain the rationale for PROHIBITING a context
- switch when a modal dialog box is in front. I find that it would
- sometimes be convenient to switch to the finder (for example) when a
- sfGetFile dialog is active, so I could examine (for example) file
- creation dates, sizes, etc.
-
- It might be reasonable to require the application developer to take an
- explicit action to ALLOW the context switch (such as providing an event
- filter for the modal dialog).
-
- Perhaps what I'm really suggesting is that modal dialogs are only modal
- with respect to that application that displays them, but that they
- should be MODELESS with respect to OTHER applications running under
- MultiFinder.
-
- If the real problem is that Apple depends upon non-reentrant code (such
- as Standard File) which uses modal dialogs, perhaps we should all be
- asking when Apple will make this code reentrant.
-
- Looking forward to some enlightenment...
-
- Herb Weiner
- UUCP: !tektronix!midas!herbw
- AppleLink: D0521
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: goldman@Apple.COM (Phil Goldman)
- Subject: Re: MultiFinder switch bug with custom WDEFs
- Date: 5 May 88 20:01:51 GMT
- Organization: Apple Computer Inc, Cupertino, CA
-
- >Perhaps someone could explain the rationale for PROHIBITING a context switch
- >when a modal dialog box is in front...
-
- The rationale is one of user interface. A modal dialog should be used
- when the user must interact with it before the (visible) task can
- continue. If this is not its purpose, then the dialog should be
- modeless.
-
- >Perhaps what I'm really suggesting is that modal dialogs are only modal
-
- There might be some use for dialogs that are modal within their layer.
- This can already be accomplished by the applications themselves.
- Hopefully these will not too often be used.
-
- There has been some thought given to allowing the power user to override
- modal dialogs, possibly by holding down the command key, or some
- equivalent, while switching.
-
- >If the real problem is that Apple depends upon non-reentrant code (such
-
- And modeless too, right? Why shouldn't other application windows be
- allowed to be put in front of the StdFile dialog, as well as other
- layers? What's the distinction (besides a change to the app interface)?
-
- Anyway... Do you really want multiple instances of StdFile? I'd think
- that it would be nicer to *never* have to use it. In MultiFinder 6.0
- (due real real soon now) it is possible to double-click on documents in
- the Finder and have an running application open them anyway, thus
- eliminating the need for StdFile (unless the latter is a preferred form
- of navigation), especially if it is desirable to look at the file info
- beforehand.
- --
- -Phil Goldman
- Apple Computer
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: darin@Apple.COM (Darin Adler)
- Subject: Re: MultiFinder switch bug with custom WDEFs
- Date: 7 May 88 07:21:04 GMT
- Organization: Apple
-
- In article <2770@polya.STANFORD.EDU> kaufman@polya.stanford.edu (Marc T.
- Kaufman) writes:
- > One of the main reasons for using modal dialogs where modeless dialogs
- > would do, is the availability of the Dialog Manager for handling most of
- > the buttons, switches, and events. If a dialog is modeless, you cannot
- > use IsDialogEvent, NewDialog, GetNewDialog, or the ModalDialog event filter.
-
- Absolutely untrue! IsDialogEvent, NewDialog, and GetNewDialog can all be
- used with modeless dialogs. Note that for a modeless dialog, you create
- the dialog and then return to the main event loop. Some of the events
- you receive from GetNextEvent or WaitNextEvent need to be passed to the
- dialog manager. After gettin an event, you call IsDialogEvent. If that
- returns TRUE, then you call DialogSelect for the event. This is the
- equivalent of what ModalDialog does for modal dialogs. Note that you can
- do the same filtering that you would do in a ModalDialog event filter
- just before calling DialogSelect. I even sometimes use the same dialog
- filter for both modal and modeless dialogs like this:
-
- modal case:
-
- ... NewDialog ...
-
- ModalDialog(itemHit, @DialogFilter);
-
- modeless case:
-
- ... NewDialog ... {fall back to main event loop}
-
- ... GetNextEvent(everyEvent, event) ...
- IF IsDialogEvent(event) THEN BEGIN
- dialog := FrontWindow;
- hitSomething := FALSE;
- IF WindowPeek(dialog)^.windowKind = dialogKind THEN
- hitSomething := DialogFilter(dialog, event, itemHit);
- IF NOT hitSomething THEN
- hitSomething := DialogSelect(event, dialog, itemHit);
- ... {handle hits here} ...
- END;
- --
- Darin Adler AppleLink:Adler4
- UUCP: {sun,voder,nsc,mtxinu,dual}!apple!darin CSNET: darin@Apple.com
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: phil@mit-amt.MEDIA.MIT.EDU (Phil Sohn)
- Subject: Mac Lint
- Date: 6 May 88 18:36:33 GMT
- Organization: MIT Media Lab, Cambridge, MA
-
- Does anyone know of a Lint type program for the Macintosh?
-
- phil@ems.media.mit.edu
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: tristan@killer.UUCP (Rob Beckham)
- Subject: Turbo Pascal
- Date: 6 May 88 15:45:42 GMT
- Organization: The Unix(R) Connection, Dallas, Texas
-
- After a couple of hours, of working with Turbo Pascal and my Mac II , I
- have found that Font DA Juggler Plus causes Turbo to crash. What
- happensis that when you are running Juggler and you comply something to
- memory, run your program and come back to Turbo, Turbo will crash when
- you touch the menu bar.
-
- So don't use Juggler with Turbo.
-
- Rob Beckham
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: dan@Apple.COM (Dan Allen)
- Subject: Re: Turbo Pascal
- Date: 8 May 88 23:03:22 GMT
- Organization: Apple Computer Inc, Cupertino, CA
-
- Turbo Pascal 1.1 is great, but it DOES NOT WORK with MultiFinder. It
- seems to only have fixed the Mac II problems.
-
- When a person Runs a program in Turbo, it creates a sub-heap inside its
- own heap. The original Mac II problem was that Color QuickDraw
- allocated some data structure in this new heap when InitWindows was
- called for the TTY window that Turbo puts up. When Turbo returned to
- its own heap and zapped the program heap, this data structure (which was
- still being relyed upon by Color QuickDraw) caused a crash.
-
- This has been fixed in Turbo 1.1.
-
- However, running a program in Turbo under MultiFinder still crashes, not
- just on Mac IIs, but on SEs and Pluses as well. Unfortunately I cannot
- recall the exact details of the problem, but it seems like it was
- similiar to the above problem.
-
- What you can do is build the program on disk (CMD K) and then run it.
- That seems to work, but you lose some of the beauty of the Turbo
- Environment. I seem to recall a small notice by Borland to the effect
- that this is the workaround for Turbo 1.1 and MultiFinder.
-
- All Turbo needs to do is call _Launch with the appropriate high bit set
- (documented in some recent TechNote if I recall right), and it would
- work.
-
- If there is a newer version of Turbo that does Run under MF, I should
- would like to know!
- --
- Dan Allen
- Software Explorer
- Apple Computer
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: kent@soma.bcm.tmc.edu (Kent Hutson)
- Subject: WDEFs in MPW?
- Date: 7 May 88 06:17:43 GMT
- Organization: Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tx
-
- I tried to write a WDEF in MPW and it didn't work. Oddly, when that
- same WDEF was compiled using Lightspeed Pascal, it worked fine. Could
- anybody give me a clue how to make WDEF's in MPW? I would really like a
- simple sample or fragments that I can figure out.
-
- Thanks, Kent
-
- --
- Kent Hutson
- Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
- kent@soma.bcm.tmc.edu
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: atchison@hpindda.HP.COM (Lee Atchison)
- Subject: LSC Glue code
- Date: 6 May 88 22:55:44 GMT
- Organization: HP Technical Networks, Cupertino, Calif.
-
- Hi all.
-
- Is there some way to change the "GLUE" that LSC generates when it is
- making code (or device driver) resources?
-
- The reason why I'm asking is that I want to be able to generate the
- printer driver resources "PDEV" (I think that's what they are called),
- and these resources require the first four words to be offset to certain
- routines. As far as I can tell, the standard LSC glue doesn't support
- this.
-
- Can anyone help me?
-
- -lee
- --
- Lee Atchison
- Hewlett Packard, Business Networks Division
- Cupertino, CA 95014
- atchison%hpindda@hplabs.hp.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Usenet Mac Digest
- ************************
-
- ACTION>