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- From: WALSHJ@SJUVM.BITNET (Jerry Walsh)
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.notabene
- Subject: misc
- Message-ID: <921015.203037.EDT.WALSHJ@SJUVM.BITNET>
- Date: 16 Oct 92 00:30:37 GMT
- Sender: Nota Bene List <NOTABENE@TAUNIVM.BITNET>
- Lines: 51
- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
-
- A warning, a discovery? and a couple of queries...
- The warning: RE: VIDEO MEMORY AND NB.
- A week or so ago I mentioned a shareware program, ADDMEM, that makes
- use of idle memory on the EGA/VGA video card when you are in text mode,
- and said that the program warned against trying to use it with programs
- in graphics mode. It has worked swimmingly with my NB3.1, but I did not
- test it with SLS because I was told (2 or 3 years ago, when I ordered
- NB) that Lingua would be out in 6 weeks, so don't bother learning SLS.
- Now that I have NB4+Lingua, I have discovered that Lingua is not happy
- with ADDMEM. Not happy at all... Red button time. In short, unless
- you stay in absolutely vanilla NB4, don't use ADDMEM. Since it seems
- to be easy to switch from Lingua to monolingual mode within NB4 itself,
- the risk of forgetting that ADDMEM is loaded, switching, and crashing
- is too great for me.
-
- Which leads to the dubious discovery: SWITCHING MULTI to MONO-LINGUAL.
- I seem to remember someone asking a week or so ago if it was possible
- to switch between Lingua and monolingual mode easily. I think the
- answer is yes: F1 => Set => Symbol sets offers you a menu of four
- options. The first is NBLingua, the second is ASCII (a vanilla form),
- the third is ASCII with true italics, the fourth is ASCII with super-
- scripts. (These options refer to screen fonts.) I've had fun playing
- with these, because you can set up the color palettes and print mode,
- window, and block colors differently for each option. (If it's puce,
- it must be Lingua|)
-
- Now the queries. When I installed NB4 and Lingua last night in my
- late-night stupor, it worked find. Hebrew inserted into English text
- pushed the characters to the left, as it should. Today, it doesn't.
- Yes, I'm in Lingua (it's puce...), yes, the proper screen fonts seem
- to be installed: I get the Lingua-specific transliterated diacritics
- (aleph and ayin, shin, underdots, etc.), I get Hebrew and Greek fonts
- onscreen, including Hebrew vowels (though I didn't try vocalized con-
- sonants). Yes, I get the "H" indicator when I hit Ctrl-H. But the
- Hebrew text enters left-to-right. What am I forgetting to do now
- that it's daytime and I'm alert?
-
- Second query. Much has been said about having to "activate" a Lingua
- printer independently of your "activated" NB4 printer. Yet in the
- copious documentation we have, the procedure is identical on the NB
- QuickStart Card and on the NB Lingua QuickStart Card (F1 => Print =>
- Printer => Activate). How does one "activate" a Lingua printer? The
- question arises because I have followed the stated procedure in both
- vanilla ASCII mode and in NB Lingua mode (under the Symbol sets
- options) to activate a TIOmnilaser 2115. When I check the "activate
- printer" menu in Lingua, it tells me the TIOmnilaser 2115 is activa-
- ted. Then when I check the available Print Types (still in Lingua)
- I'm given a list of all the typefaces in the TIOmnilaser (Palatino,
- Zapf Chancery, etc.), yet it is my understanding that only Times
- Roman is actually supported by Lingua. I'm confused. (But that's
- nothing new...) Jerry Walsh
-