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* AmigaWorld 5.19 *
© by Wolfgang Lug
Documentation
AmigaWorld is an informative and up-to-date database with much information
about every country, many descriptions and maps.
This documentation was made to show you those abilities of AmigaWorld
that you might not notice by experimenting.
Please have a look at the example in the appendix.
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
1 Basics: features, system requirements, getting started
2 The Screen: country list and search function
3 The Menus: short descriptions of the most important items
4 Country Windows
5 Data: sources, meaning and problems
6 Maps
7 Text Descriptions
8 Legal Stuff: Disclaimer and distribution
9 Registration
10 Translating AmigaWorld: what about YOU!?
11 A Kind Request: comments and bug reports
12 A Big "Dankeschön": Credits
A Example: how to sort, search and compare
B Keyboard Commands
C AmigaWorld on the WorldWideWeb
1 BASICS
========
What AmigaWorld is
------------------
AmigaWorld contains much information about every country on Earth that you
can call up in a country window. You can easily compare data of two or more
countries by opening up to ten of these windows. More advanced comparation
features are offered by the country list: You can select particular coun-
tries and sort them or search through them in many different ways.
Additionaly AmigaWorld contains informative description texts about every
country and about all continents and many international organizations.
Maps can show you the location of a country, vice versa you can select
countries by clicking on a map.
AmigaWorld is easy to use and offers output in English, German, French,
Dutch, Italian, Swedish, Norwegian and Finnish. Screen mode, font and
colours can be chosen by you.
What AmigaWorld is not
----------------------
AmigaWorld cannot take the place of an atlas because it is not the pro-
gram's goal to display sophisticated maps, but to give fast access to
information and the ability to compare data that you had to look up for
each country seperately.
There is a certain PC program that knows much more data but if you do
not have to know how many pharmacists live in Birmingham: AmigaWorld does
know the -important- facts.
System requirements
-------------------
AmigaWorld Version 5 requires at least Workbench 2.1, 2 MByte of RAM and
a hard disk. A 68000 processor will do fine.
Getting started
---------------
You cannot start AmigaWorld directly form the diskettes that you received
it on: You have to install the software on your hard disk first. This is
done the usual way with the Installer program.
If you have received AmigaWorld on a CD-ROM or via Aminet then you can get
going immediately.
Simply double-click on its icon to start AmigaWorld from Workbench.
If you like to run it from Shell you have to enter "cd AmigaWorld:"
(i.e. the complete path where the program is located) and "stack 8000"
before starting the program. Parameters cannot be specified.
Changing to another language
----------------------------
After start AmigaWorld introduces itself in English. But you can switch
to another user interface! Select "Language" from the "Configuration"
menu and click on one of the available languages.
All data and some of the descriptions will now be displayed in the
language of your choice.
Just by the way this feature of AmigaWorld offers you the great opportunity
to study the basics of a foreign language! Why not try to cope with the
German user interface!
2 THE SCREEN
============
The most important elements of the AmigaWorld screen are the country list,
the search gadgets and the little world map.
The country list
----------------
All countries that AmigaWorld knows about are displayed in the list at
first. Clicking on a country with the mouse brings up a country window
with the basic data about it. The menu of this window offers you more
information.
You can affect the contents of the list with the "Selection" menu, e.g.
have a look at the countries of one continent or one organization only.
The order of the list is fixed in the "Sort by" menu.
The "Display" menu determines the look of the list: You can choose
if dependencies and rank numbers are to be displayed, and so on.
The search gadgets
------------------
With the help of the text gadget you can search through the selected
countries for different things. You can e.g. find out where Spanish is
spoken. Wheter to search for a country's name, a language or something
else is chosen in the gadget below.
Search Mode
-----------
There are two search modes: "exclude" means that AmigaWorld only searches
the selected countries. Countries that do not match your input will be
excluded from the list. By using this mode you can for example find out
in which countries German AND Italian is spoken:
Select all countries, choose "Search for language", then type "Italian"
into the gadget, hit return, type "German" and hit return again.
The "include" mode works contrastingly: All countries in the list remain
selected, and all other countries that match your input will be included
too. So you can find out where German OR Italian is spoken:
Select all countries and switch on "mode: exclude", and search for Italian.
Then switch on "mode: include" and search for German.
Pecularities
------------
AmigaWorld knows about accents and umlauts: It does not matter if you
enter "e" or "é", "ae", "æ" or "ä". Search is not case-sensitive, i.e.
you can enter "Åland" or "aAlaND".
If you do not want to type in the whole word: The first letters will do,
like "Great B*". Other wildcards are not supported. Some things are to
be known when searching for ...
* Name: If you enter the abbreviation of a country instead of its name
(like "GB") then the country itself and all its dependencies will be
found. AmigaWorld knows more than one name for many countries:
It does not matter if you type in "England", "Great Britain" or
"United K*".
* Location: Possible input is "East Asia" or "Central Europe", but you
can also type in the name of a sea to get a list of the adjacent
countries. AmigaWorld knows about the following seas: Atlantic,
North Sea, Baltic Sea, Mediterranean, Black Sea, Indic, Red Sea,
Pacific.
* Religion: Do not enter the name of a religion ("Islam"), but the
name of its followers ("Muslimes").
* Currency: You can only search for main-units ("Dollar"), not for
sub-units ("Cents").
The little world map
--------------------
Clicking the left mouse button over the map brings up a huge map of
the continent you aimed at. Now you can call up the data of a country
by clicking it.
Clicking the right mouse button brings up a big world map.
3 THE MENUS
===========
AmigaWorld offers the following five menus:
"AmigaWorld"
------------
This menu provides some information on AmigaWorld and the most important
feature: "Quit".
"Selection"
-----------
If you would like to have a look at the countries of one continent or
organization only, then you can get a list of them with this menu.
The first two items were designed for use after searching.
* All countries: puts all 258 countries and dependencies into the
selection list.
* Restore: puts exactly those countries back to the list that have
been there before your last search.
* Continent: brings up a new window with a list of the continents.
Click one to get a description of it and a list of the countries
located there.
* Organization: works the same way, with a choice of important
international organizations.
* Calc average: This item makes it possible to have a look at the
average value of any figure for the selected countries. So you can
find out about the average expected lifetime in Central Europe or
Africa. Before calling this function, you have to sort the list
properly.
Some info for mathematicians: It is the "real" average, not the
arithmetical mean: When calculating life expectancy you would not get
the correct result by adding all values and dividing their sum by the
number of countries. Example: Country A has 100 inhabitants with an
expected lifetime of 60 years, in country B live 20 human beings (m)
that become 80 years (a) old. The average is not the mean of 60 and 80,
but 63.3:
100m * 60a + 20m * 80a 6000am + 1600 am 7200a _
---------------------- = ---------------- = ----- = 63,3a
100m + 20m 120m 120
* Calc sum: This item works similar, except for the fact that you can
only look at the sum of area, population and GNP---adding up the other
figures would be senseless, anyway.
* Load / Save: Saves or loads the contents of the list.
"Sort by"
---------
Gives you 14 different criteria to sort the list: When selecting size,
Russia comes first and the Vatican is at the end.
If you can't stand the pope being displayed at the bottom then you might
use the "Reverse order" item ...
"Display"
---------
This menu determines the look of the country list. It is most interesting
in connection with the "Sort by" menu as the example in the appendix will
show.
* Rank: Each country gets a number in fromt of it when this option is
checked.
* Official names: The official names are displayed instead of the common
ones. Quite useless.
* Value: When you activate this option and the list is sorted by popul-
ation then the number of inhabitants will be displayed behind every
country. This works the same way with all other choices that you make
in the "Sort by" by, except for alphabetical order, of course.
* Dependencies: By de-activating this one, you can remove all
dependencies from the selection list.
* Compare: Not only the currently selected countries will be displayed,
but also those that had been selected before your last search or your
last use of the "Selection" menu. They will be displayed in a different
colour, so you can easily compare two lists.
If you would like to compare two completely different lists that can
only be created with more than one step: Save list 1 to disk, create
lisk 2, load list 1 again, restore list 2 with the second item of the
"Selection" menu---then you can compare.
Moreover you can (de)select single countries with the right mouse
button when this item is checked.
"Configuration"
---------------
With this one you can adjust the looks of AmigaWorld quite largely to your
personal preferences:
* Palette: On 16-colour screens maps and flags are still displayed in
the right colours, but on an 8-coloured screen they will not look very
good after changing the palette.
* Screen Mode: Another requester appears, and you can choose a new
screen mode. Better not use lores-modes.
* Font: The "FarawayEyes" font that comes along with the program is quite
suitable.
* Language: For switching to another user-interface.
* Measures: A feature for all you Anglo-Americans: You can get area
figures in sqare miles instead of square kilometres.
* Save: Puts the settings of the config menu to disk; AmigaWorld will
use them right after you start it the next time.
4 COUNTRY WINDOWS
=================
At first, the basic data is displayed in the country window. Using the
"Data" menu gives you population or economic data instead.
The other menu offers even more information: You can call up an English
description about the country, a location map and a list of its dependen-
cies, if any. Moreover you can print out the data.
You can still use all menus of the main window, the country list and the
search feature, after having opened up to ten country windows.
5 DATA
======
Most data was taken from the 1998 edition of "Fischer-Weltalmanach",
a German yearbook. Other sources include the internet, newspaper articles
and information provided by users.
If you are interested to understand WHAT kind of data is given you
then you should read the following sections:
Basic data
----------
Several countries have changed their NAMES recently, like Burma into
Myanmar or Zaire into Democratic Republic of Congo. If you cannot find a
country in the list, you are probably searching for an old name.
No problem: Type the name you know into the input gadget---AmigaWorld
probably knows it and shows you the data of the country, along with its
new name.
Not all LANGUAGES spoken in a country are listed, but the most common ones.
Minority languages are usually mentioned if their speakers are a local
group. Not mentioned are the languages of other minorities that are scatt-
ered all over the country, like Turkish immigrants in many parts of Europe.
This is a bit unsatisfactory, but otherwise at least a dozen languages had
to be listed for most West European countries.
The same applies to RELIGIONGS: Not all are listed, but most. Usually the
percentages are provided in brackets, but these figures can only be clues.
They differ very much from source to source. For some countries you get a
total of more than 100%, for others less than 70%. This is no mistake but
due to the fact that some people belong to two religious communities,
others to none.
Population data
---------------
The NUMBER OF INHABITANTS is as up-to-data as possible, its ANNUAL GROWTH
is the average value for the last decade. The DENSITY is not very helpful
for some large countries, like Egypt: The Nile delta is one of the most
densely populated regions on Earth while the deserts are uninhabited.
The LIFE EXPECTANCY is the average value for women and men. The actual
figure for women is a few years more, for men a few years less.
The share of ILLITERATES is mostly taken from national authorities of a
country and therefore often too little: Even in the industrialized
countries of the West, there is a hidden illiteracy of a few percent.
The figure for the proportion of rural and URBAN POPULATION is problematic,
either: Different countries have different measuring methods for that one.
Economic data
-------------
The GRAND NATIONAL PRODUCT (GNP) is as up-to-date as possible, usually
taken from 1995. It is an indicator for the economic strength of a country
and composed of the overall production and service in that country, plus
money income from abroad, minus money transfer to foreign countries.
The ECONOMIC GROWTH is the percentage that the GNP has grown within a year.
This figure is quite instable and AmigaWorld would always be out of time if
using the value for one single year. Therefore the figure is the average
value for the past five years, not showing you the tendency an economy has
right now but its development in recent years.
The INFLATION varies even more throughout the years: AmigaWorld offers
the average for the past decade.
On the contrary the percentage of UNEMPLOYMENT is as up-to-date as possib-
le, usually it is the average value for a whole year, because unemployment
is subject to seasonal changes.
The unit of ENERGY CONSUMPTION is kilogramme oil units.
6 MAPS
======
The map window has a little menu with the item "Description", giving you
a text about the continent you are looking at.
At the moment there are only ten maps showing the location of a country.
Future versions will include maps that flexibly adjust to differnt screen
modes and provide more details, like cities, lakes, mountains and so on.
7 DESCRIPTION TEXTS
===================
You can move in these texts not only with the proportional gadget,
but also with the cursor up-/down-keys. You can print out or save
the descriptions with a little menu.
The descriptions of the continents and most organizations I have written.
Ruud Hoekzema has helped with criticism and ideas, and he has included
some more organizations.
But the lion's share of this work had and still has Bo Arnholm who has
written the descriptions for all 258 countries and dependencies. Bo is
still improving these texts. If you like to help him: Read the letter
that he has written to you. The file is included in the same drawer as
this documentation.
And please notice that these descriptions are copyright by Bo Arnholm.
That means that you have to contact him first if you would like to
make any non-private use of them.
8 LEGAL STUFF
=============
Disclaimer
----------
************************************************************************
* *
* DISCLAIMER *
* *
* THIS SOFTWARE AND DATA IS PROVIDED "AS IS". *
* NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES ARE MADE WITH RESPECT TO THE *
* ACCURACY, RELIABILITY, PERFORMANCE, CURRENTNESS, OR OPERATION *
* OF THIS SOFTWARE AND DATA, AND ALL USE IS AT YOUR OWN RISK. *
* THE AUTHORS DO NOT ASSUME ANY RESPONSIBILITY OR LIABILITY *
* WHATSOEVER WITH RESPECT TO YOUR USE OF THIS SOFTWARE AND DATA. *
* *
************************************************************************
Distribution
------------
Everybody is encouraged to spread the limited demo version of AmigaWorld,
as long as he or she does not remove, add or change any of the files.
The keyfile obtained by registered users must not be given to any other
person. It would be no good idea anyway, because it contains the user's
name. Should you commit this heinous deed then I wish you that you
have to sit in front of a computer for the rest of your life!
@endnode
9 REGISTRATION
==============
AmigaWorld has been released as ShareWare. That means that everybody can
copy the software, and you can use most of its features without paying.
The authors do not get any money unless you become a registered user and
send a donation to us.
If you like the software and would like to make its authors happy (and
willing to create future versions) then please become a registered user
and honor our work!
Please see the file "Registration.asc" in this drawer for more info.
10 CREATING A NEW TRANSLATION
=============================
From the very beginning, AmigaWorld has been designed as a multi-language
program. All output messages and all the data is stored in seperate files
for each language. AmigaWorld's "FarawayEyes" font contains the special
chars of the Croatian, Czech, Hungarian, Polish and Turkish languages;
and other fonts may be used, either. So a translation in all European
languages is possible!
Hence it is not very complicated to translate AmigaWorld, but it is a lot
of work, as AmigaWorld knows lots of data. If you would like to translate
AmigaWorld into another language, you have to cope with three files:
-- "aw.output" contains about 200 lines of output messages.
-- "aw.data" contains all the country data.
-- "aw.org" contains the descriptions of international organizations.
Have a look at these files, and if you are still interested in doing a new
translation -- you are very welcome! But please send a message to me
(Wolfgang) first, as somebody else might be working on the same language.
Translating AmigaWorld is mostly a favour to the people that speak your
language: Don't expect to get richt! You will receive your keyfile for
free and if you like to, you can be a registration site for your country:
Your income might suffice for a good dinner and a nice bottle of wine
-- once or twice in a year...
11 A SMALL REQUEST
==================
Every new version of AmigaWorld is thoroughly tested before its release,
and severe bugs have rarely been found.
Should such a bug or even a complete crash of the system happen to you
then please write me which kind of hardware you use, and what exactly
happened. I will be very thankful for hints about wrong data, too!
Any comments and suggestions on AmigaWorld are welcome to
Lug@stud-mailer.uni-marburg.de
If you have any comments, suggestions or corrections on the country
descriptions, then don't hesitate to write to Bo Arnholm,
arnis@tripnet.se
12 A BIG "DANKESCHÖN"
=====================
A real difficulty when saying "Thank you" to more than one person is
choosing an order! Who shall be mentioned first and who last?
This awful problem has been solved here by using order of appearance,
as it is done when listing the actors of a stage play -- and in fact,
is AmigaWorld anything else but a real good tragedy? If you would like
to turn it into a comedy then *please* become a registered user!
So, I would like to thank everybody who helped with ideas, critizism
and their work, especially:
Alexander Linke
who showed me what a good thing Modula-2 is:
The AmigaWorld program has been written using this instruction code.
Bo Arnholm
for his translation to Swedish and for all his ideas, and of course
for all the wonderful country descriptions that he has written during
the last two years.
If you would like to contact him for discussion his texts, or simply
for sending him an extra donation: His address is
Bo Arnholm -- Södermalmsgatan 13 -- 431 69 Mölndal -- Schweden
email: arnis@tripnet.se
Ruud Hoekzema
for his Dutch translation and his improving the country data as well as
the descriptions of continents and organizations, and for all his good
ideas. Thank you also for giving home to one of the AmigaWorld home-
pages at the great server xs4all.
Mika Leinonen
for his translation to Finnish and for adding some dependencies,
and also for providing the first web-address of the AmigaWorld
homepage.
Olivier Bogros und Yves Salingue
who together have created the French translation of the program and the
documentation, and for maintaining the files in such a brilliant way.
Dr. Guido Alfani
who rendered AmigaWorld into Italian. As a political scientist (and
therefore a colleague), he provided lots of tips for the organization
descriptions.
Casper Thomsen
for the Danish translation of AmigaWorld and for many good ideas on
how to make AmigaWorld even better.
Bjarne Bjørnsen
who translated AmigaWorld into Norwegian, making it possible for all
North Europeans to use the program in their mother tongue.
Dave Travers
who added many flags and improved the appearance of most of the old
ones.
Lars Unger
who designed and created the web pages of AmigaWorld, with a lot
of work and enthusiasm.
I would also like to thank two other authors of non-commercial Amiga
software which was very helpful for creating AmigaWorld:
Jean-Michel Forgeas
for his great "Az".
After five years of using, this dinosaur still is my favourite editor,
and most AmigaWorld data files have been written with it.
Thies Wellpott
for his excellent "PlotMap". The outlines of the maps shown by
AmigaWorld have originally been created with this software.
EXAMPLE
=======
A little example will show you the capabilities of AmigaWorld for comparing
data of different countries.
It describes how to compare the economic growth of the EU countries to the
growth of the East Asian nations.
* Choose "Organization" from the "Selection" menu.
A list of international organizations appears.
* Click on the European Union.
A description of the EU comes up. Read it or not, and close the window.
* Now choose "Grand National Product / Growth" from the "Sort by" menu.
You will see a list of the 15 EU members, beginning with the most
booming economies.
* By activating "Rank" and "Value" from the "Display menu" you
can easily compare the figures for the EU countries.
* Using "Calc Average" from the "Selection" menu will give you the
average value.
* Change the search mode to "include", and the search for-gadget to
"location".
* Type in "East Asia". This will produce a mixed list of the European
Union and East Asia, still sorted by economic growth.
* There is a little trick for using two different colours:
Choose "Restore" from the "Selection menu" and "Compare" from
the "Display" menu.
KEYBOARD COMMANDS
=================
Most features of AmigaWorld can be accessed via keyboard, too:
The important menus have a shortcut, and the main window offers the
following key commands:
* Cursor-up/down: Highlights a country and scrolls the entire list
when the highlight bar comes to the top or end of the list.
Use the cursor-keys in connection with Shift and Alt to move the
whole list up and down.
* Return: Calls up the country data for the highlighted country.
* Space bar: Highlighting off / on again.
* Escape: Closes any window except for the main window.
The search gadgets and the selection windows for continents and organiz-
ations also provide full keyboard support:
Just hit the understroken letter with or without the Shift key.
AmigaWorld on the WorldWideWeb
==============================
Since the end of 1996, AmigaWorld is also represented on the WorldWideWeb!
You cannot look at countries' data or have lists created online -- you have
got the program for that purpose, anyway. And it's cheaper to get informed
offline.
So, what is the aim and object of our homepage? You can stay up-to-date
with program development as new versions of AmigaWorld are announced on
the Web and can also be downloaded. What's best: You can download only
those parts that you really need. If you want the latest data files in
English, then you can get them and not a single more byte.
Lars Unger has designed and created the pages, and at the moment there
are three URLs that have been made available by Mika Leinonen, Ruud
Hoekzema and Lars himself:
<http://stekt.oulu.fi/~mikal/amigaworld> (in Finland)
<http://www.xs4all.nl/~rhoek/amigaworld> (in the Netherlands)
<http://www.amigaworld.com/Lars/aw> (in the USA)
If you would like to know what else can be found on the site -- well,
have a look :-)
V I V A L A S A M I G A S !