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- THE OPEN POLYTECHNIC OF NEW ZEALAND
- He Wharekura-tini Kaihautu o Aotearoa
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-
- version 1.1
-
- Copyright TOPNZ 1990
-
-
- ___________(PgDn for MORE!)_________
-
-
-
-
-
- Welcome to the READUTIL MANUAL!
- _______________________________
-
-
- You can browse through this file using:
-
-
- PgDn, PgUp, End, Home and arrow keys, then
-
-
- Esc to quit to DOS prompt.
-
-
-
- Use "Shift + Print Screen" to print screen pages.
-
- __________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- 1
-
- THE OPEN POLYTECHNIC OF NEW ZEALAND
- He Wharekura-tini Kaihautu o Aotearoa
-
- READUTIL
-
- Version 1.1
-
- A utility program to enhance your writing skills
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- Purpose...................................... 1
- Uses......................................... 2
- What READUTIL tests.......................... 3
- What do I need to get started?............... 3
- Setting up your text......................... 3
- Installing READUTIL.......................... 4
- Telling READUTIL what you want it to do...... 5
- Moving to your next test passage............. 7
- Returning to your wordprocessing program..... 7
- File types................................... 7
- Working with other wordprocessing programs... 8
- What is a "text file"?....................... 8
- How to interpret READUTIL's results.......... 8
- What can I do about it?...................... 9
- What passives are............................ 9
- How does READUTIL work?......................11
- Command line and batch modes.................11
- Integrating READUTIL with Microsoft WORD.....13
- Summary......................................15
- Suggestions..................................15
- Copyright....................................15
- References...................................15
- Contact address..............................16
- Registration form............................16
-
-
- PURPOSE
-
- READUTIL is a program to give writers a measure of how easy their
- writing is to read and understand. It's a simple early warning
- system. It works with files which contain the piece of text you are
- writing, in either ASCII text file or in Microsoft WORD formats. You
- can find the readability of a complete piece of writing, or you can
- just choose parts of it and get results for each section.
-
- By measuring hard word content and sentence length, and identifying
- passive constructions, READUTIL shows you what parts of the text may
- need rewriting.
-
-
- 2
-
-
- You can use READUTIL for reports, technical writing, essays, books,
- and speeches. It is not suitable for poetry or other similar writing.
- It will not produce useful results with headings or tables, but you
- can direct the program to leave these out and sample the text around
- them.
-
- Three things help to make writing easier to read:
-
- Fewer hard words;
- Shorter sentences; and,
- Fewer passive expressions.
-
- READUTIL helps you to write by
-
- Measuring the reading-level and
- the hard-word content,
- Marking the longest sentence, and
- Identifying passive expressions.
-
-
- USES
-
- You can use READUTIL
-
- 1. To repeatedly test your own writing. You can then use your
- wordprocessing program to reword your text. Shortening some of the
- long sentences, simplifying hard words, and replacing some passive
- expressions with active ones, can make your text more "readable".
-
- 2. To train authors to adopt clear writing techniques especially when
- writing instructional text. READUTIL reminds authors to write simply
- while composing the text, and not write difficult text which may
- later cost other people their time and effort to simplify.
-
- 3. To test people who wish to be writers of instructional text by
- analysing sample pieces of their writing. Some people write in a
- simple and straightforward style. Others put words together in ways
- that are more difficult to understand. People engaged to write
- instructional text should have the skills to write text for immediate
- use. Their natural wording style should not need much rewriting by
- others to make it clear to the target audience. You can use READUTIL
- to sort out the naturally good writers.
-
- 4. As an impartial aid to editing other people's work. The computer
- is an impartial judge of text. The reading index or level replaces
- opinion with measurement.
-
-
-
- 3
-
-
- WHAT READUTIL TESTS
-
- If your document consists of plain straightforward text without any
- headings or tables, you can use READUTIL to give an assessment for
- the whole file.
-
- If your file includes headings or tables, or if you want to sample
- only part of it, you can test chunks of the text. READUTIL accepts
- text in paragraph-sized chunks. You can test as many chunks of the
- text as you like, and each chunk can consist of as many paragraphs as
- you like.
-
- Before you install and run READUTIL, you may want to read more about
- how to make use of this program. If so, go to the section on page 8,
- "How to interpret READUTIL's results".
-
-
- WHAT DO I NEED TO GET STARTED?
-
- To run READUTIL, you need
-
- (a) DOS 2.10 or later. Make sure your computer's clock is
- correctly set. READUTIL date and time-stamps its printouts.
-
- (b). A wordprocessor program. Microsoft WORD 3, 4, or 5 is
- suitable. So too is any wordprocessing program that produces a
- "text" or ASCII file (the sort of file used for
- telecommunicating between computers).
-
- (c) RU.EXE (READUTIL's program file).
-
- (d) The text you want to test, in a file on disk.
-
- READUTIL will run on any disk or drive on any IBM PC or compatible
- machine.
-
- READUTIL will run with any monitor.
-
- A co-processor will markedly increase its processing speed.
-
-
- SETTING UP YOUR TEXT
-
- 1. Get the computer up and running with your text loaded in your
- wordprocessing program ready for testing.
-
- 2. Decide which parts of your document you want to test. If your
- document is a letter or a short report, you will probably test it
- all.
-
- It is best to first read a long document and select the chunks you
- wish to test. Select one, two or three paragraphs which you think may
-
- 4
-
-
- be the more difficult to read. Testing a long document as one chunk
- can give the impression that the overall readability is good. But it
- may conceal one or two paragraphs that are unsatisfactory.
-
- If your document is long, you will get results faster if you just
- test parts of it. Also, you can avoid headings or tables in your text
- by testing only the passages you select.
-
- For example, you may wish to test four sections that you consider to
- be hard reading. Mark these sections in the following way:
-
- (a) Insert three asterisks (the marker) in front of the first
- passage you want to test. For example
-
- ***In those early years, computers...
-
- Then note down on paper how many paragraphs you want that test
- section to contain. (Don't mark the end of the section - you'll
- tell the program later where to stop.)
-
- (b) Then move the cursor to the beginning of the second passage
- you wish to test, and insert three asterisks in front of that.
- Again, keep a note of how many paragraphs are in the second
- passage you intend to test.
-
- Your list will look something like this:
-
- Marker 1 4 paragraphs
- Marker 2 3 paragraphs
- Marker 3 5 paragraphs
-
- and so on.
-
- (c) Mark the beginnings of all the passages of text you want to
- test in this way. If you want the program to just test
- everything from a marker to the end of the document, you don't
- need to remember the number of paragraphs. The program will
- automatically run on through the rest of the document.
-
- (d) Later, you can use your wordprocessor's Search and Replace
- facility to delete all the *** markers.
-
- 3. Now quit from your wordprocessing program but remember to SAVE
- YOUR FILE.
-
-
- INSTALLING READUTIL
-
- Copy the READUTIL program file RU.EXE to the same disk and directory
- as your text. This is so you will not have to enter the full path
- details to run READUTIL.
-
-
- 5
-
-
- For example, on a twin-floppy disk machine, you will probably have
- your wordprocessor program on a disk in the A drive and your text
- file on a disk in the B drive. In this case, put your READUTIL disk
- in the A drive and copy RU.EXE on to the disk in the B drive. To do
- this at the A> prompt, type
-
- copy <spacebar> RU.EXE <spacebar> B: <Return>
-
- Then return your wordprocessor disk to the A drive.
-
- To access READUTIL which is now on disk in the B drive, first get to
- the B> prompt by typing at the A prompt
-
- B: <Return>
-
-
- TELLING READUTIL WHAT YOU WANT IT TO DO
-
- At the prompt for the drive where you have installed READUTIL, type
-
- RU <Return>
-
- You will then be in READUTIL. The entry panel will appear, showing a
- set of prompts.
-
- This is how to use it:
-
- Path and filename <F1>
-
- Press <F1> and then type in the filename of the document you want to
- test. Then press <Return>. If you haven't copied RU.EXE to the same
- disk or directory as the test file, you will need to type in the file
- path as well.
-
- If you don't put a full stop or an extension after the filename, the
- program will add a .DOC extension when you press <Return>.
-
- Paragraph terminator <F2>
-
- READUTIL can recognise the end of a paragraph by either a double or a
- single carriage return. This is important because the program must be
- able to recognise and count paragraphs correctly. Pressing <F2>
- toggles from double to single carriage return. It is usual to leave
- it at double.
-
- Your choice depends on the wordprocessing program you are using and
- whether a style sheet is in use. Use the single option if you are
- using Microsoft WORD with a style sheet. Use the single option too if
- you get the WORD error message "Style sheet not available" when you
- load your text into WORD.
-
-
- 6
-
-
- If your test shows that the sentence or word count is widely
- different from what you expected, re-run the test using the other
- paragraph terminator.
-
- There must be text between carriage returns for it to count as a
- paragraph. For this reason, both the single and double options may
- give the same results in some cases.
-
- Marker search <F3>
-
- Use this to tell READUTIL to test the complete file, or to test from
- the inserted markers (***). Press <F3>. First enter the marker's
- number, press <Return>, and then the number of paragraphs you want to
- test in that section. If you want READUTIL to test from a marker to
- the end of the document, don't type in a number for paragraphs.
-
- Begin processing <F10>
-
- Press this to start the program processing after you've set the above
- parameters.
-
- The program will now test your text, or the part of it that you have
- marked, for hard word content, sentence length and passive
- constructions. As it does so, it gives a word count and displays each
- passive that it finds.
-
- After the test run, the results panel will appear on the screen.
-
- AT THE RESULTS PANEL
-
- The results panel gives you information about your test. The most
- important part is the reading level, based on the text's hard-word
- content and average sentence length. You should be aiming at a
- reading level of no more than 12.
-
- The panel also gives the number of passive extracts that it has
- identified. As explained later, you'll need to check them in their
- context. The panel also includes a set of prompts.
-
- Mark longest sentence <F5>
-
- Press <F5> to mark the end of the longest sentence with a #. If you
- want to remove that mark before leaving the results panel, press <F5>
- again. After leaving the results panel, you will need to use your
- wordprocessor to remove the added mark.
-
- You can later use the "Search" or "Find" facility in your
- wordprocessor to locate this # in your text. Hence you can quickly
- find the longest sentence and make it shorter if necessary.
-
-
- 7
-
-
- The # mark replaces the last letter in the longest sentence. The
- character replaced is noted on the results print-out so you can find
- it and put it back later using your wordprocessing program.
-
- Print-out results <F6>
-
- Press this to get a printout of the results panel and a list of
- passive expressions.
-
- You can find the passive expressions in the text from each
- expression's paragraph number and sentence number. You can also find
- them using the "Search" facility in your wordprocessing program.
-
- The printout also shows the number of passive expressions the program
- identified in the text. Changing the text to active voice will
- lower the number. (If you want to find out more about passive
- constructions, read "What passives are" on page 9.)
-
- Quit READUTIL <Esc>
-
- To get out of READUTIL, press <Esc>, read the text panel which
- appears, then <Y> to exit.
-
- During processing you can press <Esc> to terminate the run. READUTIL
- will complete the run to the end of that sentence and display the
- results to that point.
-
-
- MOVING TO YOUR NEXT TEST PASSAGE
-
- After you've printed out the results and the list of passives, you
- can start testing the next test passage. Do this by pressing <F10> to
- return to the entry panel. Here you can set up for another marker or
- for a new file.
-
-
- RETURNING TO YOUR WORDPROCESSING PROGRAM
-
- You can exit from READUTIL at any point and return to your
- wordprocessing program to view or to edit your text. Press <Esc> then
- <Y> to return to the DOS prompt. Get back to the A prompt by typing
- A: <Return>, then load your wordprocessing program.
-
- If you want to read more about using READUTIL with WORD, see
- "Integrating READUTIL with Microsoft WORD" on page 13.
-
-
- FILE TYPES
-
- READUTIL works directly with files written using Microsoft WORD
- versions 3, 4 or 5. It works just as well with ASCII "text files"
- with or without line breaks, written with any wordprocessing program.
-
- 8
-
-
- READUTIL samples the file itself and auto-selects the correct
- conditions for testing WORD or plain "text" formats.
-
-
- WORKING WITH OTHER WORDPROCESSING PROGRAMS
-
- READUTIL will work with other text formats too, but there is no
- special provision for these in this current release. If you wish to
- test files written with some other wordprocessing program, save your
- file as a "text file" or plain ASCII file. Then use READUTIL.
-
-
- WHAT IS A "TEXT FILE"?
-
- This is a file in a form for interchanging between computers. It
- comprises upper and lower-case text, numerals, and the usual keyboard
- punctuation characters. The file may be text-only or text-only-with-
- line-breaks. There may or may not be a line feed and carriage-return
- at the end of each line. Wordprocessing programs provide a facility
- for generating these files for sending via a modem down a telephone
- line.
-
-
- HOW TO INTERPRET READUTIL'S RESULTS
-
- The aim of this program is to provide impartial warnings to writers
- about the complexity of their writing and give guidance on how to
- improve it.
-
- The reading level given in the results panel derives from the text's
- sentence length and hard-word content. The reading level is the
- deciding part of the results panel. If the reading level is above 12,
- you should edit the text. If it is below 12, you can probably leave
- it alone.
-
- This border at 12 is a guide and not a fixed boundary. Remember it's
- a tool, not a rule. Remember also that a text may have a low reading
- level but still not make sense - so it may still need editing.
-
- You should edit text with very high reading levels. You can best
- judge which texts to edit after testing several typical passages of
- good and poor text. Some sample texts, with manually-determined
- results, are included for comparison in separate files supplied with
- READUTIL. The files are
-
- RUWORD.DOC (in Microsoft WORD format) and the same text in
- RUASC.TXT (a plain ASCII text file).
-
- Load the appropriate file into your wordprocessor as you would any
- ordinary document or text file.
-
-
- 9
-
-
- The batch file READ.BAT will test RUWORD.DOC and display the results.
- This is explained in the section "Batch operation" on page 13.
-
- The reading index or level that is finally acceptable is a matter for
- careful judgement. If you often use big words like "the International
- Telecommunication Union" (which are unchangeable except to the
- abbreviation ITU), the acceptable reading index must be higher.
-
- The index is a measure to see whether your writing is in step with
- other writing that has proved to be easy to read and understand.
-
-
- WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT IT?
-
- READUTIL finds the longest sentence in a tested passage and displays
- that sentence's word count. The # marking feature leads you to it.
- You can
-
- Reword the longest sentence into two shorter sentences to help
- to lower the reading level.
-
- Rerun the program to identify the new "longest sentence" after
- adjusting the first. Two or three reruns with simple editing can
- simplify text.
-
- The hard-word content appears as a percentage. This shows the
- proportion of words with three or more syllables in the text. You can
-
- Replace long words with shorter and simpler words to lower the
- reading-level.
-
- Use the synonym dictionary (thesaurus) in your wordprocessor for
- this task.
-
- With the passive text extracts printout you can
-
- Use your wordprocessor's "Search" facility to find each extract
- in turn.
-
- Consider each passive extract to see whether you can reword some
- of them and so reduce their number. Rerun the test to gauge the
- improvement.
-
-
- WHAT PASSIVES ARE
-
- Passive voice is an indirect kind of sentence construction which
- looks like this:
-
- B is done by A.
-
-
- 10
-
-
- For example: The glass was broken by a boy.
- The boat is propelled by an outboard motor.
-
- It can also look like this:
-
- B is done.
-
- For example: The glass was broken.
- The computer should be switched on.
-
- Passive voice gives the impression that something just sits there
- while something happens to it. It tends to be wordy and longwinded.
- Also, the kind of sentence "B is done" doesn't show who or what does
- the action. The reader has to work it out.
-
- Some passive extracts are acceptable in a text, but too many make it
- boring to read and difficult to follow. Try to avoid using them.
-
- The active voice is a direct sentence construction which looks like
- this:
-
- A does B.
-
- For example: A boy broke the glass.
- An outboard motor propells the boat.
- Switch the computer on.
-
- Active voice names who or what is doing the action. It is a more
- straightforward way of writing. It names the subjects and their
- actions and makes your writing more interesting as well as easier to
- understand. You should encourage its use. Try to get into the habit
- of writing with active wording.
-
- READUTIL gives you the number of passive extracts that it has
- identified, and the total number of sentences it has tested. It
- then divides one figure by the other to form an indicator.
- Reduce the passives and you lower this indicator.
-
- You can process a complete file, headings and all, to get the
- passives identified. Remember though, that if the tested text
- includes tables and headings, the reading level displayed is
- inaccurate. You must use markers in this case, as explained earlier.
- The printout displays the warning << Complete File >> as a reminder.
-
- The algorithm used in READUTIL to identify the passive text extracts
- is simple. It will not trap all examples of passive text. But it
- should catch enough to show you whether your text needs attention.
-
- Also, the program may pick up a few extracts that aren't passives.
- Check each extract in the sentence it comes from.
-
-
- 11
-
-
- For example, consider these two sentences:
-
- The quality of water being experienced at the moment is poor.
-
- Being experienced in this matter, I can assure you that ...
-
- The first example conforms to the formula
-
- B is done.
-
- In the second example, the past participle (experienced) is used as
- an adjective. In many cases you can tell the difference by putting
- "very" in front of the past participle.
-
- If it makes sense, then it's probably not passive (Being very
- experienced in this matter...).
-
- If the very doesn't make sense, the sentence is probably passive
- (The quality of water being very experienced...).
-
- READUTIL may also trap other extracts that are not passives. These
- will be obvious to you, but not to the algorithm. Two examples are
- "is between" and "are when".
-
-
- HOW DOES READUTIL WORK?
-
- READUTIL uses a reading-level algorithm based on the "Fog Index"
- principle given in Gunning's book (see Reference 1 below). The
- computer takes the average sentence length, together with the
- hardword content of the total passage tested, and gives a reading
- index.
-
- READUTIL finds sentences from the number of periods (.) in the
- passage. It also recognises the colon, semi-colon, exclamation and
- question marks (: ; ! ?) as periods (ends of sentences). READUTIL
- skips periods appearing as decimal points (such as 0.4) and periods
- following one single character (such as: A. B. Smith).
-
- It also jumps non-alphabet characters (including numerals, asterisks,
- hyphens, apostrophes and brackets).
-
- READUTIL finds passive text expressions by searching for forms of
- verbs "to be" (such as: "be", "is", "was") in combination with past
- participles such as found, made, learnt, given. It is a simple
- algorithm and will not trap all passive expressions. It should draw
- your attention to the importance of this aspect of writing.
-
-
-
- 12
-
-
- COMMAND-LINE AND BATCH MODES
-
- The above explanation is for giving READUTIL your instructions in
- MENU mode. There is a faster way to tell READUTIL what you want it to
- do.
-
- The Command-line mode:
-
- You can enter the filename of your test file, and the marker
- information, all together at the DOS prompt. For example, all the
- information entered could look like this:
-
- RU STORY.DOC 2 4 S L P <Return>
-
- RU will run READUTIL.
-
- STORY.DOC is your file for testing. (Remember to enter the
- extension (.DOC) after your filename - if this applies.)
-
- 2 = Will begin the test from marker 2.
- 4 = It will test the 4 paragraphs following marker 2.
- S = The paragraph count will be by Single carriage-returns.
- L = It will mark the Longest sentence.
- P = It will Print the results and exit to DOS.
-
- These command-line parameters are an alternative method for entering
- instructions into READUTIL.
-
- You must separate the parameters with ONE space.
- The entries may be in any order and in upper or lower case.
- The program will read the first numeral as the marker number, and the
- second as the number of paragraphs.
-
- You can leave parameters out:
-
- If you omit both the marker and the paragraph numbers, the test
- will be for the whole file.
-
- If you omit the figure for the number of paragraphs, the test
- will be from the marker to the end of the file.
-
- If you omit the S, the paragraph count will be by double
- carriage-returns.
-
- If you omit the L, the longest sentence will go unmarked.
-
- If you omit the P, READUTIL will stop at the results panel.
-
- If you do not enter the command-line detail correctly, a "help panel"
- will display and give details of the correct syntax.
-
-
- 13
-
-
- If READUTIL and your text file are in different directories or on
- different disks, you may need to enter the full DOS path detail for
- both files. For example:
-
- C:\WORK\RU B:\STORY.DOC
-
- if RU.EXE is in the WORK directory on C drive, and your file
- STORY.DOC is on a disk in B drive.
-
- Batch operation:
-
- You can use a DOS batch file to test sequences of texts following
- numbered markers. It can print out the results as it goes. Unattended
- operation is possible.
-
- The companion file READ.BAT is an example. Just put the READUTIL disk
- in your A drive, type READ at the DOS prompt, then press <Return>.
-
- Some selections in READ.BAT have L included to mark the longest
- sentence. The file is:
-
- ECHO OFF
- CLS
- ECHO CHECK THAT PRINTER IS ON-LINE . . .
- PAUSE
- RU RUWORD.DOC 1 1 P
- RU RUWORD.DOC 2 4 P L
- RU RUWORD.DOC 3 4 L P
- RU RUWORD.DOC 4 1 L P
- RU RUWORD.DOC 5 2 P
- RU RUWORD.DOC P
- CLS
-
- This separately tests all 5 test passages in the file RUWORD.DOC and
- then tests the whole file - automatically. Try it!
-
- You can write your own similar batch files to test multiple passages
- on any of your own documents.
-
- Load the file RUWORD.DOC (or RUASC.TXT) into your wordprocessing
- program and print it out or read the test passages on the screen.
-
-
- INTEGRATING READUTIL WITH MICROSOFT WORD
-
- The command-line entry mode can make READUTIL easy to use with
- Microsoft WORD. When in WORD, save your file, then use <Esc>
- <Library> <Run>, and enter the READUTIL command-line entry you
- require. Press <Return>.
-
- Remember to enter the full path details for both RU.EXE and for your
- file. For example, if your active drive is the C drive with your text
-
- 14
-
-
- in a file STORY.DOC in a directory called WRITE in that drive, with
- RU.EXE on a disk in the A drive, the full path for the two files
- would be
-
- A:\RU C:\WRITE\STORY.DOC
-
- Remember to enter RU, not RU.EXE, to run the program READUTIL. The
- file STORY.DOC must have the .DOC extension included.
-
- With WORD 5, this method saves you having to re-enter the file
- details each time you test your work. You can jump between WORD and
- READUTIL with ease.
-
- On a dual floppy-drive machine (with no hard disk), you may have to
- replace your WORD disk with your DOS disk and vice versa during this
- procedure. This depends on where the WORD and DOS files are on the
- disks in the A and B drives.
-
- This method may not work if you have a lot of memory-resident
- programs. You may get strange error messages. In this case,
- remove some of these programs to gain extra memory or use the
- second choice method given below.
-
- If you use the "mark longest sentence" facility:
-
- If you use <Esc> <Library> <Run> and use READUTIL to mark the longest
- sentence in your file, then return to WORD and reload your file, you
- may find the marker is not shown on the screen. WORD does not know
- that READUTIL has amended your document file on the disk, so WORD
- has not reloaded your amended file from the disk. There are two
- ways to overcome this:
-
- First method:
-
- Load any other file (your backup .BAK file is suitable). Don't
- do anything to this, but then load your .DOC file again. Then
- search for the symbol # in your re-loaded original (changed)
- file.
-
- Second method:
-
- Don't use the the <Esc> <Library> <Run> procedure. Instead, quit
- from WORD and use the companion batch file (R.BAT) at the DOS
- command-line. Follow this method:
-
- First copy the files RU.EXE and R.BAT into the same directory as
- your WORD document files. (See page 5 of this Manual if you're
- not sure how to do this).
-
- After writing your text in WORD, save it to disk, then exit to
- DOS by <Esc> <Q>. Change to your WORD document file drive or
- directory.
-
-
- 15
-
-
- Enter command-line details for READUTIL, BUT use R instead of RU
- (to use R.BAT). For example (using the example above again):
-
- R STORY.DOC 2 4 S L P <Return>
-
- This will load READUTIL, process your file, and return you to
- WORD again with your (changed) file loaded.
-
-
- SUMMARY
-
- A little care and attention can bring about great improvements to
- your writing. Make it easier for others to read it - so they can
- appreciate your work.
-
-
- SUGGESTIONS
-
- This software and its documentation is under constant development.
- Ideas for improvements are welcome.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT
-
- READUTIL, the file RU.EXE and supporting documents are Copyright (c)
- 1990, THE OPEN POLYTECHNIC OF NEW ZEALAND, all rights reserved. The
- software and accompanying documentation are without warranty of any
- kind.
-
- In the interests of improving written text, you have a limited
- approval. You may copy and distribute READUTIL provided you
- distribute it complete with all the files: RU.EXE, README,
- README.COM, RUMANUAL.TXT, RUMANUAL.DOC, RUMANUAL.COM, READ.BAT,
- R.BAT, RUWORD.DOC and RUASC.TXT. All these files must be unchanged
- and distributed as originally received.
-
- If after inspection you wish to use READUTIL regularly as a single
- user, please send your name and address with $20 to: The Manager,
- Information Systems, The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand, Private
- Bag, Lower Hutt, New Zealand. You will receive an acknowledgement
- which will make you a registered user. A form for this purpose is
- below.
-
- You may seek registration for more than a single user, or for an
- organisation. If so, please send details of the nature and size of
- the enterprise and the number of users. You will receive further
- information.
-
-
-
- 16
-
-
- REFERENCES
-
- 1. Robert Gunning, "The Technique of Clear Writing", published by
- McGraw-Hill. (This is a classic reference in this field and
- thoroughly recommended.)
-
- 2. Fred Johnson, "Four Papers on "Readability", NZTCI, 1986", New
- Zealand Technical Correspondence Institute - available from the
- National Library of New Zealand. (NZTCI is the former name of THE
- OPEN POLYTECHNIC OF NEW ZEALAND.)
-
-
- CONTACT ADDRESS
-
- The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand,
- Private Bag,
- Lower Hutt,
- NEW ZEALAND
- Phone: +64 4 666 189, Fax: +64 4 665 633.
-
-
-
- Please tear off at this line and send to the address below:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
-
-
- To:
- The Manager, Information Systems,
- The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand,
- Private Bag,
- Lower Hutt,
- NEW ZEALAND Date:____________
-
- From: (your name)_____________________________________________
-
- Address:______________________________________________________
-
- ______________________________________________________
-
- ______________________________________________________
-
- Please register me as a single-user of the reading utility program
- READUTIL. I enclose the sum of $20.
-
- Signature: ________________________
-
-
-
-