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^^MOVE TOP
This command positions the cursor to the first line of the buffer,
scrolling or repainting the screen as necessary. pEDIT keeps all text in
memory, making it very fast to move to the top of the buffer from any
point in the buffer.
^^MOVE BOTTOM
This function moves the cursor to the dummy last line at the end of the
buffer. The screen will scroll or repaint as required.
^^MOVE HOME
The action of MoveHome depends on the position of the cursor within the
current line. If the cursor is not at the beginning of the line, it will
move there. If it is at the start of a line, it will move to the start of
the previous line. This command is normally bound to the <Home> key.
^^MOVE END
The action of MoveEnd depends on the position of the cursor within the
current line. If the cursor is not at the end of the line, it will move
there. If it is at the end of a line, it will move to the end of the next
line. This command is normally bound to the <End> key.
^^MOVE UP
Moves the cursor up one line in the current buffer. There is no action if
the cursor is already on the first line of the buffer. Note that pEDIT
attempts to keep the cursor as close to the same column as possible. The
command is normally bound to the <Up> key.
^^MOVE DOWN
MoveDown moves the cursor down one line in the current buffer. The cursor
cannot move if it is already on the dummy last line of the buffer. pEDIT
will keep the cursor as close as possible to the same column. This command
is normally bound to the <Down> key.
^^MOVE LEFT
Moves the cursor left one character position. If the cursor is at the
beginning of a line, it will wrap to the end of the previous line. This
command is normally bound to the <Left> key.
^^MOVE RIGHT
Moves the cursor right one character position. If the cursor is at the end
of a line, it will wrap to the beginning of the next line. This command is
normally bound to the <Right> key.
^^MOVE WORD
MoveWord will move the cursor to the beginning of the next word in the
current direction. If the direction is Forward, it will move toward the
end of the buffer; if the direction is Reverse, toward the beginning of
the buffer.
The screen will scroll or repaint depending on the state of Select. If
Select is active, the screen will be redisplayed. If Select is not active,
scrolling will take place to keep the cursor on the fourth line from the
top or bottom of the window.
^^INSERT CHAR
This is the default when one of the typing keys is pressed. In Insert
mode, the character will be inserted into the buffer at the current cursor
position; text to the right is "shoved over" to make room. In Overstrike
mode, the character is simply overwritten.
pEDIT uses automatic word wrap to keep text between the defined margins as
you type. If a word will not fit inside the current right margin, it will
be moved to the start of the next line. The first line of a paragraph will
be automatically indented if the PIndent parameter is set.
When the Tab key is pressed, the cursor will move to the next tab stop.
pEDIT supports only tab stops at every eighth column. Control characters
display as a caret (^) followed by the displayable character, i.e. Ctrl-A
shows as ^A.
^^OPEN LINE
This function opens up a new (empty) line for text insertion. The end
result is the same as pressing Enter followed by MoveLeft except that
there will be no indenting.
^^FILL PARAGRAPH
Reformats a paragraph or portion of a paragraph to fit within the defined
margins. Paragraph indenting, if any, is honored for the first line. Use
this command after you have inserted or deleted text or changed margins.
The SetMargins and SetPIndent commands are used to set the margins and
paragraph indent, respectively. Reformatting begins at the current line
and stops at the end of the paragraph. A paragraph is defined as contig-
uous text bounded by empty lines both above and below.
^^INDENT
This function is very useful in programming when you want to indent a
section of code in or out without having to manually edit each line.
Indenting is by levels where one level is 4 character positions or one-
half a tab stop. Indent uses tabs and spaces to indent the line to the
desired offset.
To use indent (1) position the cursor to the start of the first line, (2)
toggle Select on, (3) highlight the entire range of lines to be indented
and (4) issue the "INDENT" or "INDENT n" command. Specify the number of
levels (n) as a positive or negative integer - positive for 'out' (toward
the right), negative for 'in'.
^^AUTO INDENT
This function is very useful in programming. It is used to automatically
indent a new line the same as the previous line. pEDIT uses the same
leading whitespace (spaces and tabs) as the previous line. AutoIndent is
normally used at the end of a line but the command can be issued anywhere.
The command is normally bound to <Ctrl-Enter>.
^^CENTER LINE
This command centers the current line - the line the cursor is on -
between the existing margins. Only spaces are used to indent the line to
the appropriate position.
^^CAPITAL WORD
Capitalizes the current word starting at the current position of the
cursor within the word. The case change does not start at the beginning of
the word; this is to allow, for example, 'Compuserve' to be changed to
'CompuServe'.
^^LOWER WORD
This command converts the current word to lower-case starting at the
current position within the word. All characters from the cursor to the
end of the word will be changed to lower-case.
^^UPPER WORD
UpperWord converts the current word to upper-case, again starting at the
current character position and not at the beginning of the word.
^^QUOTE CHAR
This function is used to enter special characters into the text. pEDIT
prompts you with "Press key to be added: "; at this point press one of the
special keys. For example, to insert a form feed (Ctrl-L, Ascii 12) press
Ctrl-V followed by Ctrl-L. The character will show as '^L' on the screen.
The feature can also be used with Find and Replace. To find a line feed
(Ctrl-J, Ascii 10) for example, press the DoCommand key and enter "FIND
^V^J".
Note that extended keys such as the PC keypad and function keys cannot be
quoted. The PC graphics characters - those above Ascii 127 - are inserted
in a special way. Hold down the Alt key and enter the decimal value of the
character using the numeric keypad only; release the Alt key when done.
^^TRANS CHAR
This command transposes (swaps) two characters of text within a line. The
cursor must be on the second character when you issue the command. The
cursor cannot be positioned past the end of the line.
^^ERASE CHAR
Deletes the current character - the character the cursor is on. The action
is dependent on the current mode. In Insert mode, the character is deleted
and text to the right of the cursor is shifted left to "fill in the hole".
In Overstrike mode, the character is replaced by a space.
^^ERASE PREV
Deletes the previous character - the character to the left of the cursor.
In Insert mode, the character is deleted and text to the right of the
cursor is again shifted toward the left. In Overstrike mode, the character
is replaced by a space.
ErasePrev is permanently bound to the Backspace key which cannot be
redefined. BackSpace therefore functions the same as it does at the DOS
(Operating System) level.
^^ERASE WORD
EraseWord deletes text from the current position in a word to the end of
the word. The current direction (Forward/Reverse) does not affect the
action; deletion is always toward the end of the word.
The current mode also has no effect on EraseWord. The entire word (or
portion of a word) will be erased.
^^ERASE LINE
Erases an entire line or a portion of a line. If the cursor is at the
beginning of a line, the entire line - including the end of line marker -
is erased and stored in the text buffer. If the cursor is not at the
beginning of a line, deletion is from the current position to the end of
the line.
^^RESTORE TEXT
This command restores the text last deleted by EraseWord or EraseLine.
This text is stored in a special text buffer for later restoration. This
text buffer is rebuilt after every action so only the last erasure can be
restored.
^^FIND
Used to search for a text string. To initiate this function, press the
Find key and respond to "String to find" or press DoCommand and enter
"FIND <text>". The direction of the search will be in the current
direction. An executing Find operation can be cancelled by pressing the
Abort key.
If the target string is all lowercase, the operation will be case-
insensitive; that is 'pedit' will match 'pedit', 'pEDIT' and 'PEDIT'. If,
however, the target contains any uppercase characters, the match will be
exact, i.e. 'pEDIT' matches only 'pEDIT'.
Special symbols are used to match beginning of line (bol) and end of line
(eol). Use '\\<' for bol and '\\>' for eol. For example, '.\\>' matches a
period only if it is at the end of a line.
^^FINDNEXT
This command will find the next occurrence of the last search string you
specified. It is advisable to have Findnext bound to a key so only a
single key press is required to repeat the last search operation.
^^REPLACE
pEDIT has a very powerful search and replace function. To initiate it,
either press the Replace key and reply to the "Old string:" and "New
string:" prompts, or press DoCommand and enter "REPLACE <old> <new>".
pEDIT will search for each occurrence of 'old' and prompt you with
"Replace (Y)es (N)o (A)ll (L)ast (Q)uit: "
Y, Enter - replace this occurrence
N - skip this replacement
A - replace all occurrences from this point
L - make this the last replacement and quit
Q - quit.
Matching the old string will follow the rules listed for the Find command.
The same wild cards as Find are permitted in the 'old' string only.
^^GET FILE
This command loads in a new file for editing. pEDIT supports wildcard
file specifications of the type '*.*' and '*.BAS'. If more than one file
matches the specification, you will be presented with a list of all
matching file names in alpha order. Use the arrow keys to highlight the
desired file and press Enter. Press the Abort key to cancel.
Once a file has been selected, pEDIT will create a buffer for the file and
load its contents into memory. The status line will show the new buffer
name and the first screen of text, if any, will be displayed. If no
matching file exists, pEDIT will display "Creating file" and present an
empty screen.
pEDIT allows a total of 6 user buffers.
^^INCLUDE FILE
Reads in the specified file from disk and inserts it into the buffer
starting at the current cursor location. The result is the same as if the
user typed in the text contained in the file.
Include File should be used only for relatively small files. The function
uses the normal InsertChar routine, not the much faster GetFile which
loads text directly into memory.
^^WRITE FILE
WriteFile is used to save the contents of the current buffer to disk
without terminating the editing session. If no associated file name has
been specified, pEDIT will ask for one.
pEDIT verifies that there is sufficient disk space for the file BEFORE
starting the save operation. The section on Error Handling has a full
description of what to do if you get an error while saving a file.
You can change the name of the associated file at any time by using the
RenameFile command.
^^RENAME FILE
This command changes the name of the disk file associated with the current
buffer. The new name will be used at the time of the next WriteFile
operation.
Use RenameFile when you want to save a file under a name other than the
one the it was called up under.
^^SHOW BUFFER
This command displays detailed information about the current buffer: the
buffer name, associated file name, current mode and direction, number of
lines and characters of text, etc. The status line also shows the pEDIT
version number.
^^LIST BUFFERS
This function lists a summary of all defined buffers - the two system
buffers (COMMAND and DOS) plus up to 6 user buffers. The following items
are displayed: buffer name, number of lines in the buffer, buffer type
(System or User), whether or not the buffer has been modified and the name
of the file associated with the buffer.
^^BUFFER
Use this command to switch between buffers. You will be presented with a
BUFFER window containing the names of all buffers except the COMMAND
buffer. The cursor will be positioned on the first User buffer. Use the
up and down arrow keys to highlight the desired buffer name; press Enter
to select that buffer.
It is no longer possible to switch to the COMMAND buffer.
^^TRIM BUFFER
This function 'trims' the current buffer by removing trailing blanks from
all lines of text.
TrimBuffer is useful in any document where a left margin has been defined.
pEDIT automatically indents every line to the specified left margin, which
can result in "empty" lines between paragraphs. These empty lines can take
up a lot of space in a large document.
^^CHANGE MODE
ChangeMode is used to toggle between Insert and Overstrike modes. If the
mode is Insert when the command is given, it will change to Overstrike and
vice versa.
^^CHANGE DIR
Use this command to toggle between the Forward and Reverse directions.
Note that only Find, Findnext, Replace and MoveWord use the buffer
direction.
^^MARK
This function is used to 'mark' a particular place in a buffer so you can
return to it at some later time. There can be only one marker in each
buffer. pEDIT tries to stay as close as possible to the original mark as
text is inserted and deleted.
^^GOTO MARK
This command moves to the position (line and offset) defined by the last
Mark command.
^^LINE
The Line command is used to display the current line number or move to a
particular line in the buffer. Enter "LINE" by itself to display the
current line and number of lines; use "LINE nn" to move to line number nn.
^^ONE WINDOW
The OneWindow command 'unsplits' the screen. If there are 2 windows on
screen, the current window - the one the cursor is in - becomes the only
window. The screen will be repainted to show a full 21 lines of text. The
line the cursor was on when the command was issued becomes the top line of
the window.
^^TWO WINDOWS
TwoWindows 'splits' the screen if there is only one window visible. Both
windows will initially show the same 10 lines of the current buffer. The
cursor will move to the other window anticipating that you want to load in
another file.
^^OTHER WINDOW
If the screen is split, this command will move the cursor to the other
window. The cursor will move to the row and column stored the last time
the cursor was in the window.
^^PREV SCREEN
Scrolls the screen up - towards the beginning of the buffer. The number of
lines scrolled will equal the number of rows on screen - 21 or 10
depending on the window size. The current direction has no effect on this
command.
If the screen cannot scroll the full amount, the cursor will move up until
it hits the first line of the buffer. This command is normally bound to
the <PgUp> key.
^^NEXT SCREEN
Scrolls the screen down (toward the end of the buffer) by the number of
rows in the current window. The current direction has no effect. The
command is normally bound to the <PgDn> key.
If the screen cannot scroll the full amount, the cursor will move until it
hits the dummy line at the end of the buffer.
^^SHIFT LEFT
The Shift commands provide for horizontal scrolling - the ability to see
text beyond column 80. ShiftLeft moves the window to the left (toward the
left margin) the specified number of columns.
^^SHIFT RIGHT
ShiftRight shifts the screen to the right - toward the end of the line -
by the number of columns you specify. How far the window can be shifted is
limited only by pEDIT's maximum line length of 32767 characters.
^^LEARN
The Learn command is used to start recording keystrokes. The recording
will continue until the Remember command is given. pEDIT will store all
typing keys, function keys and special keys such as control keys.
Any keystrokes can be stored in a pEDIT Version 2 key macro. The only
restriction is that a macro containing a REPEAT command cannot, for
obvious reasons, itself be repeated.
^^REMEMBER
Remember is used to end the keystroke recording started by Learn. pEDIT
will ask for a key to bind to; press any of the definable keys on the
keyboard. You cannot bind to the Tab, Enter or Backspace keys. Only one
keyboard or dynamic macro can be defined at a time.
A macro must not be bound to a key that is contained within the macro. If
this happens, the macro routine will go into a loop and probably crash the
system.
^^SAVE MACRO
SaveMacro is used to save the currently defined keyboard macro to disk.
Enter only a file name; pEDIT automatically adds the extension '.PMC'. The
editor will write the macro file in the directory pointed to by the PEDIT
environment variable, or if none is defined, in the current directory.
If a file of the same name already exists, you will be given the chance to
overwrite it or cancel.
^^EXECUTE
Execute is used to execute a macro. When this command is issued, the
keystrokes are 'replayed' as if you entered them. There are two forms of
this command: one for a dynamic macro, one for a disk macro. See the
section titled 'Macro Facility' for more information.
Use 'EXECUTE' by itself for the single dynamic macro. To execute a disk
macro, use a command of the form 'EXECUTE filename' where 'filename' is a
valid DOS file name without an extension. pEDIT automatically adds the
file type .PMC to all disk macro file names.
^^SELECT TEXT
SelectText is a toggle that turns the select state on/off. If the state is
off, it will be turned on and vice versa. When active, selected text is
highlighted in reverse video as the cursor is moved. Select is
automatically turned off after any RemoveText or StoreText command. To
cancel the selection, simply issue the command again.
^^REMOVE TEXT
This command removes the selected text and stores it in the paste buffer.
The paste buffer is rebuilt every time RemoveText is invoked so only the
most recently deleted text is available.
^^STORE TEXT
StoreText is similar to RemoveText except that the text is not removed
from the buffer. The paste buffer is rebuilt to contain the selected text.
Use this command whenever you want to make a copy of some text without
deleting it.
^^INSERT HERE
Inserts text from the paste buffer into the current buffer starting at the
current cursor position. Note that InsertHere can be invoked more than
once to make multiple copies of the stored text.
^^DO COMMAND
When the "Do" key is pressed the editor will respond with the 'Command: '
prompt. At this point you can enter any valid pEDIT command. Commands can
be upper- or lower-case or mixed. Note that commands must be entered in
full with spaces in between words.
The Command line is really a one-line window into the COMMAND buffer. All
defined keys can be used on the command line for editing the current line
or recalling previous commands. Use MoveUp and MoveDown to scroll up and
down through the stored commands.
^^RECALL
Recall is used to recall the last command given via DoCommand. The end
result is the same as pressing the DoCommand key followed by the up arrow
with one important difference; the previous command is copied to the
current command line. The command can of course be edited before pressing
Enter to begin execution.
^^ABORT
pEDIT now has a user-definable abort key. It is no longer 'hardwired' to
Ctrl-C; this conflicted with WordStar which uses Ctrl-C as a command key.
The abort key should be defined in your initialization file.
^^REFRESH SCREEN
This command is used to clear and repaint the screen. Use RefreshScreen
if, for any reason, the screen should be overwritten or otherwise
obliterated. Everything - including reverse video - will be redrawn.
^^DEFINE SHIFT
This function defines a shift or "lead-in" key for multi-key commands. It
signals pEDIT when to expect a second keystroke; therefore a shift key
cannot be a command key by itself.
Normally this command would be specified in pEDIT's init file before other
key definitions. A maximum of 5 shift keys can be defined.
^^DEFINE KEY
Used to dynamically define a key during an editing session. pEDIT will ask
for a procedure name and a key press. The procedure name is any valid
pEDIT command entered in full (no abbreviations) with or without
parameters. An example is "SET SCOPE GLOBAL".
It is best to put key bindings in the initialization file so they are
automatically defined when the editor is invoked.
^^SHOW KEY
Used to show what procedure is bound to a key. pEDIT will prompt for a key
press and display the name of the procedure, if any, bound to that key.
^^LIST KEYS
Lists all defined keys and the procedures bound to them. pEDIT will pause
in between screens; press Enter to continue to the next screen.
^^SPAWN
This function spawns or shells you to DOS. A second copy of COMMAND.COM is
loaded into memory to process commands. You may then enter DOS commands
and do anything you can do at the operating system level. Type 'EXIT' to
return to the editor exactly as you left it.
If you have a floppy-only system, COMMAND.COM must be available or the
spawn will fail. Some versions of DOS prior to 3.x have a problem with
"SHELL" and may not work properly.
pEDIT tries to keep 50-70k of memory free for the Spawn and Dos commands;
this will not leave sufficient memory for anything but DOS resident
commands (DIR, TYPE, etc.) and small programs. If more memory is needed,
use the eXtended Spawn function (XSpawn).
^^XSPAWN
This function serves the same purpose as Spawn but with one important
extension. All text memory is swapped out to disk, leaving much more
memory available to DOS. On a machine with 640k, about 350k will be freed
up - more than enough to compile and run other programs - even another
copy of pEDIT.
The restrictions noted for Spawn apply here. Also, you must be careful not
to delete pEDIT's temporary swap files. See the section titled 'Extended
DOS Shell' for more information.
^^REPEAT
Repeat lets you repeat any key press up to 32767 times. Only the next
single key press - typing, function, Ctrl, Alt - is repeated.
The repeat count is shown by 'Repeat: ' on the message line. Use BackSpace
to correct the count; set the count to zero if you wish to cancel.
You can end a repeat loop by pressing the Abort key.
^^SET AUTOSAVE
pEDIT has an 'autosave' function that automatically saves your work to
disk. If autosave is on, pEDIT will periodically do a WriteFile if changes
have been made. The 'Working . . .' message will appear and the disk
access light will come on. You will be told how many lines were written.
The usage is 'SET AUTOSAVE ON|OFF'.
^^SET COLOR
SetColor lets you choose foreground and background colors on a color
(CGA/EGA/VGA) monitor. For monochrome, the only legal combinations are
"SET COLOR blk wht" and "SET COLOR wht blk". Here 'blk' and 'wht' refer to
the mono colors whatever they may be - black and white, black and green,
etc.
The usage is 'SET COLOR fground bground'. See the Appendix for a list of
valid color code names.
^^SET LINES
SetLines lets you switch between 25 and 43 line mode on an EGA or VGA
monitor. These displays can show more than the normal 25 lines of text.
Note that screen writing and scrolling are generally much slower in 43-
line mode. The SetLines command cannot be given when the screen is split.
VGA 50 line mode is not supported. The usage is 'SET LINES 25|43'.
^^SET MARGINS
This command lets you set left and right text margins. The default margins
are 1 and 80. The left margin must be greater than zero and the right
margin has to be greater than the left. The usage is "SET MARGINS left
right".
^^SET PINDENT
Used to set the paragraph indent, i.e. the number of columns by which to
indent the first line of a paragraph. The usage is "SET PINDNT nn" where
nn is zero or a positve integer.
^^SET SCOPE
Specifies the "scope" for all Find and Replace operations. If the scope is
local, only the current buffer will be searched. If the scope is global,
all user buffers will be searched and 'Global' will show on the status
line. The format of this command is "SET SCOPE local|global".
Things can get out of hand if some buffers are searched in a forward
direction while others are searched in reverse. For this reason, the
direction for all buffers is temporarily set to Forward during a global
search.
^^DOS
The Dos function spawns or "shells" a command to DOS for execution. The
output from the command will be placed in the DOS buffer as text. If only
one window is on-screen, pEDIT will split the screen and map the DOS
buffer to the other window.
A second copy of COMMAND.COM must be loaded into memory to handle the
request. See Spawn for a discussion of limitations and cautions.
^^XDOS
The eXtended DOS function (XDos) uses an intelligent DOS shell to free up
additional memory for the execution of DOS commands. See the description
of XSpawn and the section titled 'Extended DOS Shell'.
A common use of XDos would be to compile a program from within the editor.
For example, 'XDOS BC TEST /O ;' would be used to compile a QuickBASIC
program. The compiler output will of course be directed into the DOS
buffer.
^^HELP
The Help command provides full on-line help for every pEDIT command. The
editor looks for a help file named PEDIT.HLP in the directory defined by
the PEDIT environment variable, or if none is defined, in the current
directory.
You will be presented with a HELP window containing an alphabetical list
of all pEDIT commands. Use the arrow keys to highlight the command you
want help with and press Enter. The function can be cancelled by pressing
Abort.
^^KEYBOARD
This function displays the contents of the file PEDIT.KEY on the screen in
a KEYBOARD window. The editor looks for this file in the directory
specified by the PEDIT environment variable, or in the current directory.
Normally this command is used to display a diagram of your keyboard and/or
a list of the keys you have defined.
^^RULER
Toggles an 80-column on-screen ruler on and off. The ruler temporarily
overwrites the status line.
^^QUIT
Use the Quit command to abort an editing session. Abort MEANS abort - any
changes you have made will be lost. If any User buffers have been
modified, pEDIT gives you the option of not quitting by displaying
"Buffer(s) modified - quit (Y/N)? ". Enter Y to abort, N to cancel the
abort and resume editing.
^^EXIT
The Exit command terminates the editing session and returns you to DOS.
The current buffer is automatically written to disk if it has been
modified. If any other user buffers have been altered, pEDIT asks you one
at a time if you want to write them. Answer Y to save the buffer, N to
skip it.