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- Subject: Macintosh application software frequently asked questions (FAQ)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.apps,comp.answers,news.answers
- From: elharo@shock.njit.edu (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
- Date: 10 Nov 1994 01:25:10 GMT
-
-
- Archive-name: macintosh/apps-faq
- Version: 2.3.2
- Last-modified: August 13, 1994
- Maintainer: elharo@shock.njit.edu
-
- Frequently Asked Questions about Macintosh Application Software
- ===============================================================
-
-
- comp.sys.mac.faq, part 4:
- comp.sys.mac.apps
-
- Copyright 1993,1994 by Elliotte Harold
- Please see section 5.8 of the general FAQ if you wish to
- redistribute, revise or republish this document in any way.
-
- Archive-name: macintosh/apps-faq
- Version: 2.3.2
- Last-modified: August 13, 1994
- Address comments to elharo@shock.njit.edu
-
-
- What's new in version 2.3.2:
- ----------------------------
-
- 2.5: Where can I get more information?
-
- The correct ftp address for the word-mac FAQ list is
-
- ftp://scu.edu.au/lists/word-mac/FAQ/
-
-
- Table of Contents
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- I. What's the Best...
- 1. Text editor
- 2. Word processor
- 3. Genealogy software
- 4. TeX/LaTeX
- 5. Integrated application
- 6. Spreadsheet
- 7. JPEG Viewer
- 8. Electronic publishing software
- 9. Drawing application
- 10. Typing tutor?
- 11. OCR software?
- II. Microsoft Word
- 1. How can I assign styles to characters?
- 2. How can I automatically generate cross-references?
- 3. How can I change a Word document to TeX? and vice-versa?
- 4. How can I depersonalize Word?
- 5. Where can I get more information?
- III. TeachText
- 1. How can I change the font in TeachText?
- 2. How do I place a picture in a TeachText file?
- 3. How do I make a TeachText document read-only?
-
-
- RETRIEVING THE ENTIRE FAQ
- =========================
-
- This is the FOURTH part of this FAQ. The first part is also
- posted to this newsgroup under the subject heading "Introductory
- Macintosh frequently asked questions (FAQ)" and includes a complete
- table of contents for the entire document as well as information on
- where to post, ftp, file decompression, trouble-shooting, preventive
- maintenance and conditions for reproduction, posting and use of this
- document outside of Usenet. The second, third, fifth and sixth parts
- are posted every two weeks in comp.sys.mac.system, comp.sys.mac.misc,
- comp.sys.mac.wanted and comp.sys.mac.hardware respectively. Please
- familiarize yourself with all six sections of this document before
- posting. All pieces are available for anonymous ftp from
-
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/macintosh/
-
- Except for the introductory FAQ which appears in multiple
- newsgroups and is stored as general-faq, the name of each
- file has the format of the last part of the group name followed
- by "-faq", e.g the FAQ for comp.sys.mac.system is stored as
- system-faq. You can also have these files mailed to you
- by sending an E-mail message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu
- with the line:
-
- send pub/usenet/news.answers/macintosh/name
-
- in the body text where "name" is the name of the file you want as
- specified above (e.g. general-faq). You can also send this server
- a message with the subject "help" for more detailed instructions.
- For access via Mosaic use
-
- http://rever.nmsu.edu/~elharo/faq/faqs.html
-
-
-
- =========================
- WHAT'S THE BEST... (1.0)
- =========================
-
- TEXT EDITOR? (1.1)
- -------------------
-
- Available shareware and freeware text editors that can
- handle more than 32K of text include McSink, BBEdit Lite, Edit II
- (with grep style searching), Alpha (particularly nice for working
- with TeX files), Stevie (for fans of vi), and microEmacs. The
- feature sets of these editors overlap somewhat but are not identical.
- Since all are available via anonymous FTP, there's no reason not
- to try them all and find the one you like best. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu//pub/macfaq/BBEditLite.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu//pub/macfaq/Alpha.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu//pub/macfaq/EditII.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu//pub/macfaq/Stevie.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu//pub/macfaq/microEmacs.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu//pub/macfaq/McSink.sit.bin
-
- I use Rich Siegel's BBEdit Lite for the FAQ because it can word
- wrap to a specific number of characters and indent lines with spaces.
- (You didn't think I did all this nice formatting by hand, did you?)
- It's also a very nice programmer's editor. BBEdit has an extensive
- interface for adding custom externals written in Think C so if you
- need a feature that's not built-in you can add it. For me the only
- thing that's missing is automatic word-wrap, but that's available
- from the Text Editor Patches 1.3.1 by James W. Walker. Some others
- may also miss a macro language that's easier to use than writing
- code externals in C which brings us to my second choice.
-
- Alpha ($25 shareware) is a text editor that includes a full
- featured implementation of the tcl scripting language and extensive
- search and replace capabilities. Emacs users will feel at home
- with this powerful program. Unfortunately it's System 7 dependent.
- Shareware authors take note: About 40% of all installed Macs are
- still running System 6. If you actually intend to make some
- money, then you shouldn't cut out half your market at a swipe.
-
- Stevie is vi-workalike for the Mac, but since Stevie isn't
- an interface to an ex-style editor as is vi, it's not as powerful
- as its UNIX inspiration. microEmacs is likewise NOT a full featured
- implementation of Emacs. If you want to do Emacs style Lisp
- programming and keybinding (and I can't imagine why else anyone
- would ever want to use Emacs on a Mac) you'll probably be happier
- with Alpha.
-
-
- WORD PROCESSOR? (1.2)
- ----------------------
-
- I have seen the future, and its name is WordPerfect.
- WordPerfect has almost every feature of competing word processors
- including not only basic and advanced word processing tools (style
- sheets, spelling checker, thesaurus, grammar checker, outliner,
- equation editor, on-line help, multiple import and export formats,
- etc. etc. etc.), but many features more commonly associated with
- desktop publishing software (text and picture boxes, tables,
- multiple column layouts, indexing, EPS and uncompressed TIFF
- importing, etc. etc. etc.) as well. Furthermore it has two
- abilities that have been glaringly absent from Microsoft Word for
- years, automatic cross-referencing and a built-in macro language.
- While most of these features are available in third party products
- for other word processors, by the time you've bought the other word
- processor and one or two add-ons you've already spent more than on
- WordPerfect alone. Finally there's a native PowerPC version. No
- other word processor company has one yet. You can get a demo from
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/WordPerfect_3.0_Demo.sit
-
- As I said WordPerfect 3.0 is the future of Macintosh word
- processing. Unfortunately I'm not sure it's the present. Not all
- of these capabilities actually work. Many of those that do are
- incomplete in their current incarnations. Finally WordPerfect
- needs about 1800K of RAM and seven megabytes of hard disk space for
- full functionality, and still manages to make Word look like a speed
- demon. Screen redraw is abysmally slow. And there are non-trivial
- bugs in file import and export, macros, and WorldScript. To finalize
- matters street prices for WordPerfect have gone up, and Wordperfect
- Corp. no longer offers lifetime toll-free technical support. As
- thrilled as I was to see a real competitor for Microsoft Word, I'm
- afraid the initial glow has worn off. I cannot recommend WordPerfect
- at this time.
-
- This brings us to the longtime champion of Macintosh word
- processors, Microsoft Word 5.1. Word is still the market leader
- and still fulfills ALMOST every conceivable word processing need.
- Word is virtually guaranteed to have at least one feature you can't
- live without which just isn't available in any other word processor.
- (Well, it's probably available in WordPerfect, but the difference
- is that in in Word it works.) For me that feature is outlining.
- For you it may be styles or mail merge or cross-platform support.
- Whatever you need chances are that Microsoft Word can provide it.
-
- Finally since Word is the market leader, there's a greater
- chance that it will be upgraded and supported in the future, both
- by Microsoft and by third parties. Many people have been burned
- by committing to word processors that were subsequently abandoned,
- leaving them with files they could neither exchange with others
- nor convert into better supported formats. It's also nice that you
- can be virtually certain that anyone you send a Word file to will
- be able to read it, and that any program which needs to import
- word processing documents will import a Word file. And if there
- is some feature you need that Word doesn't have, like auto-numbering
- of equations, there's a very good chance a third party tool exists
- to provide it.
-
- Users with limited disk space, 68000 CPUs, or less than four
- megabytes of memory may want to consider WriteNow 4.0, a word
- processor noted for its speed, small memory appetite, minimal
- disk footprint, and small price, about sixty dollars. Unlike the other
- products discussed here, WriteNow really is designed first and last
- to be a word processor, not a document formatter. It doesn't have
- an equation editor, text boxes, an outliner or other features more
- associated with desktop publishing than with writing. If all you
- want to do is write, WriteNow may be the choice for you. Users
- behind the power curve and even those out in front of it may also
- want to consider ClarisWorks whose word processing functions are
- more than sufficient for basic writing. While more expensive than
- WriteNow, ClarisWorks also provides many other well-integrated
- features in a small and speedy package.
-
- Almost everyone who buys a computer immediately either buys or
- borrows a word processor. Certainly they get one before they get
- a modem and net access. Consequently the market for freeware and
- shareware word processors is miniscule. Nonetheless there is one.
- Datapak's Word Solution Engine Demo 2.2 is a full-featured free
- word processor. Don't let the word "Demo" fool you. What Datapak
- is demoing is the capabilities of the word processing engine they
- license to software developers, not the word processor itself which
- is fully functional and free. WSED supports editing files larger
- than memory, WorldScript, simple styles and all the standard
- features you'd expect in a Macintosh word processor. There's no
- manual or technical support, but what do you expect for free?
- In any case the program is simple and intuitive enough that
- neither should be necessary. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/WordSolutionEngineDemo.sit.bin
-
- Among writers of technical documents that include many
- numbered equations, tables, and figures, FrameMaker is particularly
- popular. Unlike Word it has the cross-referencing, auto-numbering
- and sectioning capability to match its tables, drawing package,
- and equation editor. However FrameMaker really is more of a desktop
- publishing package than a word processor, and it's priced like
- one. The educational discount price for FrameMaker is close to
- the non-educational, street price of Word 5.1 or WordPerfect; and
- competitive upgrades are not available. When creating a Framemaker
- document you need to give a lot more initial thought to the layout
- of the page than you would with most word processors. It's much
- harder to just launch FrameMaker and begin writing than it is in
- any of the other word processors. FrameMaker is not well suited
- to general use.
-
- Many netters swear by (and at) Nisus from Nisus Software. Nisus
- 3.4 has has several features not found in any other Macintosh word
- processor including very powerful macros and multiple Undo's. It's
- also missing many features included in other similarly priced
- packages like tables, useable styles, and support for most System 7
- features. The fully WorldScript savvy edition is copy-protected by
- an ADB dongle; but if your writing is limited to Roman languages
- and Japanese, the non-copy protected limited flag edition will
- serve equally well. Furthermore Nisus can actually handle all the
- languages it claims to, unlike WordPerfect which keels over when
- faced with anything more complicated than Cyrillic. For writing
- in non-Roman languages Nisus is the obvious choice. However for
- writing in English or another Latin langauge, you'd probably be
- better served by one of the other cheaper, more feature rich
- programs like Word, WordPerfect or WriteNow.
-
- MacWrite Pro 1.5 is a solid product but has nothing special
- to recommend it beyond the name of the company that makes it.
- If MacWrite was produced by Friendly Neighborhood Software (tm)
- instead of Claris, it would have been eliminated from the market
- long ago.
-
-
- GENEALOGY SOFTWARE? (1.3)
- --------------------------
-
- Leister Productions' Reunion is the most powerful, flexible,
- graphical, and easy-to-use Macintosh software for producing family
- trees and doing genealogical research. At $115 street it's also
- the most expensive. Reunion is available from all the usual
- sources of payware software. If all you want to do is chart your
- own family tree back a few generations, you may want to consider
- the less powerful and less flexible, but considerably cheaper
- Personal Ancestry File (PAF for short) from the Church of Jesus
- Christ of Latter Day Saints (the Mormons for short). It's designed
- primarily for easy downloading of data into the Mormons' central
- database so it's not as easy to use as Reunion and lacks some basic
- features. For instance there's no provision for children of
- unmarried couples. PAF is, however, only $35. It must be ordered
- directly from the Mormons at
-
- Salt Lake Distribution Center
- 1999 West 1700 South
- Salt Lake City, UT 84104
- (800) 537-5950
-
- The product number is #30992 (Macintosh) and an IBM version is also
- available. MasterCard and Visa are accepted for a $2 fee. However
- your card is charged for a cash advance rather than a purchase so
- interest will begin accruing immediately and your credit card
- company will probably tack on about a 2.5% cash advance fee.
-
- Simple descendant and ancestor charts can be produced with the
- shareware HyperCard stack Our Family Tree 1.3 by Timmy G. Bremer. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/OurFamilyTree.sit.bin
-
- However this stack is limited compared to PAF and the much more
- powerful Reunion. For instance, pedigree charts can only go back
- five generations.
-
-
- TEX? (1.4)
- -----------
-
- Textures from Blue Sky Research is easily the superior
- implementation of TeX for the Mac. It's the only TeX for the Mac
- that typesets and displays text and equations continuously as the
- TeX code describing them is typed, includes PostScript versions of
- the Computer Modern fonts, or allows simple copying and pasting of
- graphics and formatted pages between TeX and other Mac applications.
- If you work with TeX on a daily basis, Textures at $195 student price
- is worth a look. Blue Sky Research is famous on the net for technical
- support that should be a model for the industry. For more information
- send E-mail to sales@bluesky.com.
-
- Andrew Trevorrow's OzTeX is not as sophisticated or as Maclike
- as Textures, but OzTeX files are somewhat more easily exported
- to TeX systems on other platforms than are Textures files. More
- importantly OzTeX is only $30 shareware and available from
-
- ftp://midway.uchicago.edu/pub/OzTeX/
-
- OzTeX is the most integrated and Maclike of the shareware TeX's.
- It's also the only shareware TeX with anything approaching complete
- documentation. It's slower than the other programs discussed here,
- but does allow background compilation and printing. If you only
- need to print or preview an occasional TeX document, get OzTeX.
-
- Tom Kiffe recently released CMacTeX 2.1, a more modular TeX
- for the Mac. The different pieces of this full TeX package like
- dvipreview, TeX, and METAFONT are all available separately. CMacTeX
- is available in both freeware and commercial versions. The
- freeware version is available for anonymous ftp at
-
- ftp://ftp.shsu.edu/tex-archive/systems/mac/cmactex/
-
- The freeware package includes information on ordering the commercial
- version which costs $25 and adds the "big" TeX and Metafont packages.
- Both versions include METAFONT, dvips, and various other TeXie tools.
- However both versions require a PostScript printer. Unlike the
- other TeX programs CMacTeX cannot print to a QuickDraw printer.
- CMacTeX's documentation is somewhat lacking.
-
- Finally Wilfried Ricken maintains DirectTeX, shareware,
- $100 for up to three copies, $20 for each additonal copy. It
- can be retrieved from
-
- ftp://hadron.tp2.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/pub/directtex/
-
- DirectTeX sits on top of and requires the payware MPW. This
- provides it with exceptionally strong macro abilities but makes
- it by far the least Maclike of the four packages. DirectTeX
- supports bidirectional typesetting as is needed for Hebrew and
- Arabic. It includes most TeX utilities such as BibTeX, METAFONT,
- and various tools for working with .dvi files. DirectTeX is the
- fastest shareware TeX and offers the most complete collection of
- TeX capabilities and tools.
-
-
- INTEGRATED APPLICATION? (1.5)
- ------------------------------
-
- Most software is driven by the needs of power users. Features
- are added to sell into the power-user segment of the market since
- they're the hardest to please and spend the most dollars. Triple
- Omega Paperware Corp. and its competitors need to design cocktail
- napkins in 16,000,000 lifelike, mouthwatering colors so
- Big Software Inc. has its programmers spend many hours adding
- photorealistic color capability to Bloated Draw 7.2. Meanwhile
- Father O'Brian finds he needs all the hard disk space on his Color
- Classic and more money than he gets in the collection plate on
- a good Sunday just to purchase and install Bloated Draw 7.2,
- SuperDuperPublisher 3.8, and WhizzyWriter 9.7 so he can make a
- brochure with a picture of a hamburger to advertise the upcoming
- CYO dinner. Integrated applications provide the tools for Father
- O'Brien to create his brochure at a price, both in money and system
- resources, that won't require him to rob the poorbox.
-
- Very few Mac users really push our $200 software packages to
- the limit. Even people who do use Word 5.1 to the fullest may
- not come close to utilizing the power of Excel or Canvas, and
- vice-versa. An integrated package omits the 80% of features that
- 90% of users never touch. Thus we get the 20% of features that
- we actually do use in several areas for less than the price of a
- full featured application in any one of those areas. Integrated
- applications also pack these features into a smaller, faster
- package ideal for users with 68000 Macs or small hard disks. The
- basic components of an integrated package include a word processor,
- drawing application, spreadsheet, database, charting module, and
- telecommunications. Some integrated apps also include painting
- (ClarisWorks, WordPerfect Works, and GreatWorks), outlining
- (ClarisWorks, GreatWorks), and even presentation
- (ClarisWorks) modules.
-
- ClarisWorks is undoubtedly the best integrated package for
- the Mac (which of course means it's easily the best integrated
- package anywhere, but you knew that already. :-) ClarisWorks 1.0
- did what was previously thought to be impossible. It destroyed a
- virtual Microsoft monopoly in a market, something no one had ever
- before achieved though many had tried. The virtual dethroning of
- market leader Microsoft Works by the upstart Claris ought to
- serve as a lesson to any company that thinks market dominance can
- substitute for solid, improving products. It also proved for the
- first time that even as a wholly owned Apple subsidiary Claris was
- capable of turning out a market leading product, something they'd
- never done before. With the release of version 2.0 the gap between
- ClarisWorks and everyone else became a chasm. Though other
- integrated packages like Symantec's GreatWorks and WordPerfect
- Works offer a few features not found in Claris Works and vice
- versa, (Noone agrees on exactly how much should be included in an
- integrated package.) none of the other packages are as well
- integrated, well designed, and easy to use as ClarisWorks. I
- strongly recommend ClarisWorks as the first software for new
- Mac owners, and an essential tool for PowerBook users. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/ClarisWorks_Demo.sit.bin
-
-
- SPREADSHEET? (1.6)
- -------------------
-
- The best professional's spreadsheet is undoubtedly Microsoft
- Excel. While there are occasional reasons one might want to use
- Lotus 1-2-3, Wingz or Resolve, they all fall into the "If you have
- to ask..." category. Since development has ceased on all three of
- Excel's competitors, I recommend that you do not buy any payware
- spreadsheet except Excel unless you absolutely must.
-
- However if you're less than a real power user of
- spreadsheets, you may want to take a look at two excellent
- demoware packages, BiPlane and Mariner which retail for about 20%
- of the street prices of their payware counterparts and offer the
- 20% of spreadsheet features 90% of spreadsheet users spend 100%
- of their time using. Both are available from
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/BiPlaneDemo.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/MarinerDemo.sit.bin
-
- You may also want to consider one of the integrated packages
- such as ClarisWorks. For less than the price of a full-blown
- spreadsheet, you get a medium-sized spreadsheet with all the
- basic features except macros, and a damned good word processor
- and graphics package to boot. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/Clarisworks_Demo.sit.bin
-
-
- JPEG VIEWER? (1.7)
- -------------------
-
- Aaron Giles' JPEGView previews JPEG files on Macs running
- System 7. Kevin Mitchell's GifConverter, $45 shareware, can read
- and dither JPEG's on any Mac running System 6.0.5 or later. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/JPEGView.68k.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/JPEGView.ppc.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/JPEGView.fat.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/GIF_Converter.sit.bin
-
-
- ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING SOFTWARE? (1.8)
- --------------------------------------
-
- Professional electronic publishers tend to swear by either
- QuarkXPress or Aldus Pagemaker, typically because they haven't
- tried the other package. The interface metaphors of the two
- products are quite different, and forcing your mind to switch
- between the two is non-trivial. However many people have made the
- effort to switch to Quark. Few have moved the other direction
- unless forced.
-
- Quark offers more control over the placement of objects on the
- page and various color effects than does PageMaker. This makes
- Quark particularly popular for advertising and other layouts
- that don't look like traditional books and magazines. For instance
- I can't imagine laying out Mondo 2000 or Spy in PageMaker. In
- Quark it might actually be fun. This is not to say that such
- things can't be done; the MacWarehouse catalog is done with
- Pagemaker; but Quark is certainly easier to use for this sort of
- free-form layout. Pagemaker fits a more traditional layout like
- MacWeek's where everything fits neatly into non-overlapping
- rectangular columns and boxes with occasional pull quotes.
-
- Aldus has been playing catch-up with Quark for several years
- now, and with the recent release of PageMaker 5.0 they may finally
- have pulled even. The two products still aren't equal (Quark's
- XTensions are superior to Aldus Additions; PageMaker's book
- publishing features like automatic indexing are non-existent in
- Quark.) but they are roughly comparable. PageMaker is a little
- more expensive, but Aldus provides much better support. For
- users just starting out I recommend PageMaker.
-
- Many people choose PageMaker because its simpler interface
- makes it easier to use for simple black and white newsletters,
- books, and other printed matter that doesn't push the art of
- electronic publishing to its limits. However if this is all
- you want, you may be surprised at just how well today's word
- processors fit your needs. With text and picture boxes,
- styles, multi-column capabilities, sectioning, EPS import,
- and many other features traditionally associated with desktop
- publishing, word processors like Word 5.1, WordPerfect 3.0,
- and even ClarisWorks can do a surprisingly professional job
- when producing relatively simple documents. These features
- may not be obvious (especially in Word 5.1) but they are
- present, and for considerably less money than Pagemaker.
-
-
- DRAWING APPLICATION? (1.9)
- ---------------------------
-
- For sheer artistic capability Aldus Freehand and Adobe
- Illustrator have been playing leapfrog with each other for years
- However the proposed merger between Aldus and Adobe leaves the
- fate of Freehand up in the air. As of this writing Illustrator
- is the superior package with more features and capabilities
- than Freehand. However for day-to-day work most people feel
- more comfortable with whichever program they learned first
- since the interfaces of the two packages are somewhat different.
-
- Both Illustrator and Freehand are designed for tasks that would
- traditionally have been accomplished by freehand drawing. If your
- drawing tends more towards the technical than the artistic, you'll
- probably be happier with Canvas 3.5 which has a superior interface
- for object alignment and drawing to scale. Illustrator and Freehand
- can do pretty much anything Canvas can and vice-versa; but having the
- right package does make particular jobs easier. If your pictures
- will consist mainly of smooth curves, Illustrator or Freehand will
- suit you better.
-
- All of the above packages are geared toward serious artists and
- professional designers and are priced accordingly. For occasional
- drawing by non-professionals any of the integrated packages such
- as ClarisWorks or even the drawing modules of WordPerfect or
- Microsoft Word will likely serve well for a substantially smaller
- investment of time, money, and disk space.
-
-
- TYPING TUTOR? (1.10)
- ---------------------
-
- Almost everyone agrees that Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing
- ($34 street) is the best typing tutor program though some, including
- myself, would qualify that by noting that it's the best of a bad
- lot. It includes all the standard bells and whistles one would
- expect from a typing tutor including statistics, typing games, and
- practice text plus a few extras like a Dvorak mode and a manual
- that's considerably more interesting and fun than the program
- itself. Mavis Beacon has its flaws (It expects you to type two
- spaces at the end of a sentence, and its Dvorak mode doesn't work
- with a genuine Dvorak keyboard.) but these are shared by the
- competitors as well. Two Hypercard typing tutors are available from
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/TypingTutorStack.sit.bin
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/NoviceTypistStack.sit.bin
-
- This isn't the equal of Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing, but if price
- is your only concern download it and try it out.
-
-
- OCR SOFTWARE (1.11)
- --------------------
-
- OmniPage Professional ($500 street) is far and away the best
- optical character recognition package for the Mac. However for
- considerably less money ($75 street) Xerox TextBridge does a
- perfectly adequate job of basic recognition without all the bells
- and whistles of OmniPage Pro.
-
-
-
- =====================
- MICROSOFT WORD (2.0)
- =====================
-
- HOW CAN I ASSIGN STYLES TO CHARACTERS? (2.1)
- ---------------------------------------------
-
- Once you've used character based styles it's almost impossible
- to imagine document formatting without them. After all, just because
- you want equations to be formatted in 10 point I Times Italic or
- references to menu choices in 12 point Chicago doesn't mean you want
- the entire paragraph in that font; but that seems to be the only
- choice Word offers. It's truly a shame that a program that makes
- working with styles so easy via its ribbon bar and customizable
- command key equivalents that can be attached to common styles doesn't
- let the user attach styles to less than a paragraph of text at a time.
-
- There is, however, a work-around. Unless you're one of the
- fifteen people who actually use color text, you've got six unused
- character formats called Blue, Cyan, Green, Magenta, Red, and Yellow
- available in the Format Character dialog box and via user-assignable
- Command-Keys. (There's also Black and White but using those two will
- mess with the normal appearance of your document.) Pick a color for
- each different character-based style you want to use and mark your
- text with the appropriate color. Then, before saving the document,
- do a global Find and Replace for each color; i.e. find the color and
- replace with the style attributes like font and font size.
-
-
- HOW CAN I AUTOMATICALLY GENERATE CROSS-REFERENCES? (2.2)
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- Matthew Nodine's WordRef 1.4.1 (shareware, $25) uses some truly
- inspired hacks to make cross-referencing and auto-numbering of
- figures, tables, sections, equations or whatever else you might care
- to count almost simple. (It can't be made genuinely simple until
- Microsoft incorporates these features directly into Word.) WordRef
- will also automatically generate BibTeX style bibliographies. The
- writer defines variables for each reference or number series while
- writing. These variables can be operated on by various arithmetic
- and logical operators (so a little programming experience is helpful
- though not absolutely necessary.) When you're ready to prepare a
- draft, WordRef will resolve all references and citations into Word
- PrintMerge variables. Then PrintMerge produces the final output.
- The procedure is more complicated than it would be if Microsoft
- incorporated these features into Word, but for the moment WordRef
- should serve most users' cross-referencing needs well. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/WordRef.sit.bin
-
-
- HOW CAN I CHANGE A WORD DOCUMENT TO TEX? AND VICE-VERSA? (2.3)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Brian Jefferies of the University of New South Wales has
- written the program RTF->TeX to convert files Word files saved in RTF
- format into plain TeX files. RTF->TeX is less than robust. Among
- other deficiencies it ignores paragraph and character formatting
- and will not handle equations written with the Equation Editor
- (though it will try to convert equations written in Word's built-in
- formula setting language.) However RTF->TeX is a useful tool to
- handle a lot of the grunt work of preprocessing documents before
- finishing the conversion by hand. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/RTF->TeX.sit.bin
-
- Erwin Wechtl and Alex Viskovatoff have written a similar though
- less polished tool called rtf2LaTeX for converting RTF files to
- LaTeX. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/RTF2LaTeX.sit.bin
-
- Fernando Dorner and Andreas Granzer have written a UNIX
- based program to go in the other direction. See
-
- ftp://ftp.vmars.tuwien.ac.at/pub/misc/latex2rtf.1.0.tar.gz
-
- Design Science's MathType, the payware from which Word's
- Equation Editor is derived can convert Equation Editor equations
- into TeX (though it can't convert the rest of the document). Call
- Design Science at (310) 433-0685 for ordering info.
-
-
- HOW CAN I DEPERSONALIZE WORD? (2.4)
- ------------------------------------
-
- BEFORE installing any software you should lock all the master
- disks, make a backup of all the master disks, and install from the
- backups. Since some installers now check for specific bits on the
- installer floppy, use DiskCopy to make the backup of the master
- disks. DiskCopy also copies floppies more quickly on a one-floppy
- system than the Finder. This is especially true for recent Microsoft
- applications like Word and Excel that write personalization info on
- the master disks. If you need to do multiple installs such as from
- the single set of disks Microsoft sends with its site licenses, you
- don't need to make a backup for every computer you'll be installing
- on. Instead just copy the original, pre-personalization Installer
- application onto your hard drive and replace the one on the floppy
- with the clean copy from your hard drive after every install.
-
- If the disks have already been personalized, get the freeware
- program Anonymity 1.2 from
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/Anonymity.sit.bin
-
- Make a copy of Word on your hard drive and then "Zap" it with
- Anonymity. This removes the personalization information. The next
- time Word is launched it will prompt you for the personalization
- information. If you're using Word 5.0 or 5.1 you'll then be asked
- to insert the "Install" disk. Don't! Instead click Cancel. Word
- will now display a dialog telling you how nice it's being for letting
- you use your software even though you're obviously a nasty, evil
- pirate. Click OK. Then quit Word. Launch Word again, cancel out
- of the dialog asking for the Install floppy again, acknowledge the
- anti-piracy message again, and quit Word again. Repeat this three
- more times. The sixth time you launch Word it should have given up
- on ever getting you to give it the master Install floppy and will
- stop asking for it.
-
-
- WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION? (2.5)
- ----------------------------------------
-
- A FAQ list for the Word-for-Mac mailing list is archived at
-
- ftp://scu.edu.au/lists/word-mac/FAQ/
-
- This archive stores both the full FAQ list and individual questions
- with reasonably descriptive titles. Answers are available for many
- more detailed and advanced questions than are covered here.
-
-
-
- ================
- TEACHTEXT (3.0)
- ================
-
- HOW CAN I CHANGE THE FONT IN TEACHTEXT? (3.1)
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- Make a copy of TeachText 7.0 and open the COPY with ResEdit.
- Open CODE resource 1. You'll probably be warned that the resource is
- stored compressed and that opening it will irreversibly decompress
- it. Click OK. Scroll down to address 4A88. You should see the hex
- string "0001 A887". A887 is the call to TextFont(). The four hex
- digits preceding it (0001) are the font ID. Change this number to
- the ID (in hexadecimal) of the font you want. Monaco would be
- 0004. (It may be something else if Monaco has been renumbered
- on your system.)
-
- To change the size go to the next line (4A90) and look for
- "000C A88A" A88A is the call to TextSize(). The four hex digits
- preceding it are the size of the font to be used. Change "000C" to
- the size (in hex) you want. For instance 0009 is nine-point, 0010
- would be sixteen point.
-
- Changing the font and size can adversely affect the way
- TeachText displays embedded pictures which most commonly occur in
- read-only TeachText documents (the ones with the little newspaper
- icons) so you may want to finish your modifications by deleting FREF
- resource 130 to prevent your modified TeachText from opening those
- files. Save your changes and quit.
-
-
- HOW DO I PLACE A PICTURE IN A TEACHTEXT FILE? (3.2)
- ----------------------------------------------------
-
- I recommend the shareware program Belgian Postcards by
- AIGS and Karl Pottie. While the interface is not very well
- thought out, it does make placing pictures in TeachText
- documents easier than any other utility or technique. See
-
- ftp://rever.nmsu.edu/pub/macfaq/BelgianPostCards.sit.bin
-
-
- HOW DO I MAKE A TEACH-TEXT DOCUMENT READ ONLY? (3.3)
- -----------------------------------------------------
-
- Use ResEdit or any other file typer utility to change
- the file's type to 'ttro.' The above-mentioned Belgian
- Postcards will also save (and edit) files in this format.
-
-
- --
- Elliotte Rusty Harold Dept. of Mathematics
- elharo@shock.njit.edu New Jersey Institute of Technology
- erh0362@tesla.njit.edu Newark NJ 07103
- ..
-
-