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S@=@`0n"n S Sn0.nlN^NuNV=| y (Sg.3>?<!NTfBy`r y (kg3D3-|`F y (g3`* y (g3D3-| y (gBy.NR@3h.NR@3By y (sg3` y (g 3 yg yfB9 H./</< H/<N =@ nfP.No=@#^Jnm3`NG3T3Nj`=|`.N3JynBy0.`N^NuNVBnBn nP .-f=|R nP`&0. .H|A=@R nP .0m .9o nf0.D@`` 0.`N^NuNV0yT"<.?9N`T=@0.`N^NuNV>?</9N\\>?</9N\\N^NuNVBW?</9N\\N^NuNV>?</9N\\>?</9N\\N^NuNV=|=| Bn09`R=|?=|`V=|=|`F=|=|_=|Jyg=|q=| ``J@g|g|g`0.@ny l0.y l0. y o =|`V0.2.AAy l$0.2.Ay o =|H8`0.2.AAy l=|P2`x09 no 3 09 no 3 09 H3JylBy09 H3JylByNy20.`N^Nu#NN/9Nu#NM/9Nu#NA/9NuNV?<NBT0<N^NuNVA*#pA #tAF#xA̮#|A̞#ǀA #DŽAp# ?< NBT3̮09N^NuNV3F3 H3 J3L3N3P3R3T3V3X3Z3\3 ^3"`#$̞3(b3*d?<NBT n,0̰ n00̲ n40̴ n80̶ n<0̸ n@0̺09̮N^NuNV3F# ̞?<4NBTN^NuNV#̞?<6NBT n 0̰ n0̲ n0̴ n0̶09̮N^NuNV3F3 H3 J3L3N3P3R3T3V nf 3333?<3NBTN^NuNV n0 n 0 n0 n0N^NuNV#̞3 F?<2NBTN^NuNV?<MNBT n0̰ n 0̲ n0̴ n0̶09̮N^NuNV3F# ̞?<NNBTN^NuNV#̞3 F?<NBTN^NuNV#̞3 F3H?<NBTN^NuNV#̞3 F3H?< NBTN^NuNV#̞3 F3H?<!NBTN^NuNV#̞3 F3H3J3L3N3P?<*NBTN^NuNV3F3 H32?<pNBTBy2 n  09̮N^NuNV3F3 H3 J3L3N3P?<lNBT n0̰ n0̲ n0̴ n 0̶09̮N^NuNV3F?<fNBTN^NuNV3F3 H3 J3L3N?<dNBTN^NuNV3F?<gNBTN^NuNV3F3 H?<hNBT n 0̰ n0̲ n0̴ n0̶09̮N^NuNV3F3 H3 J3L3N?<eNBTN^NuNV3F3 H3 J3L3N3P?<iNBTN^NuNV3F?<kNBTN^NuNVH?<$Hn/.NO .6.HЃ-@ .3 .3B` Ю @ Ю R 2.Hm .6.HЃ-@B` / </N  n00`, / </N Ю @ ( Ю!@ `8`6|gа|gʰ|gİ|g|g|g|g|g| g ?/.N\R 2.Hmb .6.HЃ-@B`p / </N Ю @ Ю / </N Ю @ (Ю!@ / </N Ю @ (Ю!@R 2.Hm .6.HЃ-@B` / <"/N  n 0Ю"/"<"/N" n! / <"/N  n 0Ю"/"<"/N" n! / <"/N Ю @ (Ю!@R 2.HmT .6.HЃ-@B`> / </N  n 0Ю"/"</N" n!R 2.Hm0<LN^NuNVHBG".l~D$. l GD&gHC H@J@g@HCBCւJGgD-C LN^.JNuNV0.n o0.`0. NqN^NuNV0.n l0.`0. NqN^NuNV n"n 2.HbH0|f |f`$ |g `Q`bA`2Q`VA`"Q`J0|f |f`$ |g ` Q`A`3 Q` A`# QN^NuNV3*0.| AHЈ-@=|` nR2.AA*H1Rn nm/9 NjX09̮N^NuNV3ByBy3N N^NuNV3eByBy3N N^NuNV# #  .мZ# 3dBy3  n 3N 09 n 03Aʞ# A # AP# A# N^NuNV .3 .3N^NuNV .3 .3N^NuNV0969Ƽ n N^NuA Xy  !JHy!W # Hy " <sNBYy A "P$hNuNV3|ByBy3N n 0 n0P n0RN^NuNV#  3r3By3N A# N^NuNV3 ʞ3By33N 09 N^NuNV#̞# ̢Hy?<&N\ y d?<ZNBT n0̰09̮`$#̦?<[NBT n0̰09̮N^NuNV x3 N^NuNV#̞3 F?<rNBTN^Nu ST Writer Elitexyzzx.datName of file to print? Enter rinter, isk, creen, spoo er?Enter file name? Print whole document /? Enter first? Enter last? Searching disk for printer config. file.Enter number of copies? Chaining Make entry? Printing to disk file.Press any key to resume,  to cancel.Press any key to pause print. Page Printing to spooler. Page ERROR writing to file!Page wait--press any key to continue.Chain file not found.Cannot chain.Form data from file /? Data file name: Letter-quality print /? Sides to format ( 1 or 2 ): All data will be erased,  to format.Which drive to format (A or B): Enter name for disk: To format: Unable to format disk.Too many bad sectors.ERROR trying to format.%9MbmzPrint pages: dd, ven, oth?B(P!7n  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~--WWSTSTEF45MP @xxDLPdlp 0!6 4z >Z!N"#r<"!!#D776~7.7Save as ST Writer Elite file.Save as ASCII file.Print to disk file.Save formatted file.Load file.Delete file.Load Merge file.Select Printer Driver.Form-data file.Load AtariWriter File.CDEFILPSRTHF^GzMrl6plR`VAA ST WRITER ELITECopyright 1989 by Atari Corp.In the public domain. Not for sale.REATE FileELETE File DIT File ORMAT Disk  NDEX of Files OAD FileRINT File AVE File ECEIVE AtariWriter RANSFORM ColorsUIT ST WRITER ELITECopyright 1989 by Atari Corp.In the public domain. Not for sale.REATE FileELETE File DIT File ORMAT Disk  NDEX of Files, OAD File,RINT File ,AVE File ,ECEIVE AtariWriter ,RANSFORM Colors,UIT ST WRITER ELITECopyright 1989 by Atari Corp.In the public domain. Not for sale.REATE FileELETE File DIT File ORMAT Disk  NDEX of Files, OAD File,RINT File ,AVE File ,ECEIVE AtariWriter ,RANSFORM ColorsIRES Flip-Flop,UIT SELECT LETTER Quit without saving file in memory? Save in ASCII format? Erase file in memory, / ? File to be deleted: File deleted. Unable to delete file. Type 'Y' to delete file:  Receive from 850? Start sending (ESC to quit).Now receiving.String was not found.Press  to return to menu.Line:Column:Free: Save filename: HIDDEN file, can not be used.SYSTEM FILE, can not be used.FOLDER, can not be used.ALREADY EXISTS, 'Y' to replace it.ERROR trying to open the file.Disk is full.File not found. Do Run Run STWRITER.PRG*.*'P' to printer, 'S' to screen: There are no files. Press any key to pause listing.Press any key to continue listing.\Unable to change to that folder.Path name: ST Writer file: Folder: 64k+ Load file: ERROR trying to read the file.Converting non-ST Writer file.Change tabs to spaces? Buffer is full, file not loaded.B!B!B!B!12 4 0 5 0 10 70 2 12 132Forward search : Reverse search : Query Replace : with : Type 'Y' to replace string.Type 'Y' to restore default tab stops: Type 'Y' to clear all tab stops: Type 'Y' to clear current tab stop: First block mark not found.Second block mark not found.Cursor inside block marks.Too large for Cut Buffer, cut anyway?.Too large for Cut Buffer.Insert would overflow buffer.Two marks already set.WARNING- memory low.!!! WARNING !!! Almost out of memory.!!!! OUT OF MEMORY !!!!Save block as: Erase current file in memory (Y/N): Cursor position: b̝<h͸GnΊδFςϰ,О0ZхѠUҀҤ!Gkӷ3Y}ԷB}զCDEFILPSRTHQ*.TXT*.DAT*.SPO*.DOC*.**12 *4 *0 **5 0 *10 *70 *2 *12 132 **0 19812 4 0 5 0 10 70 2 12 132$ZnnnnnnnntlnVntznnJnXnfnnPnnBRxRRRRRRRZRRRR<[1][!! FATAL ERROR !!|Resource file not loaded!][ CRASH! ][1][ ST Writer Elite ver. 3.6| 1989 by Atari Corp.| In the Public Domain.| Not for sale.][ OK ][3][Quit without saving|file in memory?][ YES | NO ][1][ERROR trying to|read the file.][ OK ][2][Converting non-ST Writer file.| OK to change Tabs to Spaces?][ YES | NO ][3][Buffer is full!|File not loaded.][ OK ][1][ST Writer cannot|open this file.][ OK ][3][ERASE current file| in memory?][ YES | NO ][1][ERROR writing| to file!][ Oops! ][3][Page wait.][ Continue ][3][Unable to delete| file!][ Oh Oh! ][3][ Delete file. ][ OK | CANCEL ][2][ Send file. ][ OK | CANCEL ][1][Printer port for new driver.][ Parallel | Modem ][3][ List files. ][Printer|Screen| CANCEL ][1][Unable to change|to that folder.][ OK ][1][HIDDEN file,|can not be used.][ OK ][1][SYSTEM file,|can not be used.][ OK ][1][FOLDER,|can not be used.][ OK ][1][ | | ALREADY EXISTS! ][ REPLACE | CANCEL ][1][ERROR trying to|open the file.][ OK ][1][Disk is full.][ OK ][1][File not found.][ OK ][3][Restore default|tab stops?][ YES | NO ][3][ Clear all tab stops? ][ YES | NO ][3][Clear current tab stop?][ YES | NO ][1][File deleted.][ OK ][1][First block mark|not found.][ OK ][1][Second block mark|not found.][ OK ][1][Cursor inside|block marks.][ OK ][3][Too large for cut|buffer. Cut anyway?][ YES | NO ][1][Insert would overflow buffer.][ OK ][1][Two marks already set.][ OK ][1][WARNING- memory low.][ OK ][1][!!! WARNING !!!|Almost out of memory.][ YIKES! ][1][!!!! OUT OF MEMORY !!!!][ GOSH! ][1][Chain file not found!][ OOPS! ][1][Printing to disk file.][ OK ][1][Modification to file|must be saved before|file can be chained!][ OK ][2][ Form data from file? ][ YES | NO | CANCEL ][3][ All disk data will | be erased.][ FORMAT | CANCEL ][1][ERROR trying to format!][ OOPS! ][1][Unable to format disk!][ OK ][2][ Which drive to format? ][ A | B | CANCEL ][1][Too many bad sectors!][ SIGH. ][2][ How many sides to format? ][ 1 | 2 | CANCEL ][2][ Mouse enabled. ][ OK | CANCEL ][3][ No file in buffer! | Load file?][ YES | NO ][1][Too large for| cut buffer.][ OK ][2][Get AtariWriter file|via null modem|or from disk file?][ MODEM | DISK | CANCEL ]ffff$ffk PRINT DOCUMENT:PrinterDiskScreenSpooler 1Start page:___999DraftFinal999End page :___999001Copies :___999Print Pages:OddEvenBoth OK CANCEL Desk File Edit Options ST Writer Elite -------------------- Desk Accessory 1 Desk Accessory 2 Desk Accessory 3 Desk Accessory 4 Desk Accessory 5 Desk Accessory 6 Load AtariWriter --------------- Save Save As ... Save ASCII --------------- Delete File Format Disk --------------- Print Pr. Driver --------------- Quit Edit ----------------- Create ----------------- Global Format Insert Type over -------------- Lines Mouse Deadkey Spec. Char. -------------- Colors ON OFFMARGINS:topbottomleftrightlength012___999012___999010___999070___999132___99902__9904__99000___999198___999005___X99Spc:linepara.2Col: Lt RtIndentJustifyOKCANCELPICAELITEITALICSCONDENSEDGLOBAL FORMAT:BOLD1st ColumnPTcsw2# $2! 4 < A Hf !  g m       ! % PP     &P     )>Sh} " 2 B R b &!%"r#$% '/ ()*+,-.&/5& D%B%   S VC#[dh o t z  *Fb ~   "!    )  . " 4 # < $F% U  Z  J $   "  "(  * 2     $                                                     4                              2&"  " ( &       "             , (  .*    & : ,     $    0"$  &       &H  &"      >( <.  ( &(               ,    X2          \ (      4": ~                    2            &           , 8:& &&* l,6, *Z$     ,$                0    , (       $\ "  * ",p2($l.p*,>  6 < (  .       Hd&XZ           6$   F               * >*     $$  8 08l:zzzj:::4 8      $ 2"  J&     $    ~     "         * ,   $    &                       .     L       6     "2    8  "          ,    *      6 & & ((   0     2   6    $ D   J         "          0 *,&,,L0$h   , *(            : z         (  "        $ <<                              (L \8"&J  J t&       Do Run Run STWRITER.PRG6 4 1 5 0 5 75 2 6 132ATARI ST-WRITER HELP SHEETFORMAT BLOCK (Top of page)CONTROL- "B" - Bottom margin "L" - Left margin "D" - Paragraph spacing "R" - Right margin "G" - Change font "S" - Line spacing 0=pica 1=bold 2=condensed "T" - Top margin 4=italics 8=elite "Y" - Page length "I" - Paragraph indentation "M" - Dbl. column left margin "J" - Justification toggle "N" - Dbl. column right marginFUNCTION KEYS F1 - Go to end of file SHIFT F1 - Go to start of file F2 - Insert block SHIFT F2 - Move block F3 - Uppercase Toggle SHIFT F3 - Underline On/Off F4 - Set tab SHIFT F4 - Clear tab F5 - Delete block SHIFT F5 - Set block marks F6 - Forward search SHIFT F6 - Reverse search F7 - Query replace SHIFT F7 - Global replace F8 - Merge file SHIFT F8 - Save block F9 - Form printing insertion SHIFT F9 - Expanded print toggle F10 - Subscript SHIFT F10 - SuperscriptOTHER COMMANDS CONTROL-A or CONTROL-[LEFT ARROW ] - Cursor beginning of line CONTROL-C - Center line of text CONTROL-CC - Block right line of text CONTROL-E - Page eject CONTROL-F - Footer CONTROL-H - Header CONTROL-K - Abort search or replace/ Insert comment in text CONTROL-O - Enter printer control code CONTROL-P - Paragraph mark CONTROL-Q-number - Page # to start numbering from CONTROL-U - Section heading, level CONTROL-V-Filespec - Chain print Filespec CONTROL-W - Page wait CONTROL-X - Before and after Control Characters when they are to be actually inserted into the text. CONTROL-Z or CONTROL-[RIGHT ARROW] - Cursor end of line @ - Replaced with page number in header or footer CONTROL-DELETE - Delete to end of file SHIFT-DELETE - Delete to end of line UNDO - Restores a deleted block of text INSERT - Toggles between Insert and Type-Over modes CLR HOME - Delete file in buffer CONTROL-TAB - Clear all tab stops SHIFT-TAB - Restores default tab stops SHIFT-[UP ARROW] - Up one page SHIFT-[DOWN ARROW] - Down one page ALT-X - Toggles between normal and international characters ALT-= - Byte count at cursor position CONTROL-(keypad) * - Prints delta character CONTROL-(keypad) minus - Prints overscore character CONTROL-CLR HOME - Toggles deadkey mode (",',~,`,^,/,-,_)(BUG ALERT VERSION 3.6: There's a problem with the mouse being at the top of the screen (in the area where the menu bar will appear) when switching from the editing screen to the GEM menu screen. The program will appear to lock up when the [Escape] key is pressed. This bug appears in the softload developer version of TOS 1.4 and in the TOS 1.2 version of the Mega ROMs. These versions of TOS require the user to pull the mouse out of the menu area before switching to the GEM menu. This is the only way to keep the menu screen clean and to prevent the loss of the mouse cursor.) ST WRITER ELITE VERSION 3.6 -- Changes since version 3.0 1) No separate resource file. 2) The Global Search and Replace is now roughly 60 times faster! 3) The free memory byte counter can now accommodate values up to 95 megabytes. This makes it compatible with the TT, which can handle more than 25 megabytes. 4) In non-GEM mode, in many instances the [Enter] key acts the same as the [Return] key. 5) Placing the cursor with the mouse now updates the line/column numbers immediately, as opposed to updating them on the next key stroke. 6) An info status line has been added at the top of the GEM menu screen which keeps track of the name and path of the current file in memory. 7) When you save a file under the name of one which exists, you are warned, and the alert box tells you the name of the file which you are attempting to overwrite (nice, in case you click on the wrong file, or type in a name which you didn't know was already a file in the same directory). 8) If you have TOS 1.4 in ROM, file selector boxes now indicate the operation (eg., did you select delete, load, save or what?). 9) All disk i.o. has been updated and thoroughly debugged. 10) [Control]-[A], [Control]-[Z], [Control]-[Right Arrow], and [Control]-[Left Arrow] now work in the command box. 11) Search/Replace allows a null replacement (bug in versions 3.2 and 3.3). 12) AtariWriter(tm) files can now be loaded from another folder (bug in 3.4). 13) There's now an option to print only odd, or only even pages, which allows you to print your document double-sided, like a book, by flipping the sheets. As always, any bugs, let me know. I can be reached on Compuserve [72407,504] and Genie [B.Noonan]. Do Run Run STWRITER.PRGB!B!4 4 1 5 0 1 79 2 4 1325 ST Writer 1 KEY CODE TABLE0 Shift | Alternate "X" Shift + | +KEY Normal Shift Control Control | Normal Shift Control ControlReturn ^< ^< ^J ^J | ^< ^< ^J ^JSpace Bar Sp Sp | 1 ! 1 ! ^Q ^ | 2 @ 2 @ | 3 # 3 # ^S ^C | 4 $ 4 $ ^T ^D | 5 % 5 % ^" ^E | 6 ^ 6 ^ ^ ^ | 7 & 7 & ^W ^F | 8 * 8 * ^X ^J | 9 ( 9 ( ^Y ^H | 0 ) 0 ) ^P ^I | - _ - _ ^? ^? | = + = + ^_ ^K | ` ~ ` ~ ^ | [ { [ { ^Up ^Up | ] } ] } ^_ ^_ | ; : ; : ^Up ^Z | ' " ' " ^G ^B | , < , < ^L ^Dn | . > , > ^N ^ | / ? / ? ^O ^? | \ | \ | ^Dn ^Dn | A a A | B b B ^B ^B | C c C ^C ^C | D d D ^D ^D | E e E ^E ^E | F f F ^F ^F | G g G ^G ^G | H h H ^H ^H | I i I ^I ^I | J j J ^J ^J | K k K ^K ^K | L l L ^L ^L | M m M ^M ^M | N n N ^N ^N | O o O ^O ^O | P p P ^P ^P | Q q Q ^Q ^Q | R r R ^R ^R | S s S ^S ^S | T t T ^T ^T | U u U ^ ^ | V v V ^V ^V | W w W ^W ^W | X x X ^X ^X | Y y Y ^Y ^Y | Z z Z | Insert ^P | Clr Home 7 7 | Up Arrow ^X | F3 ^_ ^_ | ^_ Rt ^_F5 ^" ^" | ^" ^"F9 ^? ^ ^? ^ | ^? ^ ^? ^F10 ^Dn ^Up ^Dn ^Up | ^Dn ^Up ^Dn ^UpKeypad * * *   | Keypad - - - | Do Run Run STWRITER.PRG  10This template can be cut out and taped above your function keys as a quick reference. 51603|------- F1 -------|-------- F2 -------|-------- F3 -------|------- F4 -------|-------- F5 -------|-------- F6 -------|| 7 Top of File 3 | 7 Move Block 3 | 7 Underline On/Off3 | 7 Clear Tab Stop 3 | 7 Mark Block 3 | 7 Reverse Search 3 || | | | | | || Bottom of File | Insert Block | Uppercase Toggle | Set Tab Stop | Delete Block | Forward Search |-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|------- F7 -------|-------- F8 -------|-------- F9 -------|------- F10 ------|| 7 Replace 3 | 7 Save Block 3 | 7 Elongated On/Off3 | 7 Superscript 3 | 7 [Shift] 3 | | | | || Query Replace | Merge File | Form Character | Subscript |-------------------------------------------------------------------------------Do Run Run STWRITER.PRGB!B!* the following table gives the widths of the various dot matrix* printing modes. A least common multiple was calculated so all* mode widths could be represented as a whole number* weights* columns per page = 80 lcm= 5280* if columns = 132 then lcm= 8712* normal = 80 columns 66* elongated = 40 columns 132* condensed = 132 columns 40* condensed elongated = 66 columns 80* condensed elite = 160 columns 33* elite = 96 columns 55* elongated elite = 48 columns 110** column width5280* pica and elongated condensed elite66* elongated pica132* condensed40* condensed elongated80* condensed elite33* elite55* elongated elite110** character translation table to accommodate non-Atari printers which* may not have the international set in 8 bit codes but instead use* character substitution. Set up currently for Atari printers*0x00,0x01,0x02,0x03,0x04,0x05,0x06,0x07,0x08,0x09,0x0a,0x0b,0x0c,0x0d0x0e,0x0f0x10,0x11,0x12,0x13,0x14,0x15,0x16,0x17,0x18,0x19,0x1a,0x1b,0x1c,0x1d0x1e,0x1f0x20,0x21,0x22,0x23,0x24,0x25,0x26,0x27,0x28,0x29,0x2a,0x2b,0x2c,0x2d0x2e,0x2f0x30,0x31,0x32,0x33,0x34,0x35,0x36,0x37,0x38,0x39,0x3a,0x3b,0x3c,0x3d0x3e,0x3f0x40,0x41,0x42,0x43,0x44,0x45,0x46,0x47,0x48,0x49,0x4a,0x4b,0x4c,0x4d0x4e,0x4f0x50,0x51,0x52,0x53,0x54,0x55,0x56,0x57,0x58,0x59,0x5a,0x5b,0x5c,0x5d0x5e,0x5f0x60,0x61,0x62,0x63,0x64,0x65,0x66,0x67,0x68,0x69,0x6a,0x6b,0x6c,0x6d0x6e,0x6f0x70,0x71,0x72,0x73,0x74,0x75,0x76,0x77,0x78,0x79,0x7a,0x7b,0x7c,0x7d0x7e,0x7f0x80,0x81,0x82,0x83,0x84,0x85,0x86,0x87,0x88,0x89,0x8a,0x8b,0x8c,0x8d0x8e,0x8f0x90,0x91,0x92,0x93,0x94,0x95,0x96,0x97,0x98,0x99,0x9a,0x9b,0x9c,0x9d0x9e,0x9f0xa0,0xa1,0xa2,0xa3,0xa4,0xa5,0xa6,0xa7,0xa8,0xa9,0xaa,0xab,0xac,0xad0xae,0xaf0xb0,0xb1,0xb2,0xb3,0xb4,0xb5,0xb6,0xb7,0xb8,0xb9,0xba,0xbb,0xbc,0xbd0xbe,0xbf0xc0,0xc1,0xc2,0xc3,0xc4,0xc5,0xc6,0xc7,0xc8,0xc9,0xca,0xcb,0xcc,0xcd0xce,0xcf0xd0,0xd1,0xd2,0xd3,0xd4,0xd5,0xd6,0xd7,0xd8,0xd9,0xda,0xdb,0xdc,0xdd0xde,0xdf0xe0,0xe1,0xe2,0xe3,0xe4,0xe5,0xe6,0xe7,0xe8,0xe9,0xea,0xeb,0xec,0xed0xee,0xef0xf0,0xf1,0xf2,0xf3,0xf4,0xf5,0xf6,0xf7,0xf8,0xf9,0xfa,0xfb,0xfc,0xfd0xfe,0xff** printer specific control strings* underline on27451255255255255255* underline off27450255255255255255* elongated on27871255255255255255* elongated off27870255255255255255* superscript on27830255255255255255* superscript off2784255255255255255255* subscript on27831255255255255255* subscript off2784255255255255255255* bold on2771255255255255255255* bold off2772255255255255255255* italics on2752255255255255255255* italics off2753255255255255255255* compressed on15255255255255255255255* compressed off18255255255255255255255* elite on2777255255255255255255* pica on2780255255255255255255* carriage return/line feed sequence0x0d0x0a255255255255255255* printer reset2764255255255255255255* draft quality print271200255255255255255* letter quality print271201255255255255255Do Run Run STWRITER.PRGB!B!* the following table gives the widths of the various dot matrix* printing modes. A least common multiple was calculated so all* mode widths could be represented as a whole number* weights* columns per page = 80 lcm= 5280* if columns = 132 then lcm= 8712* normal = 80 columns 66* elongated = 40 columns 132* condensed = 132 columns 40* condensed elongated = 66 columns 80* condensed elite = 160 columns 33* elite = 96 columns 55* elongated elite = 48 columns 110** column width5280* pica and elongated condensed elite66* elongated pica132* condensed40* condensed elongated80* condensed elite33* elite55* elongated elite110** character translation table to accommodate non-Atari printers which* may not have the international set in 8 bit codes but instead use* character substitution. Set up currently for Atari printers*0x00,0x01,0x02,0x03,0x04,0x05,0x06,0x07,0x08,0x09,0x0a,0x0b,0x0c,0x0d0x0e,0x0f0x10,0x11,0x12,0x13,0x14,0x15,0x16,0x17,0x18,0x19,0x1a,0x1b,0x1c,0x1d0x1e,0x1f0x20,0x21,0x22,0x23,0x24,0x25,0x26,0x27,0x28,0x29,0x2a,0x2b,0x2c,0x2d0x2e,0x2f0x30,0x31,0x32,0x33,0x34,0x35,0x36,0x37,0x38,0x39,0x3a,0x3b,0x3c,0x3d0x3e,0x3f0x40,0x41,0x42,0x43,0x44,0x45,0x46,0x47,0x48,0x49,0x4a,0x4b,0x4c,0x4d0x4e,0x4f0x50,0x51,0x52,0x53,0x54,0x55,0x56,0x57,0x58,0x59,0x5a,0x5b,0x5c,0x5d0x5e,0x5f0x60,0x61,0x62,0x63,0x64,0x65,0x66,0x67,0x68,0x69,0x6a,0x6b,0x6c,0x6d0x6e,0x6f0x70,0x71,0x72,0x73,0x74,0x75,0x76,0x77,0x78,0x79,0x7a,0x7b,0x7c,0x7d0x7e,0x7f0x80,0x81,0x82,0x83,0x84,0x85,0x86,0x87,0x88,0x89,0x8a,0x8b,0x8c,0x8d0x8e,0x8f0x90,0x91,0x92,0x93,0x94,0x95,0x96,0x97,0x98,0x99,0x9a,0x9b,0x9c,0x9d0x9e,0x9f0xa0,0xa1,0xa2,0xa3,0xa4,0xa5,0xa6,0xa7,0xa8,0xa9,0xaa,0xab,0xac,0xad0xae,0xaf0xb0,0xb1,0xb2,0xb3,0xb4,0xb5,0xb6,0xb7,0xb8,0xb9,0xba,0xbb,0xbc,0xbd0xbe,0xbf0xc0,0xc1,0xc2,0xc3,0xc4,0xc5,0xc6,0xc7,0xc8,0xc9,0xca,0xcb,0xcc,0xcd0xce,0xcf0xd0,0xd1,0xd2,0xd3,0xd4,0xd5,0xd6,0xd7,0xd8,0xd9,0xda,0xdb,0xdc,0xdd0xde,0xdf0xe0,0xe1,0xe2,0xe3,0xe4,0xe5,0xe6,0xe7,0xe8,0xe9,0xea,0xeb,0xec,0xed0xee,0xef0xf0,0xf1,0xf2,0xf3,0xf4,0xf5,0xf6,0xf7,0xf8,0xf9,0xfa,0xfb,0xfc,0xfd0xfe,0xff** printer specific control strings* underline on27451255255255255255* underline off27450255255255255255* elongated on27871255255255255255* elongated off27870255255255255255* superscript on27830255255255255255* superscript off2784255255255255255255* subscript on27831255255255255255* subscript off2784255255255255255255* bold on2771255255255255255255* bold off2772255255255255255255* italics on2752255255255255255255* italics off2753255255255255255255* compressed on15255255255255255255255* compressed off18255255255255255255255* elite on2777255255255255255255* pica on2780255255255255255255* carriage return/line feed sequence0x0d0x0a255255255255255255* printer reset2764255255255255255255* draft quality print271200255255255255255* letter quality print271201255255255255255`*6*#*O*m#1` - ЭЭм"ҍ¼.A// Bg?<JNA y1`"h#1dE?/ NN"/0<NBNu o AdpNu#1dBNuNV0/"/ NB1dd0< A+"NB0<NBN^Nu o2/0/ HSoQBNu o0/JfBNuf SNuNV.-hNBW/<-?<+/<-NXJy1m4Jy1m .+/<?91?<@NP` .-N.-N>1?<>NTBWN XN^NuNVBW/<. ?<=N\31Jy1mrB.`.]/<?91?<?NP .*fa`|Bn` |12nBRn nmBn`B.]/<?91?<?NPn .*fa,`0n1Rn .,gJ.g nm 901f$ 9x1g 9X1f.1a=@`.1a=@ y+l40.H2y++Ry+0.2.HAA=@0.H2y++Ry+ .g y+m>1?<>NT y+l ..NN^NuNVBn=|` n2n 0m2 n2n 9n"0.@"n4nHA|=@` n2n Am0 n2n Fn 0.@"n4nHA|=@`> n2n am. n2n fn0.@"n4nHA|=@Rn nm40.N^NuNVBn`0. 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N' LN^NuJj Jjf NufNuJNu<NuJg NugR kjklf`>k^g>k^g2k8<d,&B<ރeNuRid~S<Nu.NuJNu:ڼ.gNugRghEDvi^E]HE:BB8HD&HC؃HF&؃BDHDHGHFHEބj ޼gNuSiex@ބއdRgNu~NujJ<Numc68343 floating point firmware (c) copyright 1981 by motorola inc. Stack Overflow$C runtimeCON:LST:B(P!7n  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~--WWSHSHEF45MP @xxCreating file "xyzzx.dat". xyzzx.datReading "config.txt" file. "xyzzx.dat" file size is %d bytes. Can't read "config.txt" file. Aborting... now closing file config.txt!!! WARNING !!! Faulty "xyzzx.dat" file!: unmatched quoteCannot open Cannot append Cannot create : No matchStack Overflow $   xBfffffff"ffffffvffffffffff|Bfffffff&ffffffz0T0T    z!!!!"CP/M-68K(tm), Version 1.2, Copyright (c) 1983, Digital Research XXXX-0000-654321__exit__break1d___cpmrv1h__base1`__sovf_crystaln_ctrl_cn*6_brkz___BDOS_blkfill_index_strchr___pname+___tname+___lname+___xeof+_j+_buffer+_main_fill_bu_discard_mk_deci`_mk_intH_gemdos_bios_xbios__main_printf_fprintf___main__creat X_creat _creata &_creatb >_exit X__cleanu p_fclose _close __iob.___fdecl _fflush __open $_open _opena 6_openb N_lseek h_tell __doprt __pftoaf__petoa__pgtoa_fputn _fputc__flsbuf_isatty$_isdevX_ttyname__afreeb0T__aflist0\_malloc_free._realloc,_malloc___errmal___prtin___prtld.___prtsh_sbrkR_write__chvec0`__allocc:__freec__chinit___chini__chkc0__wrtasc__wrtbin___open_ucase,_errno0__errcpm0_strcat`_strcpy_strlen___atab0____atab__strcmp__salloc L_uldivr1 _uldiv z_sw_ __pc_rea!__pc_wri!B_trap!~lmul!_ftoa!_etoa#fpadd%_fpadd%fpcmp&_fpcmp&fpdiv&2_fpdiv&2_fpltof&R_fpftol&fpmul'j_fpmul'jfpmult'j_fpmult'jfpneg'_fpneg'fpsub'_fpsub'ffpcmp'ffptst'ffpabs'ffpneg'ffpadd(ffpsub'ffpdiv(ffpmul2)lffpcpyrt@)_out_han1_temp1_in_hand1__fds16$ N      $* & " N    ,"  ,D( 0 <    >  h 0HN&  j^***`&$ D"V8*R$ZF \@(B4.J".86 Jp $""@2&"fHR"D(<@* T0^0 :  Do Run Run STWRITER.PRGB!B! ST WriterTM Elite Quick Reference Guide Page @Formatting commandsEnter value, where appropriate, following command.Bottom margin Control BBlock text right Control C Control C before each line, [Return] afterByte Count atcursor Alternate =Center text Control C before each line, [Return] afterChain print files Control V at bottom of file, followed by drive specifier and colon, if necessary, filename to be chained, and [Return]Control Characterinsert in text Control X before and after the control character temporarily turns off formatter and prints the character in your file.Double-column printing:2nd col. left Control Mmargin2nd col. right Control NmarginElongated print Shift F9 before and after textForm printing F9 for each blank in formHeaders and Control H for header,footers Control F for footer, then text and [Return] for each lineJustified and Control J and 1nonjustified (justified) or 0 margins (nonjustified)Left margin Control LLine spacing Control SMerge files F8Mouse on Click mouse buttonMouse off Click on Mouse in Options menu.Page eject Control E where page break is desiredPage length Control Y (for continuous printout, set top and bottom margins at 0)Page numbering @ (Shift 2) in header or footer; for starting page number other than 1, Control Q after [Return] that concludes header or footer, then desired page number. Negative value alternates right and left blocked headers and footers on alternate pagesPage wait Control WParagraph Control IIndentationTo make an outdent, use a negative valueafter Control I.Paragraph spacing Control DPrinter controls Control O and decimal codePrint stylesPica Control G and 0Bold Control G and 1Condensed Control G and 2(16.7 CPI)Italics Control G and 4Elite Control G and 8To mix print styles, add the numbers that followControl G. (Note: the number after [Control G]must be followed by a hyphen.) In GEM mode,print styles can be selected prior to Creatinga file by clicking on the appropriate buttonsin the Global Format dialog box.Right margin Control RSection Control U, section levelheadings number (1-9), heading text, and [Return]Subscripts F10 before, Shift F10 afterSuperscripts Shift F10 before, F10 afterTop margin Control TAlternate Alternate XCharacter set (toggle)Deadkey function Control Clr Home (toggle)Cursor movementUp (up arrow)Down (down arrow)Left (left arrow)Right (right arrow)Beginning of line Control (left arrow), or Control AEnd of line Control (right arrow), or Control ZTop of file Shift F1Bottom of file F1Page up Shift (up arrow)Page down Shift (down arrow)Next Tab stop (inserts spaces) Tab(no insert) Shift (right arrow), or Shift (left arrow)UnderlineNew or existing Shift F3 before and after texttextUpper and lowercase charactersSwitch between CapsLockupper andlowercaseChange existing F3text to upperor lowercaseParagraphsBegin paragraph Control PEnd paragraph ReturnType-over text/ Insertor Insert (toggle)Delete textCharacter under DeletecursorCharacter to Backspaceleft of cursorTo end of line Shift DeleteTo end of file Control DeleteEntire file Clr HomeRestore last Undoline or blockdeleteText blocks Shift F5 to mark beginning and end of text block, then --Delete block F5Duplicate block Position cursor, then [F2]. After initial duplication and before any line or block deletions, position cursor, then [Undo] to reduplicate block.Move block Position cursor, then [Shift F2]Save block Shift F8, then enter filenameSave ASCII You can only set right margin (10 to 160).Search and replaceSearch forward F6Search reverse Shift F6Global replace Shift F7Query replace F7TabsClear all Control TabTab stops Restore default Shift TabTab stopsClear Tab stop Shift F4at cursorSet Tab stop F4at cursorHalt printing EscReturn to menu Esc. -j.. -SECRETS1TXT/kiSECRETS2TXT5*TWOCOL TXT9(Do Run Run STWRITER.PRGB!B!12 4 2 5 1 5 64 68 127 2 12 1326 ST Writer Secrets2 Page @THE FOLLOWING ARITCLE IS FROM ST WRITER SECRETS WHICH APPEARED IN THE WINTER 1986 ISSUE OF START (c)1986 by ANTIC PUBLICATIONS. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION.2 ST Writer Secretsby Bruce D. Noonan, M.D.Imagine, if you can, a powerful 8-bit computer with 48 kilobytes of memory-- but with no word processor software, and a reputation as being a "game machine". Sound familiar? For many of us Atari veterans, those days are not so far away. Back around 1980, Atari recognized the need for credible, practical software for their new Atari 800 computer, so they developed the Atari Word Processor. It set you back $100, and came in a large ring binder with two disks, volumes of documentation, and an audio-cassette teaching tape. Compared with today's word processors, the Atari Word Processor was a neanderthal. Each page of processed document required its own disk file, and every time something was edited, the entire document had to be re-formatted before saving and printing.No wonder Atari owners turned to Letter Perfect, a word processor from LJK. Letter Perfect was respectable and workable, but it used a nonstandard, incompatible disk format and cost $150-- high for Atari software, even in those days. Next, Datasoft came out with Text Wizard, which was menu driven, and produced Atari-compatible, standard ASCII files. But Text Wizard was hampered by inflexibility in printing. You could not specify a range of pages to print, and multiple copies had to be printed one at a time.Atari hired the the author of Text Wizard, William Robinson, to create AtariWriter and produced an overnight success. Not only was AtariWriter easy to use with only one menu screen, it was among the first of the Atari word processors to exploit the features of the newer dot-matrix printers. The main drawback of AtariWriter was its lack of printer drivers, as Atari, Inc. clung to the narrow view that every Atari owner should only use Atari printers. Nevertheless, Consumer Reports rated AtariWriter, bundled with the new 800XL and the Atari 1027 printer, as the best word processing system for the price.But after Jack Tramiel bought Atari from Warner Communications and developed the 16-bit 520 ST, Atari was again faced with the old game-computer reputation. Displaying six-color graphic screens ported over from the 8-bit machines would do little to dispel the myth.JACK BE QUICKThe first word processor I saw for the ST was Express, from Mirage Concepts. One look at the non-mnemonic control codes was enough for me. I wanted AtariWriter on the ST. Lo and behold, the new Atari Corp. was thinking along similar lines. A word processor was needed quickly to be served with the new STs, Macintosh style.Atari produced ST Writer remarkably quickly. Assembly language programmer, Dan Oliver, converted the code for the editor portion of the original AtariWriter, while John Feagans planned to adapt the formatter portion of the program in C. (The formatter is that part of a word processor that interprets editor commands and translates them into the proper format for the output device, whether it be the screen, printer or disk.) Feagans returned from a one-week vacation to find that all that was needed was his formatter, and the package would be ready to go! In just 6 two short weeks2 , ST Writer was born.And what a word processor it was! It could do multiple pitch printing, double columns, headers, footers, multiple copies, expanded print, underlining, sub/superscripts, justification, block moves, deletes, inserts, search, replace...It even received AtariWriter files directly from an 8-bit Atari via an 850 interface and null modem cable! Best of all, its commands were the familiar mnemonic codes used in AtariWriter.NO ROSE GARDENAs with many products rushed to market, ST Writer was not bug-free. The double-column printing would not work when double spacing with more than 80 columns (as with elite or condensed print). Furthermore, headers and footers couldn't be blocked right, and elongated printing did not center properly.In September, 1985, I spoke with Leonard Tramiel and Sig Hartmann at a Boeing Computer Society meeting in Seattle, and asked them when the next release of ST Writer would be fixed. The discouraging answer was that ST Writer was "complete" and besides, it was "free". Undaunted, I called Richard Frick at Atari, and was fortuitously steered toward John Feagans. John was unaware of the block-right header bug. He suggested I contact a couple of interested newsletter editors, Jack Durr of 6 Atari Journal2 in Miami, and Joe Waters of 6 Current Notes2 , in Washington, D.C.. As I spoke to Joe and Jack, I discovered that ST Writer had even 6 more2 bugs. Among other things, both Joe and Jack needed condensed print in double column format for their newsletters. I contacted John Feagans and asked if I could examine the ST Writer source code for bugs. In retrospect, this was quite presumptuous of me. I knew BASIC and 6502 assembler, but was only getting started in C, and had virtually no exposure to 68000 assembler. Surprisingly, Sig Hartmann said "O.K", and I began one of the most time consuming but educational challenges of my life. Eight revisions later, and I'm still not sure ST Writer rev. 1.50 is complete, but 6 I love it2 and am using it to write this article.I DON'T DO WINDOWSOne reason I like ST Writer is that I don't have to take my hands off the keyboard and pet the mouse. I don't miss the GEM environment because all the AtariWriter commands are already deeply ingrained in my cerebrum. Besides, things like multiple windows confuse my simple mind, and I get lost trying to figure which window I should be in, or how I got to the one where I am. To cut and paste between documents with ST Writer, I simply find the block, mark its beginning and end, and delete the block, thereby storing it in the copy buffer. I then load the destination file, place the cursor in the right spot, and press [Undo] to paste the block. Alternatively, I could save the block to disk and merge it to the file wherever I want it. GEM drop-down menus are always getting in the way of the text anyway. Who needs them? (I know many of you disagree, so later I'll let you in on some of the plans for ST Writer 2.0.)Atari was not enthralled with the idea that their premier ST word processor could not even use GEM, so the mouse-driven 1st Word was acquired. I don't want to sound like a bigot, but 6 I can't stand 1st Word2 . The first version lacked multiple spacing, and the current version does not permit variable pitch print. I read about using fixed spaces, variable spaces, reformatting paragraphs, 6 typing2 and 6 editing2 modes (WHAT? You mean they're not the same thing?), and had a devil of a time trying to figure out why the print option on the drop-down wouldn't appear enabled when I wanted to print something. I had to learn about yet another mode 6 WP mode2 . Maybe I'm being too critical, but I'm also lazy. If I could print with ST Writer in just 5 minutes, why shouldn't all word processors be so simple?A BETTER MOUSETRAPMy frustration with 1st Word and GEM made me want to cage my mouse and improve ST Writer . I poured over the source code and first fixed the block-right header problem. Simple--the code pointed to the wrong array, so I substituted the right one. I fixed the expanded-print centering. Then the double-column bugs came in swarms. The blanks in the page image were initialized to pitch 10 width. With condensed print the blanks were too large and caused the second column to be shoved to the right. I fixed that only to find I overwrote the last line on the first column with blanks (sigh). On and on it went, but along came versions 1.04, 1.05, 1.06 and finally 1.07. I won't describe all the additions and changes in detail, but here is a list of them (in no particular order). -2 0 2- Search for the printer-configuration file only once at the beginning.- Outdenting of paragraphs (used in bibliographies).- A mail merge function.- Enable large document size: 198 columns by 112 lines to accommodate wide carriages in condensed print and 14" legal sheets at 8 lines/inch.- Conditional page eject.- Type-over/Insert toggle.- Keyboard access to second half of the ST character set.- Alternate left and right blocked headers and footers.- Enable an unformatted comment insertion in text.- A "spooler" to print to disk (or RAMDISK) with printer controls embedded in text. Such files can be printed directly from the GEM Desktop.- Send printer reset code each time a document is to be printed.- Enable condensed elite text.- Independent formatting of headers and footers.- Fix print preview to prevent wrap.- Insertion of controls to prevent use of odd numbers for vertical margins and spacing.- Error message if you try to print or spool to a write-protected or unformatted disk.- A new 432 byte printer config. file (accommodating up to 8 control codes per function as needed for the new laser printers) and file creation program.- Elimination of the possibility for proportional print (too slow).- Elimination of a word-wrap bug on boldfaced or italicized words. 5 1 4I SHALL [Return]One of the drawbacks of ST Writer is that it does not save standard ASCII files which can be printed to the screen from the Desktop. This came about to maintain compatibility with the original AtariWriter. AtariWriter was originally designed so that [Control M] indicated one of the margins for double-column printing. The [Control M] key combination generates an ASCII 13, which is nothing special on the old 8-bit Atari's, but is the standard code for carriage returns on the ST and most other microcomputers. (The oddball 8-bit Atari's used ASCII 155 for carriage return.) A compatible ST Writer couldn't use ASCII 13 for its carriage return, so ASCII zero (null) was used in its place. Saved ST Writer files thus contain zeros instead of ASCII 13 carriage returns and that is why you get a runaway screen when printing ST Writer files from the GEM Desktop. Recognizing this, the print-to-disk option was added to ST Writer so that such things as README.DOC ASCII files could be created to be read from the GEM desktop.What about the "DO RUN RUN" at the beginning of the saved files? Apparently the author saw something similar on a Macintosh, and thought it would be cute. The words hold no significance. It only flags the Index menu function so it recognizes and labels files that are in ST Writer format. Also, while you can merge an ST Writer saved file into a file currently in memory, merging a non-ST Writer file will mess up your existing document. Instead, load the non-ST Writer file first, save it--thus converting it to ST file format--then merge it. Unlike many word processors, ST Writer has a utility to read and convert practically any type of file. As you may have experienced, it is very S-L-O-W. However, with TOS in ROM and one megabyte of memory, ST Writer can convert and edit larger files than either MINCE or MICRO EMACS can handle. One more tip, while we're on the subject: To convert 1ST Word files to ST Writer, save the 1ST Word documnet in non-WP Mode before loading it into ST Writer. (Later, I'll show you how to get rid of all those extra carriage returns.)PRINTER CONFIGURATIONST Writer comes with a special printer configuration program called CONFIG.TOS. When run, CONFIG.TOS looks on disk for a file named CONFIG.TXT,wand reads it into memory. CONFIG.TXT is nothing more than a saved ST Writer file containing all necessary printer codes for the user's individual printer. After reading CONFIG.TXT, CONFIG.TOS converts the text into special code and saves it back to disk, creating a file named XYZZX.DAT. Upon loading ST Writer from disk, ST Writer searches 6 on the disk it was booted from 2 for XYZZX.DAT and uses its codes to properly interface with the printer. Once you create an XYZZX.DAT file for your particular printer, you never need to go through it again. Be sure to make a backup copy--and remember where you put it. The only two files you need on any disk to operate ST Writer, are the STWRITER.PRG program itself and XYZZX.DAT.Some versions of ST Writer will also have a file called XYZZX.TXT. This is nothing more than a backup duplicate of CONFIG.TXT. Since we did not have space on the START disk to include this, be sure to create your own backup before altering CONFIG.TXT.Before I describe how to edit CONFIG.TXT for your printer, I must tell you ST Writer veterans that, yes, this is a whole new printer configuration system, and, no, your earlier XYZZX.DAT file (prior to ver. 1.07) will not work with ver. 1.50. Sorry.OK, pull up your printer manual, load 6 a backup copy 2 of CONFIG.TXT into ST Writer and examine it. What you are looking at is very similar to program source code. Any line of text beginning with an asterisk (*) is a comment for your information only and is ignored by the CONFIG.TOS program. The CONFIG.TXT file on the START disk contains the proper codes for a Star Micronics NX-10 printer, which is, in most instances, compatible with Epson-compatible printers. If your printer falls into this category, leave everything as is and run CONFIG.TOS to create your XYZZX.DAT file.For the moment, let's skip over the first section of the file and edit a fairly simple example. Look for the comment 3 * underline on2 (you can use the ST Writer search command [F6]. Following 3 * underline on2 are a list of numbers: 27, 45, 1, 255, 255, 255, etc. Each of these numbers is a printer code 6 in decimal2 representing the command to turn on the underline. The 255's are fillers where there is not printer code number.Look in your printer manual for the proper codes to turn on the underline. If your printer codes are listed in decimal--sometimes shown as CHR$(27), CHR$(45), CHR$(1)--you're lucky. Printer codes are also often listed in hexadecimal or ASCII form. Hex is indicated by either a preceding dollar sign or by the presence of the letters A through F. The 3 underline on2 codes above would appear in hexadecimal as: $1B, $2D, $01. In ASCII notation 3 underline on2 would be: Esc, -, SOH. Whichever the case, if your printer codes are in hexadecimal, you may enter them by preceding them with the letters 0x (that's zero and lower case 'x') in place of the dollar sign. Thus, enter: 0x1B, 0x2D, 0x01. Alternatively, enter the decimal values. Up to 8 codes can be entered as either decimal or hexadecimal numbers, between 0 and 255.Go down the line of CONFIG.TXT codes and replace any codes that disagree with those codes in your printer manual. If your printer requires, say, four codes for a function that previously contained three, replace one of the 255's with the fourth code. Likewise, if your printer is one code short, replace the old, extra code number with a 255. It is very important that each function segment in CONFIG.TXT contains 3 eight2 codes, so edit carefully. If you are uncertain about a particular function, leave it alone. Change as little as possible. You can always re-edit and try again.Go back and look at the top of CONFIG.TXT. A short chart at the top shows the necessary code numbers to use for certain parameters. It is set up for 80-column printers, but if you have at least 132 columns, substitute 8712 for 5280. This number is critical if you want more than 160 columns (condensed elite on an 80-column printer). You 3 can2 get 198 columns (condensed on a 132 column printer) if you use the larger number (8712), but don't try printing more columns than your printer can handleThe character translation table may appear confusing, but it merely lists the ASCII representation of all the characters in the character set, from 0 to 255. The numbers are in hexadecimal, so if you are not sure what they represent, see a table or the character set in your printer manual. Beyond the standard range of alphanumeric ASCII characters is an extra character set. The ST sees these extra characters as one thing (see again the chart in your ST BASIC 6 Sourcebook2 ), but your individual printer sees them as another (depending on the printer). Many printers have their own special character set. The character translation table in CONFIG.TXT is designed to make the two jibe as much as possible.Currently, the table is set up for Atari printers. If you don't have an Atari printer, you won't have all the special characters, so you can configure your printer driver to print the characters you 6 do2 have even if they have a different ASCII number. For example, my Star Micronics NX-10 printer has the paragraph symbol located at 0x14 (decimal 20), but on the ST, that symbol has the value 0xbc (decimal 188). I found 0xbc in the table and replaced it with 0x14. Now, every time I use the paragraph symbol in text to be printed, it will print as though I were using an Atari printer. Don't bother changing values in the table below 0x20, as ST Writer uses those for formatting codes, and they will never be sent to your printer.ST Writer tip: If your printer doesn't support underlining or bold printing, but 6 does2 support back spacing, you can still get these features. Although undocumented, if you use 95 as the first number for 3 underline on2 , followed by the backspace code (usually a decimal 8), the printer will print the underscore, backspace one space, then print a character over the underscore. For bold print, below the section labeled 3 bold on2 , place the back space code. This will print a character twice in the same place.Up until this article, I had never noticed a certain bug that was brought to my attention by the editors at START. When using [Control G][number][space] to bold or italicize single words, any word that happened to get printed immediately after a linefeed would not be bolded (or italicized). To correct this, use a hyphen in place of the space after the [Control G][number] combination.Once you have completed editing CONFIG.TXT, save it back to disk under the same name. Return to the GEM Desktop and make sure that you have both CONFIG.TOS and the newly edited CONFIG.TXT on the same disk. Click and run CONFIG.TOS. In a short while, it will create a XYZZX.DAT file on your disk. Place this file on the same disk as STWRITER.PRG and you're ready to go. You might create a short ST Writer file which uses all the printer commands you wish to test. This way you can quickly try out the different functions and see how successful your edit has been.DOUBLE YOUR PLEASUREOne of ST Writer 's greatest assets is its ability to format double column text. Set [Control L] and [Control R] for the left and right margin values for the first (lefthand) column, then use [Control M] and [Control N] for the second (righthand) column left and right margins respectively. The minimum value for the first left column is 1, and the maximum second right value depends on which print you are using. For an 80 column printer this would be 80 with pica (10 cpi) print. For condensed elite (20 cpi), this would be 160. Be sure that the first column's right margin doesn't extend past the second column's left margin, or there will be trouble. Also, because different pitch characters have different weight (widths), you cannot mix pitch with, say a 10 cpi word in a column of condensed print, since it will force the second column to be moved right. Using elongated (double width) print is OK, however.NOTHING UP MY SLEEVEHere are a few tricks to navigate your way through ST Writer . To change drive paths (A:, B:, etc.) before your filename, you can either specify it every time, or choose [I]ndex from the menu and change the path name to the desired drive. ST Writer will remember this and use the new path as the default drive from then on. To access files within folders, type the backslash character (\) before and after the folder name, followed by the file name.When downloading files from a bulletin board, or converting 1ST Word files, you get a carriage return at the end of every line. Here is a simple procedure to clean up those files. Usually every line of such a file has one carriage return and every paragraph break consists of two. First, replace the pattern at every paragraph break with a [Control P]. Assuming a pattern of two carriage returns at each paragraph, the procedure would be: Press [Shift][F7], at the prompt press [Return][Return][Esc]. At the second prompt, press [Control P][Esc]. Next, globally delete the remaining carriage returns. (In some files you replace them with no character, and in others, with a space. Look in your document to see if spaces are next to the carriage returns.) Press [Shift][F7]. At the first prompt enter [Return][Esc], and at the second enter [Esc]. Finally, to restore the paragraph breaks, press [Shift][F7], enter [Control P][Esc] at the first prompt, and [Return][Control P] at the second.The above procedure will work with the majority of downloaded files, but it will mess up charts and tables. If your document has a lot of charts, use a Query Replace [F7] instead of a Global Replace ([Shift][F7]). It's slower, but safer.Experiment with search-and-replace formatting. This is a powerful feature of ST Writer found in few other ST word processors. Version 1.50 of ST Writer also allows keyboard access to the special characters with ASCII values between hex 80 and hex FF. [Alt X] will let you print them to the screen.MAIL MERGEST Writer can do a limited form of mail merge. This is handy for creating individualized letters from data lists. Let's say you wanted to send a duplicate mailing to two people, but also wanted to sound more personal than form letters normally allow. You could use ST Writer to create a database as follows: Mr. John Q. Smith 212 Elm Street Seattle, WA 98101 Johnny Mrs. Elizabeth Bean 11323 Eighth Avenue South Humptulips, WA 98377 LizSince the ST Writer merge system uses carriage returns to recognize each data field (such as Name, or Street) it is very important that you create a file with no extra carriage returns between records, or at the beginning of the file. Also, most importantly, the data file that will later be read by ST Writer must be 6 printed to disk2 using a special format. Set the top and bottom margins to zero, the left margin to one, and the number of lines per page to twice the number of lines in each record (eight for the above). So the above file should start with: [Control T][0] [Control B][0] [Control L][1] [Control Y][8]. Now, choose [P]rint from the menu, [D]isk from the prompt, and enter a file name.When you create your letter, use the Form Insert option ([F9] key) where each field item should appear. For example: 20December 4, 1986[Return][Return][F9][Return][F9][Return][F9][Return][Return]Dear [F9],[Return][Control P]It's time again for our annual Garden Club meeting. I certainly am looking forward to seeing you and renewing old acquaintances... 10Note that each of the lines of data will be used in order, and each line in the address file is terminated with a [Return]. If some of your addresses have four lines, you should make all the addresses with four lines. Use a [Return] without any characters in the fourth line position for three-line addresses. The fifth line with the first name or nickname is optional, but must be consistent from letter to letter.As you print your letter, you will be asked if you want to get your form insert data from a file (as opposed to typing each entry in by hand). Answer 'Y' and then when prompted, give the correct file name. If the file does not exist, you will be placed into the manual entry mode. You can terminate the printing at this point by typing [Esc] and re-check the Index to get the correct filename.You do not have to create your databases with ST Writer . You can use the mail splat from DB Master One, although you lose the flexibility of inserting nicknames in the text of your letter. This is a restriction of the database, not of ST Writer . Any database program which sorts and creates ASCII files will work with ST Writer , however.PREVIEW OF COMING ATTRACTIONSWe are currently working on a version of ST Writer which would allow the user to specify his preference for GEM or not. By clicking the left mouse button, the user may select GEM, and all GEM functions would be available. Accessories are selected directly from the menu bar, as well as all the normal Menu selections. Our objective was to make ST Writer compatible with Thunder!, the spelling checker from Batteries Included. One potential problem is in printing text to the screen with the GEM 3 v_gtext2 function. This is much slower than 3 Bconout2 as is presently used, but 3 v_gtext2 is needed to get clipping. (Clipping "clips" the screen display to within certain parameters--such as a window.) Our fear is that the 3 v_gtext2 function will slow down ST Writer to an annoyance level. One of ST Writer 's best features is its speed.Other plans and dreams include an auto-index feature or at least a block alphabetizating routine. How about placing the GEM version on cartridge along with the CONFIG.TXT file? ST Writer on disk may be free, but I would 6 pay2 for a cartridge version! I've thought about graphics merge; it would be very difficult, especially since ST Writer works in three different resolutions. I tried to program several ways of passing user-supplied printer control codes embedded in the text, but found it very difficult indeed. Besides, you could modify the printer configuration file to suit your needs regarding other fonts not supported by ST Writer by sacrificing such things as sub- and super-scripts. Adding additional columns has been suggested, but the programming would be a nightmare, as we would most likely have to rebuild ST Writer from the ground up. And what characters could we use to represent the 3rd or 4th left and right columns? The entire alphabet has been used up for control codes, and I'm not anxious to make ST Writer as complicated as WORD STAR.KEEP THOSE CARDS AND LETTERS COMINGIf you like ST Writer and would like to have some other features added, let me or John Feagans know. If there are some other thoughts on how to improve the program, I would love to hear from you. My Compuserve number is 72407,504, or you might write me in care of START. I can't promise that we can or will implement your suggestion, but I'm open to suggestions. On the other hand, you could go out and PAY for one of the newer word processor programs...Do Run Run STWRITER.PRGB!B!12 4 8 5 0 12 85 2 12 132ST Writer Secrets Part 2ST Writer Secrets Part Twoby Bruce D. Noonan, M.D.Since 12 ST Writer Secrets8 , and ST Writer version 1.50 appeared in the winter 1986 issue of 9-Start8 , I have had an overwhelming number of letters and electronic mail on Compuserve regarding ST Writer! It seems many of you, (like myself) prefer ST Writer to whatever else is out there for a first-line word processor. I have taken many of the suggestions and incorporated them into the current version, 1.73. I have tried to answer as many questions as possible personally by mail, electronic or otherwise, but the task has been somewhat overwhelming, what with my involvement in Seattle's Atari Trek '87 and all. Nevertheless, 1.73 is now here (bugs?? I think it's darn near bullet-proof by now!).NEW AND IMPROVEDSome of the bugs I have corrected included fixing up some annoyances. For example, in 1.50 you couldn't enter a [Control M] in the command line for searches or replacement. As many of you may recall, [Control M] is the normal carriage return character to the rest of the ASCII world, but ST Writer uses a null to terminate paragraphs. One person asked if he could transmit SAVEd ST Writer files by modem to UPI, since ASCII files PRINTed to disk contain carriage returns (ASCII 13) and line feeds (ASCII 10) at the end of every line.I informed him that SAVEd files always have the "DO RUN RUN STWRITER.PRG" identification string followed by the tab data and format string at the top of a file. The format string is optional, of course, and could be deleted. Fortunately, the computer which received his file would ignore all data except that following a special code, which he entered at the beginning of the file to be saved. Then, just before saving the file, he substituted [Control M] for all those carriage returns using the global replace feature [Shift F7]. Since I have heard nothing further from him, I suspect it must have worked.Before I forget to mention it, a number of you wrote to say that the START disk files LONGREF and QUICKREF were mangled. Before you can print these files to screen or paper, they must be LOADed into ST Writer, and PRINTed from the master menu. Printing via the desktop option will not work, as the files contain nulls for carriage returns, and are not ASCII files.FASTER THAN A SPEEDING BULLETSome people wrote to complain about the rapidity with which the screen scrolled past in print preview. I agreed. I fixed it so that if [Control W] (page wait) is present, the scrolling will not occur until a key is pressed. The [Control S] function was inconvenient and almost impossible to implement when trying to stop scrolling, so almost any key except [Esc] will stop and start scrolling. I prefer to use the space bar.I was cautioned not to eliminate the rapid scrolling, though, as some writers wanted to be able to scan quickly. The page wait function was just the ticket. Print preview still worked ok, except when only part of the document was wanted. For some silly reason, after showing the final page selected, it continued to format (but not print to screen) the remaining pages in the file. I put the kybosh on that! But on further examination, I found that when page numbers were double-wide, they did not appear double spaced on print preview. (This is the way to simulate double-wide on the screen). I re-wrote that portion of the code. Next, I tried to fix it so that double and triple digit page numbers in headers and footers would be flush with the right margin when justification was ON. There just isn't any way to do it. The headers and footers are formatted the first time they are encountered in the file, then saved in strings for printing on succeeding pages. When the [@] sign is replaced with a single digit page number, centering and right justification works just fine. But when the single [@] is replaced with a double or triple digit number, everything shifts right one or two columns respectively.The immediate fix was suggested by one writer, John Woodley of Montgomery, AL, and for those with rigid standards of right margin widths, such as in masters and doctoral theses, is as follows: (1) Print out pages 1 to 9 separately. (2) Find the page break, and just before text for page ten, re-write the header, but set the right margin one column less. This will NOT affect the body of the text, only the header. Thus, for a paper with right margin of 70, make the justified right header containing the [@] 69 instead of 70 as: [Control H][Control C][Control C][Control R][6][9]Page @[Return] (3) For pages 100 to 999, decrease the [Control R] in the header line by two less than the right margin for the body of the text.(This can also be done for centering page numbers.)Header and footer formatting was also improved. For example, if a header was wider than the selected margins, some of it would unpredictably overflow into a footer. I changed the routine to ignore any text extending past the right margin in a header or footer, but to observe any control functions which may have been placed there, such as a command to turn off an underline. This results in less calculation and allows more flexibility when creating headers which extend the width of a page even though the page width is later altered.QUALITY IS JOB ONETom Hudson uses ST Writer as his first-choice word processor. He made one suggestion, however, which I have implemented in the current version. You can now select or de-select letter quality printing (provided, of course, that your printer supports it) without having to type in the [Control O] codes or pre-setting the printer configuration desk accessory.I also could not leave the disk formatting feature alone. The new TOS ROMs (coming with the Blitter chip) support skewing of sector placement in disk tracks to enhance reading speed. The code to do this is not difficult to write, but will cause a crash if attempted with the current TOS. I wrote the code into this version of ST Writer, but before doing it, the program first reads which version of TOS is being used. If it is version 1, the old formatting routine is followed, but if a later version, the new skewing is used. I just hope that the version number is changed in the new ROMs, as I haven't had the opportunity to test this.BUG ALERTOne astute individual found that when underlining more than one word while out-denting extended the underline all the way to the left margin. Yecchh. That has been rectified.I further found a bug in form insertion which caused an extra page to be printed while retrieving data from a database, such as in mail merge. I re-wrote the code to allow the correct number of documents to print. Remember that a database containing six names and addresses must be PRINTed to disk (ASCII format), and requires that copies be set to 1, unless all six addressees are to receive more than one copy of the letter each.A further annoyance was that the little letters (ie., D,A,C,I or T) at the end of the middle line of the command box did not show up on every screen. This is troublesome if, for example, you are in [Alternate X] mode (special characters) and you are trying to type a menu command. The desired command will not work, and the character is wisked away off the screen before you can read it. Now, in [Alternate X] mode, a capital [A] is always present in the command box to alert you of this fact. In fact, a further letter was added to this area, [D] to signal a new command: the "deadkey" mode.BETTER DEAD, THEN READThe deadkey allows you to get all those foreign vowels, such as umlauted ones, underlined a and o, scandinavian slash-o's, etc. In fact, just about any character in the ST character set that resembles a combination of a vowel and some other mark (^,_,',",/,~,`,-) can be produced. The deadkey function is toggled on and off with [Control Clr Home]. For an umlaut u, for example, first type a ["] mark. Nothing will appear on the screen. Next, type a [u]. An umlaut u, [] appears. This is simpler than looking up the character in a table and going through the [Alternate X] toggle. The ligatures, or diphthongs combining a and e, or o and e were excluded so as to keep to a minimum the slowing of typing speed when in this mode. While deadkey is turned on, to get regular quotation marks requires hitting the ["] key twice in succession.MERGE RIGHTOne thing that always annoyed me was that non-ST Writer files could not be merged into files already in memory without scrambling things into an unreadable mess. I had always supposed that it just was never meant to be, so I always loaded the non-ST Writer file, converted it to ST Writer format, saved it, THEN merged it. I had forgotten that the problem existed.Well, finally it dawned on me to re-examine the code, and I found the bug. It seems that for non-ST Writer files, the code called for all merged files to insert at the beginning of the buffer instead of the current cursor location! I wish ALL bugs were so easy to correct!ST WRITER 2.0Many of you are asking, "What about the GEM version of ST Writer." I got tired of waiting for Atari to do it. We even had a letter writing campaign and a template of a letter up on Compuserve. It must have fallen on deaf ears, as Atari disavowed any knowledge of attempts to create the GEM version.So I did it. No, it's not yet complete, and no, it won't be Thunder! compatible, but it will allow use of dialog boxes for such things as selecting printer options, file selection, and global formatting. Further, all menu functions can be selected with the mouse, and warning messages arrive in alert boxes.The reason for lack of Thunder! compatibility is the need to go through event_multi(), a 'C' function which handles input from the keyboard, mouse, timer, and message pipe. The function is also the reason such programs as First Word are so slow. I had many pleas to produce a GEM version, while maintaining ST Writer's special attribute, speed. This couldn't be maintained while using event_multi().For those of you who do not want GEM, the program looks and runs as usual. But if you wish the GEM features, clicking the left mouse button allows you to work in GEM. This is the only program I am aware of that allows this kind of toggle. Oh yes, the GEM version also can work in all three resolutions, making ST Writer the only word processor for the ST that can make that claim.The two features still waiting to be implemented are cursor positioning with the mouse, and deselection of the GEM portion if the program is booted from an AUTO folder. John Feagans of Atari has promised to do this. So gently prod HIM, OK?Do Run Run STWRITER.PRGB!B!14 4 0 4 0 6 78 2 12 132S T W R I T E R T R I C K SFine Tuning Two-Column OutputBy Joe Waters- @ -0 10 75As most 4-ST Writer0- users are aware, output may be formatted for two columns. Using a single font, double columns work reasonably well. However, if you attempt to mix fonts (switching from compressed to pica and back, for example), your final output usually doesn't look anything like what you intended. In this little tutorial, then, I will try and explain how 4-ST Writer0- formats columns and how you can work around its shortcomings to produce the output you want.41-Margin Math0-Margins in 4-ST Writer0- are set using a control character and a paramater that represents the character count. Let me use an example to explain. If you are using an elite font (^G8), characters are printed at 12 characters per inch (cpi). For a standard 8.5 x 11 inch page, a maximum of 102 characters (8.5 x 12) can fit across the page. A one-inch margin on the left and right side of the page would require a margin of 12 characters (one inch) on the sides with 78 characters (6.5 inches worth) left in the center for the text. Your left margin would be set by ^L12 (note: I am using the symbol ^ to represent the [Control] key). The right margin would be ^R90. (Where did the 90 come from? Subtract 12 from 102 or add 78 to 12.)With the above settings, all of your text would appear in the center 6.5 inches of the page. If you wanted to switch to a different font size, say pica at 10 cpi, you would have to reset your margins since the margins are measured in characters not in inches. With a pica font, only 85 characters would fit on that page (8.5 x 10) and, with one-inch margins on the left and right, the margin settings would be ^L10 and ^R75. A maximum of 65 characters would then fit on a line. For compressed mode, (assume 17 cpi), you would have to set your margins at ^L17 and ^R128 and you could print 111 characters are on a line. If you carefully change your left and right margin when you change your font size, the margins of your document will stay lined up even though your font is changing.In single column mode, by switching your margins you can, indeed, switch fonts and still maintain even margins. (You still can't, however, switch fonts right in the middle of a sentence.) How about double column mode.?41-Margins With Two Columns0-To indicate two columns, you specify the left and right margins of both the left and right column. The margins for the left column are set with ^L and ^R while the margins for the right column are set with ^M and ^N. Assume you want to print two 3-inch columns with a half-inch gap inbetween. Using a pica font, you could get 30 characters in a column and your margins would be ^L10 ^R40 ^M45 ^N75. In elite you could fit 36 characters in a column. The margins would be specified by ^L12 ^R48 ^M54 ^N90.Now we get to the heart of the problem. Suppose we have two columns set up in elite (^G8). We want to use a section title in pica (^G0) to make it stand out more. However, when we do this, we find the characters in the right-hand column are shifted over too far thus messing up the two-column output. What happened?41-The Problem0-Remember that 4-ST Writer0- does all of its counting in characters. When you specify the limits for a page, 4-ST Writer0- uses that information to completely format a page in memory. In two-column mode, it writes the first column to memory and then adds the second column. When both columns are on the page in memory, each line is then sent to the printer. When writing to its "memory" page for our two-column elite example, 4-ST Writer0- will see that 12 blank characters are followed by 36 characters for column one, 6 characters for the gap, and 36 characters for column two. If we stick in a 10-character subtitle switching to pica at the beginning (^G0) and back to elite at the end (^G8) of our subtitle, 4-ST Writer0- counts that as 10 characters. It ignores all control characters and their parameters since it knows these are printer controls and not characters in the text. 4-ST Writer0- then adds another 26 blanks to fill up the rest of column one on that line.When it comes time to send that line to the printer, 4-ST Writer0- passes the ^G0 on to the printer, sends the 10-character expression, passes the ^G8 on to the printer, sends 26 blanks, the 6-character gap, and the text in column two. What happend at the printer? It received the ^G0 code and switched to 10 cpi, it printed 10 characters (at 10 cpi), received the ^G8 code to switch back to 12 cpi, and then printed 26 blanks (at 12 cpi). The 10 characters took up one inch. The remaining 26 blanks took up 2 and 1/6 inches. Whoops, column one went 1/6 of an inch too far. Column two, therefore, is shifted to the right by 1/6 of an inch or 2 characters in elite mode. We told 4-ST Writer0- we wanted 36 characters in a column and then we cheated by sticking in a code to the printer telling it to print the characters further apart. The result: character spacing gets messed up.41-The Solution0-How do we fix this? If we switch to pica and send 5 characters to the printer, we want 4-ST Writer0- to actually count 6 characters. (The amount of physical line space used up in 5 characters of pica is the same as in 6 characters of elite.) If we could only type a character that 4-ST Writer0- counts but the printer igonres, we would be in business. But we can! All we have to do is use the 4-ST Writer0- printer configuration file to define one of the keys on the keyboard as a null character. 4-ST Writer0- will still count it, but the printer will ignore it. I had to pick a character I don't normally use. I chose the accent mark located to the right of the equal sign on the keyboard. Checking an ASCII conversion table, I found that the accent mark was listed as hex 60, decimal 96. In the 4-ST Writer0- CONFIG.TXT file, I changed the '60' in the character table to an '00'. Therefore, whenever 4-ST Writer0- encountered an accent mark (hex 60), it would convert it to a null character (hex 00) before sending it on to the printer.After making that change, saving CONFIG.TXT, and running the CONFIG.TOS program, I had a new printer driver for my 4-ST Writer0-. Everytime I typed an accent mark, 4-ST Writer0- would count that as a character, but the printer would receive it as a null character and ignore it. Now, it was a simple matter to use pica subtitles in the midst of elite two-column text. For every five characters in my subtitle, I would send an accent mark. (If my subtitle didn't have an even multiple of 5, I would add enough blanks to make it come out even.) For example, the subtitle "INTRODUCTION" would be written like this: ^G0-INTRODUCTION '''^G8-[Return]The subtitle "INTRODUCTION" has 12 characters. I add three blanks to make it 15 characters (3 groups of 5) and then send 3 accent marks. Finally, I switch back to 12 cpi. [Note, since my accent mark is still being interpretted as a null character, I used three apostrophes in the example above.] 4-ST Writer0- thinks it sent a total of 18 characters. At 12 cpi, that's 1.5 inches. The printer received 18 characters, but ignored the last three. The fifteen characters it printed, at 10 cpi, took up 1.5 inches. Both 4-ST Writer0- and the printer are now in accord. The second column will line up exactly.What I use in CURRENT NOTES is based on this principle. Normal text is printed at 15 cpi. Subtitles are printed at 10 cpi. Everytime I send 10 characters in a subtitle, I have to trick 4-ST Writer0- into thinking I sent 15. That is a ratio of 2 to 3, i.e. for every two characters in the subtitle, I add a null character. If my subtitle is 12 characters, I add 6 nulls; if 20 characters, I add 10 nulls.There is one other change in my subtitles: they are printed in a different font. I can download fonts to my QMS Kiss laser printer. To change fonts, I send the printer code: [NNNNs where "NNNN" is a particular font number. How do I get 4-ST Writer0- to send this code? Once again, I make use of the printer configuration file. I use almost everything in there: pica, elite, compressed, underline, bold, italics. However, I almost never need to use superscript or subscript. Therefore, I embedded the necessary printer control codes to switch to a larger font in the "superscript on" section. The code to switch back to standard prestige elite font was put in the "superscript off" section. Therefore, my subtitles follow the following format: start with ^G0 (to switch to 10 cpi), superscript on (to switch to the appropriate font), the text of the subtitle followed by half as many null characters, superscript off (to switch back to prestige elite), and finally, ^G2 (to switch back to compressed which I have defined to be 15 cpi). And there you have it, two columns with mixed fonts.Actually, I only just tried sending ^G0 and ^G2 to do the switching and they worked like a charm since both were defined to produce 10 and 15 cpi respectively. Previously, I had sent the actual printer control codes to tell a QUME to switch character spacing. The sequence "E12" switches to 10 cpi while "E08" switches back to 15 cpi. These sequences are, of course, printer dependent. How did I send the code? Using ^O in 4-ST Writer0- doesn't work. All the ^O's wind up being sent at the beginning of a page and cannot, therefore, be used to change things in the body of the text. Have you figured it out yet? That's right. Just use the character translation table in the CONFIG.TXT file to redefine one of the characters to be decimal 27, the escape code. I used the pound sign for this. Whenever I typed a pound sign, the printer received the escape code. Using this trick, I can now send an escape sequence to the printer anywhere in the document. There is one drawback, however. If I send, for example, a four-character sequence started by the "pound" sign, 4-ST Writer0- thinks all of those characters count when, in fact, the printer is interpreting them as printer control codes. But that's another story.....[Reprinted from the July/August, 1987 issue of CURRENT NOTES.] . =.. =BARREL TOSABARREL DOCD`BN N*O*m - @Э"@м.@ -So Q m -SoBQ(m)M*mN l <Ш ШШ"҈gR)AЬ"҈¼)A//Bg?<JNAO Jg?2QA C8A NuM,"z9`-@=@<0afa(@~=| |@4<B0ѮafQA|0.@<0=F:p6|SFBEBDa4@`0 MlN<.8 aJfJEfWv|m JEgBEaVfP`affDRCQRK`JEg 0 a.f(0.a> .a6afa AѐB@Nu20H@a@K0HHC`2HHa(0Ha 0aNuB4@MH4@MѮNu|?| |+n @A`&|:m|@n @5`|[m@a*fRn n@lBNuBnp a p aNuepNuRBNuccPAz NuA: NuA NuA NuNVHl?< N \N^NuNV/.?< N \?<?<N X`N^NuNVHl ?< N \|PHl?< N \=@ABA `N^NuNVH&nHl4NX> Gyg GYg`'k 'kLN^NuNVH0&n +gHlLN8X`NV$@H|f`Hn?<N (\Bg/ ?<NN P gHldNX`A, F, oHlxNX`x oBg/ ?<=N P=@ @lHlNX`F/+/?.?<?N gHlNpX`'k +І'@HlNRXL N^NuNVH0&n$k,+" nHlNX` +o4Hl?< N \HlNX> Gyg GYg`~,+N-@ nH|f`^Bg/.?< G0m G9n??<?<N0\|0 Gf BgN2T0H2HЁ-@/ Gam Gzn|??<?<Nd\Hl(?< Nr\ GCf=| GIfBn GDf }"m=|BnBn GSf=|=|Bn GHfBn GBf =|Bn GFfBn GEf / N6X GRf0.g / N^X GWf / N^X GQg`|67n7n7n0.gBgNT` NJ",ѮBg/.?<1NhPLN^NuNuNV?.NT nn0<`?.?<>N4X9@g0<`0<N^NuNV?.?<LNXN^NuNV/ A&H`0+ |g/ N*X A"Ҽm?.NT&_N^NuNV/ &n/ NDXJ@g0<`00+ |g /+NXBk ?+ N,TJ@g0<`0<&_N^NuNVH&n0+ |f0<`.0+ |gV0+ |f0<`v0+ |g?<B?+ NhP?/+?+ NP @f0<`@k 0Hѫ`$ k o?<0+D@H/?+ NP'@&Bk0<LN^NuNV nl <`?.?./. ?<BN -@ m .`?<?.B?<BN` -@?<?.B?<BNF -@ nf .Ю -@ `$ nf .Ю -@ `0.g <`b . oHn . /?.?<@N Bg?./. ?<BN ]|9@g <` `Bl . N^NuNV/.?<IN\N^NuNVBn`&0.Ad0nf0.AdBPRn nLmN^NuNV?>.=|0Ad"HPgXHf0(>N^Nu)I`)J\)_XNM"l`$l\/,XNu)I`)J\)_XNA"l`$l\/,XNuNV`4 nH| f?< ?<NX nRH??<NX0. Sn J@fN^NuNV` nRH??<NX0. Sn J@fN^NuNV` nRH??<NRX0. Sn J@fN^NuNVH0&n $KA>-H nf?./ N4\=n`L nf?./ N`\=n`. nf?./ Np\=n`-KBn?.NvTJ@f`H| f |o@ H-@/./.?.?<@N| 9@Hg0<`0,n/./<?.?<@NF 9@ @g0<`tRnR -@`R ned` 6.ƼЃ$@ H-@/./.?.?<@N 9@Hg0<`0,nBl0.L N^Nu)|C"2"2 2"2"2"22"2"2"22"2x9|NuE BARREL by Moshe Braner Enter filename: Are you sure (y/n)? Empty barrel first! File not found! File too big for barrel! Error opening file! Error reading file! [file read, no errors.] Nothing to write! Not all the stuff still there! Save barrel as-is (y/n)? Error creating file! Error writing file! [file written, no errors.] Installing BARREL - choose size in units of 12K (1-9, 0 to cancel): Not enough memory for such a barrel! Barrel installed. (Reboot to remove.) Hit any key [capturing printouts in barrel] [SCODE screendumps to barrel] [DEGAS screendumps to barrel] [stuff in barrel] [printing in background] Immediate hardcopy printouts Capture printouts in barrel Foreground printing only Background printing Hardcopy screen dumps DEGAS format screen dumps SCODE format screen dumps Empty barrel Write barrel to a file Read a file into barrel Quit (accept current settings) Choose by first letter: CON:AUX:PRT:  BARREL: The Versatile RAM Buffer and Printer Spooler. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ by Moshe Braner Consider the following situations: You want to print long files without holding your computer up in the meanwhile... You would like to save the screen as a disk file when you press Alt-Help, instead of printing a hardcopy... You're trying to do some fancy printout, but your word processor doesn't print what you think you told it to. You would like to be able to see exactly what control characters were sent to the printer... You want to print on a remote printer, send a document e-mail, or input it to another program, but your word processor (or whatever) will only save documents in its own wierd format, not as a formatted ASCII file... You have a printer-driver to print graphics from program X on printer A. But you would like to use printer B. You have the documentation for both printers. You could easily write a "post-processor" program that will replace one set of control chars with another. But first you need a method of capturing the output for printer A in a file... It is all possible with the program "BARREL". When you run BARREL for the first time in a session (from the desktop or from the auto folder) it installs a RAM buffer plus some resident code. You enter the desired size of the buffer in units of 12K: a number between 1 and 9. (You need to press '3' (i.e. a 36K buffer) or more if you want to capture DEGAS format screen dumps.) Then, and every time you run the (same) program later in the session, you get to choose items from a menu: Capture printouts in barrel Immediate hardcopy printouts Empty barrel - make room for new stuff Write barrel to a disk file - file the RAM buffer Read a file into barrel - for background printing Hardcopy screen dumps SCODE format screen dumps DEGAS format screen dumps Background printing - after Capture or Reading Foreground printing only - but can resume later Quit - but leave settings intact BARREL intercepts all BIOS calls, and when they concern the printer it redirects them to a RAM buffer. BARREL achieves background printing by installing a routine in the 200 Hz system timer interrupt (that's plenty fast enough for text but rather slow when printing graphics). You can also ask BARREL to read a file into the RAM buffer. That is a faster way of setting a file up for background printing. The barrel is automatically emptied whenever background printing catches up with the saved stuff. It is NOT emptied upon writing to a file, so if you want to do both you should write the file first. BARREL also redirects the screen dump vector, enabling capture of the screen dump in RAM, in either SCODE or DEGAS format. A "screen dump" is caused by either pressing Alt-Help, or by a program (e.g. N-Vision) calling the XBIOS screen- dump function. If the screen dump is successful (i.e. there was enough space available in the barrel) the screen will 'blink' as a confirmation. The captured data may then be saved to disk by re-running BARREL and pressing 'W'. SCODE is a format that is both compressed and coded as text, so it is ideal for sending pictures via electronic mail (no uuencoding necessary). You must use the SDECODE program to view the picture, print it, or save it in a standard bit-map form. Note that when using DEGAS format dumps in BARREL, repeated Alt-Helps overwrite each other, only the last saved screen is still there. When using SCODE format dumps, they accumulate in the barrel as long as there is enough space. Individual dumps are separated by a blank line. After you write the barrel to disk you must use a text editor to separate the dumps (and remove any other text preceding coded dumps). Also note that the format of the saved graphics is NOT printable, while the normal screen dump does not go through any BIOS calls. Therefore, you cannot print an Alt-Help screen dump in the background without some extra software. You CAN spool the output of a program that prints graphics from a file (e.g. a GEM metafile) as long as the program calls the BIOS Bconout() function to print each byte. Asking for "immediate hardcopy printouts" just turns off interception of printer output. If you want to actually remove BARREL and reclaim the memory it holds, you have to reboot. What is a Word Processor? Whether you're a student facing a term paper, a business professional with frequent reports to write, or an aspiring novelist, ST Writer can help you beat those deadlines -- with time to spare. No more tedious typing and retyping of drafts; ST Writer lets you edit and reorganize your copy until it's just right. What exactly can ST Writer do for you? One advantage is that you never have to press the [Return] key to end a line of text while typing -- the program does it for you automatically. Also, you can change all or any incidences of a given word in your text to another word -- for instance, you can instantly change the word "pleased" to "glad" anywhere it appears in your text with just a few keystrokes. ST Writer lets you center text or print it flush against the right margin, and you can print with left and right justification. You can mark a block of text and then delete, copy it, or move it to anywhere else in the text (or to another file!). Made a mistake? Just press the [Undo] key and start fresh! There's lots more, and you'll find out about it by reading this manual. Quickly and step by step, this guide shows you everything you need to know to use ST Writer. The first section tells you how to load ST Writer into your ATARI ST computer, and presents an overview of the program. The second section gives you a brief text to enter, edit, and print, along with how-to instructions for each step; after printing your first ST Writer document, you'll also learn how to store and retrieve what you write using a disk drive. By working with a longer passage in the third section, you'll learn about the advanced editing, formatting, and printing features of ST Writer. Finally, you'll find a complete, alphabetical Reference Guide to all the features of ST Writer in the back of the guide. Getting Started Here's how to load your ST Writer word processing program into your Atari ST computer. 1. With your computer turned off, turn on your monitor and disk drive(s). Insert your ST Writer disk. If you do not have TOS in ROM, you will have to insert your TOS System Disk instead. Turn on your computer. 2. When the GEM desktop appears, remove your TOS System Disk (if you have used it) and place your ST Writer disk in the drive, or if you have two drives, place the ST Writer disk in the second drive. Open a window for the disk drive by double-clicking on the icon for that drive. 3. Run ST Writer by clicking twice on the icon (or text filename) labelled STWRITER.PRG. Note: You can run ST Writer in any of the ST's three resolutions: low, medium, and high. Low resolution gives you 22 lines and 40 columns; with medium resolution, 22 lines and 80 columns, and with high resolution you get 25 lines and 80 columns. Also, using high resolution gives you the option of 37 screen lines. Simply use the GEM desktop to set the resolution you desire before running ST Writer. You may also wish to change the default screen colors and key repeat rate from the desktop before running ST Writer, although you can change these once ST Writer is running if you are in GEM mode (GEM mode will be explained later). What's on the menu? Take a minute now to look over the selections available and see what you can use each one for. While working with ST Writer, you can return to this menu at any time by pressing the [Esc] key in the upper left corner of your computer keyboard. CREATE File - Start writing a new text file. DELETE File - Erase a file that you've stored on diskette. EDIT File - Revise a file that you've just printed or loaded from diskette. FORMAT Disk - Format a data diskette for storing text files you write with ST Writer. INDEX of Files - Call up a listing of the text files on a diskette. HIRES Flip-flop (high res only) - switch high res display between 22 lines and 37 lines. LOAD File - Load a file from diskette into your computer. PRINT File - Print a text file on the printer, the screen, or to a disk file. SAVE File - Save a file on diskette. RECEIVE AtariWriterTM - Receive file transmitted from 8-bit Atari Computer using Atari 850 Interface Module and null modem cable, or load in an intact AtariWriter file obtained by other means (eg., from a bulletin board). TRANSFORM Colors - reverse screen colors -- black to white and vice-versa. QUIT - Stop using ST Writer and exit to the desktop. Talking to ST Writer...and making it run. With the ST Writer menu on the screen, type C for Create File. Take a few minutes to become familiar with the edit screen that now appears. The small flashing rectangle (or square) near the upper left corner of the screen is the cursor. It shows you where you are on the screen while you're working with ST Writer -- whether you're writing, editing, or responding to the prompts and questions that appear in the Message Window at the bottom of your screen. Many of the questions that ST Writer asks you require a yes or no response. You can answer by typing Y or N. If ST Writer finds a mistake in an entry or command, or detects a problem in your computer system, it displays an error message in the Message Window. In most cases when you see an error message, you must press a key before continuing. In this guide you'll find several instructions such as "press [control P]" or "press [Shift Tab]." To execute these keystroke combinations, hold down the first key while typing the second. You may already be familiar with this technique; if not, you'll soon get the hang of it. Clean copy in minutes When they first learn to use a word processing system, many people want to tell their friends about it. So here's a letter for you to type, edit, and print that won't just teach you about ST Writer -- you can also use the finished copy to show a friend what a fine word processor you are using. But first, a couple of features of ST Writer that you'll need to understand to type your letter. With ST Writer you don't use the Return key on your computer keyboard the way you do on a conventional typewriter. When you're typing a word that will overflow the right margin of the screen, ST Writer automatically moves the cursor -- and the word -- to the beginning of the next line. Press [Return] (or [Enter]) at the end of each paragraph, or to insert blank lines in what you're writing. ST Writer inserts an inverse video "less-than" sign (<) (colored red in low and medium res) at that point to show the [Return] and moves the cursor to the left margin of the next screen line. To mark the beginning of a paragraph, press [Control P]. ST Writer displays an inverse video (red in low and medium res) letter P at that point on the screen. Now you're ready to go. Select Create File from the ST Writer menu, if you haven't already. The display switches to the editing screen. For now, ignore the Print Formatting Block at the top of the screen. Just enter today's date on the first line, fill in the name of the person you want to write to after the word "Dear," and type away. And don't worry about typos -- you'll be able to fix them in a jiffy when you edit with ST Writer. Today's date [Return] [Return] [Return] Dear .........[Return] [Return] [Control P] As you can see, I'm not writing this letter on my old typewriter. Instead, I'm breaking in my new ST Writer word processing program, composing and editing on my monitor screen. When I've finished writing, I can print a copy -- or dozens of copies -- just by pressing a few keys on my computer console. [Return] [Control P] And no more typos -- or at least, no more retyping to get rid of them. I can easily delete or change letters, words, sentences, or paragraphs. Or say I use a word or phrase several times in a piece of writing, and decide later that I want to change it. I can have the computer automatically search out every use of it and substitute something different. [Return] [Control P] ST Writer will print the things I write just about any way I want. I can vary the margins, in- dent paragraphs or blocks of text, and change line spacing just as with a typewriter, but more easily. I can also print pages with justified right margins. [Return] Now add a paragraph of your own if you like, preceded by [Control P] and followed by [Return]; then add a closing and press [Return] again. Quick editing with ST Writer Now that you've created your first text file, you can go back and fix any mistakes you made. And if you want to rephrase anything to make it more your style -- by all means! No need to return to the ST Writer menu and select Edit File; you can edit a text file while still in the Create File mode (select Edit File to revise a text file that you've retrieved from diskette, as explained in "To load a text file"). While editing, you'll probably want to move the cursor quickly around the screen from one problem area to the next. Refer to your Quick Reference Guide (see file QUIKREF.TXT) for the Cursor movement controls you can use to do this. To start editing at the top of your letter, for example, press [Shift F1] to move to the top of your file. F1 is the first key in the row of ten function keys at the top of your keyboard. Now you can use [down arrow] to scan quickly through what you've typed, and [left arrow] and [right arrow] to move the cursor to anything you want to change or correct. When you reach the last line of text on the screen, just keep moving the cursor down -- the text will scroll up to show more of what you've written. You can also page through your text file, up or down, by pressing [Shift up arrow] or [Shift down arrow]. Press [Control A], or [Control (left arrow)] to move to the beginning of a line, and [Control Z], or [Control (right arrow)] to move to the end of a line. To move instantly to the end of a file, press F1. To correct a typo or replace a word or phrase, you first must either delete the wrong characters or words, and type in the correction, or press [Insert] to enter the "type-over" mode, allowing you to type directly over the incorrect text. Be careful, though, not to type over wanted text, as once this is done, the typed-over text is not retrievable. Pressing [Insert] again returns you to the insert mode. Refer to the Delete text commands in your Quick Reference Guide. After deleting what you want, just type in your correction or change. ST Writer automatically makes room for as much new material as you want to add. To insert a whole new sentence, paragraph, or more, just position the cursor where you want to add text and type in the new material. Whenever you delete a line or block of text, the last line or block deleted is retained in the failsafe text buffer of your computer. To restore the deleted text, press [Undo] to insert the deleted text at the current cursor position. From screen to paper You're now ready to print your clean, edited letter. Make sure that your printer is properly connected to your computer and turned on. Press [Esc] to return to the ST Writer menu, and select Print File by pressing [P]. Then press [Return] four times at the four prompts with which ST Writer presents you -- they will be discussed in detail later in this manual. Next ST Writer looks for a printer configuration file on your disk (see Printer Configuration File in Reference Guide). Now ST Writer formats, then prints your letter. To halt printing at any time, press the [Esc] key (or [Control S] to pause) on your computer keyboard. You may have to experiment a bit, adjusting the paper in your printer before printing your files, to get the correct top margin on your printed pages. The top margin on your letter should be about one inch. How much can you write with ST Writer? You can enter between 180,000 up to about 3,800,000 (depending on system) characters, or bytes, in ST Writer's text editor. While editing or creating a file, the amount of remaining free memory appears constantly in the Message Window. The free edit space is shown in bytes. A byte is roughly equivalent to one typed character. You can figure on about 1500 bytes for each standard double-spaced page. It's a good idea to leave yourself an adequate margin of free memory in every file you write, just in case you want to add to a file later on. When your computer is close to running out of free memory, the message "WARNING - memory low" (at 500 bytes left) or "!!!WARNING!!! Almost out of memory" (at 200 bytes left) appears in the Message Window. When this happens, it's a good idea to stop writing and save what you've written -- you'll need a margin of free memory if you decide to revise or add to the file later on. After saving the text, start a new file to continue the document you're working on. To save a text file Here's the procedure for saving a text file. Try it now with the letter you've written about ST Writer. First return to the ST Writer menu and select Save File by pressing [S]. ST Writer prompts you to enter the Save filename. Insert a formatted diskette (if your disk isn't formatted, you can have ST Writer format it for you -- see Format Disk in the Reference Guide). Then type a filename or Path name for your text file. Filenames may be up to eight characters in length, optionally followed by a period and an extender of up to three characters (e.g. STWRITER or STWRITER.TXT). A path name indicates the name of a folder that is to contain the file, as well as the file name, separated by a slash (e.g. LETTERS\STWRITER). See Path name in the Reference Guide for further information. All alphanumeric characters (A-Z, a-z, and 0-9), except a space, and punctuation can be used in ST Writer filenames. If you enter lower case letters, they will be converted to upper case. After entering the filename, press [RETURN]. If while saving a file ST Writer finds that there's not enough space on your diskette to accommodate the file, the program gives you the message Disk is full. Press any letter to return to the main menu and try another disk -- format one if necessary. If you want to lock (prevent overwriting) a text file that you've saved to diskette, see Locking files in the Reference Guide. It's always a good idea to make a backup copy of every diskette you store files on -- just so you'll have a duplicate in the event that something happens to your original diskette. Long documents -- anything that will more than fill your computer's memory -- must be created and saved in segments, with each segment assigned a different filename. This is where the filename extender comes in handy. You can tie together the various segments of a long piece of writing by giving them all a common filename, and use the extender for each to keep track of their proper order. As you saved each segment of a document named REPORT, for example, you could name successive segments REPORT.1, REPORT.2 and so forth. You can easily print the various segments of such a document in any order you wish; see Chaining print files in the Reference Guide. To load a text file Using ST Writer to load a text file from a disk drive into your computer's memory is much like saving a file. You just move the file in the opposite direction. Here's the procedure; try it now with your letter about ST Writer. Though you've just saved the letter, it also remains in your computer's memory. To load it back in from your disk drive, first return to the ST Writer menu and select Create File by pressing [C]. ST Writer asks, Erase file in memory, Y/N? Type Y. ST Writer erases the letter from your computer's memory and presents you with an empty edit screen. Now return to the menu (press [Esc]) and select Load File by pressing L, at which point ST Writer asks, Load File:. Insert the data diskette that contains the file you want to load and type the complete filename or path name for that file and press [Return]. If the file loaded is not an ST Writer file, you will be asked if you want any embedded tabs changed to spaces (5 spaces per tab). If you simply press [Return], they will be converted. If you are trying to maintain the same tab spacing and are planning to "SAVE ASCII", you may wish not to have the tabs converted. If so, just don't try to print the file if you chose not to convert the tabs, since any lines containing the tab character [Control I] will be blank. If while loading a file ST Writer overflows your computer's free memory, the loading process is halted and the message Buffer full, file not loaded appears on your screen. That part of the file that was loaded prior to this message is erased from memory. A word processing wonderland To show you more of what you can do with ST Writer, this section gives you another text file to type, edit, format, and print. You may recognize it. Go to the menu and select Create File. If there's a file in your computer's memory, ST Writer asks, Erase File in Memory, Y/N? Type Y to erase the file from your computer's memory. Again, ignore the Print Formatting Block at the top of your screen for now -- you can experiment with various formats after you've typed and edited the text file. Just type the passage below (from Alice in Wonderland) as it appears, but do not type the paragraph numbers in the left margin -- they're for ease of reference during the editing you'll do later on. Before you begin typing, here's a tip and a reminder. To begin underlining some text, press [Shift F3], which inserts an underline character. To turn underlining off, press [Shift F3] again to insert another underline character. All text between pairs of underline characters, including spaces between words, will be underlined. You can underline as you type, or return to a document after it's typed to underline passages. Don't forget to mark the beginning of each paragraph by pressing [Control P], and the end of each paragraph by pressing [Return]. 1 "Why," said the Dodo, "the best way to explain it is to do it." (And, as you might like to try the thing yourself, some winter day, I will tell you how the Dodo managed it.) 2 First it marked out a race-course, in a sort of circle, ("the exact shape doesn't matter," it said,) and then all the party were placed along the course, here and there. There was no "One, two, three, and away!" but they began running when they liked, and left off when they liked, so that it was not easy to know when the race was over. However, when they had been running half-an-hour or so, and were quite dry again, the Dodo suddenly called out, "The race is over!" and they all crowded round it, panting, and asking, "But who has won?" 3 This question the Dodo could not answer without a great deal of thought, and it stood for a long time with one finger pressed upon its forehead, (the position in which you usually see Shakespeare, in the pictures of him), while the rest waited in silence. At last the Dodo said, "Everybody has won, and all must have prizes." 4 "But who is to give the prizes?" quite a chorus of voices asked. 5 "Why, she, of course," said the Dodo, pointing to Edith with one finger; and the whole party at once crowded round her, calling out, in a confused way, "Prizes! Prizes!" 6 "But she must have a prize herself, you know," said the Mouse. 7 Edith had no idea what to do, and in despair she put her hand in her pocket, and pulled out a box of comfits (luckily the salt water had not got into it), and handed them round as prizes. There was exactly one a-piece, all round. 8 "Of course," the Dodo replied very gravely. "What else have you got in your pocket?" it went on, turning to Edith. 9 "Only a thimble," said Edith sadly. 10 "Hand it over here," said the Dodo. 11 Edith thought it rather absurd to give away her thimble just so the Dodo could give it back to her. But she handed it over, just to humor the old bird. 12 Then they all crowded round her once more, while the Dodo solemnly presented the thimble, saying, "We beg your acceptance of this elegant thimble"; and, when it had finished this short speech, they all cheered. Advanced editing with ST Writer If you recognized the passage you just typed -- it's from Lewis Carroll's whimsical Alice in Wonderland -- you may be aware that it contains some errors. Here are some ST Writer techniques for putting it in order. Each of these major functions is also highlighted in your Quick Reference Guide. Deleting blocks of text With ST Writer you can delete a long passage from a piece of writing without having to erase it letter by letter or line by line. In your passage from Alice in Wonderland, for example, paragraph 11 doesn't belong there and should be deleted. To delete a block of text you must first place markers at the beginning and end of the text to be deleted. First position the cursor under the first character of the passage you want to delete -- in this case, under the paragraph marker before "Edith thought it..." -- and press [Shift F5]. ST Writer inserts an inverse quotation mark at that point on the screen. Next, move the cursor down to the end of what you want to delete -- in this case, under the paragraph marker at the beginning of paragraph 12 (in order to include the [Return] symbol at the end of the passage you want to delete) -- and press [Shift F5] again. ST Writer places another inverse quote mark at that point. To erase the text block, press F5. The block will be erased without any prompts. However, if you change your mind about deleting the block, you can bring it back simply by pressing the [Undo] key. In fact, you can insert the deleted block anywhere in your text by moving the cursor to the desired location, then pressing [Undo]. Each time you delete a line or block of text, a failsafe text buffer (a temporary holding section of memory) is reinitialized and the deleted text is placed in the buffer, and remains there until the next deletion. The failsafe buffer holds about 40,000 characters. If a block is too large for the buffer, the prompt Too large for Cut Buffer, cut anyway? appears. Pressing Y will delete the block without saving it in the buffer. Moving blocks of text There's also a paragraph in your passage that's out of place -- the Mouse's remark in paragraph 6 should follow paragraph 7. To put things in order, you don't have to delete the out-of-place paragraph and retype it where it should be. ST Writer will move a block of text for you. The procedure for moving a block of text is much like that for deleting a block of text. Press [Shift F5] at the beginning of what you want to move and again at the end. ST Writer places an inverse quotation mark at each point. Finally, place the cursor where you want to reposition the text to be moved -- in this case, under the paragraph marker that begins paragraph 8 -- and press [Shift Insert]. ST Writer deletes the specified text block from its old place and inserts it where it belongs. Search and replace with ST Writer In your passage from Alice in Wonderland, the girl who hands out the prizes is of course not Edith, but Alice herself. But with ST Writer, you don't have to go back and change each use of Edith to Alice. ST Writer will search out and replace any specified string wherever it appears in a text file. To use this search-and-replace function, first position the cursor at the top of your file (a quick way is to press [Shift F1]), then press [Shift F7]. When ST Writer prompts you to enter the Replace : string, type in the word Edith and press [Esc]. Using the [Esc] key to terminate search strings allows you to search for strings that include the [Return] character. This is the text for which ST Writer must search. Next ST Writer prompts you to enter the text you want to substitute for the search string with the prompt With :. Type in the word Alice, then press [Esc]. ST Writer now searches the entire text for the word Edith, and replaces it with the word Alice wherever it occurs. This is known as a global unqueried search-and-replace, which means that all occurrences of the search phrase are replaced without further prompting. ST Writer can also perform a case-by-case replacement operation, in which you are prompted to confirm each substitution. Press F7 to perform a query search-and-replace operation. Notes on Search-and-Replace When you enter a word or phrase to be searched for, you must type it exactly as it appears in your text file. When the string is a single short word, like son, that might appear in your file as part of longer words, it's a good idea to type in blank spaces before and after it. If you do this, however, be sure to include the same blank spaces before and after the phrase you're substituting for the search string; and keep in mind that ST Writer will not recognize occurrences of such a search string that are immediately preceded or followed by punctuation marks. You can also use the search-and-replace function as a search-and-delete tool. To do this, simply press [Esc] when ST Writer asks for a replacement string. ST Writer will delete the search string and close up the resulting blank space, whether you proceed with a case-by-case or global search. Getting your text files in shape With ST Writer you can print what you write in just about any shape you want by using a variety of formatting commands. Some of these commands, entered in the Print Formatting Block at the top of your screen, control the overall formatting of your text file. Others, entered within your text file while you're creating or editing it, are used to specify variations from the overall format. Others still are used to specify some special formatting features of ST Writer. In the next several pages, you'll find instructions for using all the formatting commands, along with some suggestions for using most of them to shape up your passage from Alice in Wonderland. The formatting commands are also outlined in your Quick Reference Guide. Print Preview As you experiment with various formatting commands, you might wish to observe the results of these commands on the final printed form of your text without waiting for an actual printout. You can preview your final document on the monitor screen by printing the text to the screen instead of paper. To do this, press [Esc], if necessary, to return to the ST Writer menu, then select Print File. You are prompted Enter Printer, Disk, Screen, spooLer? Type S, press [Return] twice, and your text will be printed to the screen exactly the way you've formatted it. Stop and start the scrolling text by pressing [Control S] to stop and any key to restart, or escape to the menu by pressing [Esc]. Overall file formatting By now the Print Formatting Block at the top of a text file should be a familiar sight. Each of the inverse video (colored in low and medium res) letters in it represents a command that will affect the overall formatting of the file. The number to the right of each letter is the formatting value for that command. Shown below -- and in the Print Formatting Block each time you begin a new file -- are the default values for overall formatting. ST Writer will use these values to format your file unless, of course, you change them. To set your own formatting values, just move the cursor into the Print Formatting Block (pressing [Shift F1] is the quickest way), delete the number displayed for the value you want to change, and type in the new value. Try reformatting your passage from Alice in Wonderland to some new values, as suggested on the next two pages, or to values of your own choice. B12 Bottom margin: 12 half-lines, or 1 inch D4 Paragraph spacing: 4 blank half-lines (double spacing) between paragraphs G0 Print style: 10 characters per inch (CPI) I5 Paragraph indentation: 5 spaces from left margin J0 Justified right margin: OFF L10 Left margin: 10 spaces from left edge of page R70 Right margin: 70 spaces from left edge of page S2 Line spacing: 2 half-lines, or single spacing T12 Top margin: 12 half-lines, or 1 inch Y132 Page length: 132 half-lines, or 11 inches Line spacing, S, is set in terms of half-lines. For double-spaced printing, delete 2 and type in 4. For triple spacing, set this value at 6. Only even numbers can be used. (Entering odd numbers will cause ST Writer to use the next highest even number.) Paragraph spacing, D, is set in terms of blank half-lines between paragraphs. For single spacing between paragraphs, delete 4 and type in 2. Only even numbers can be used. Paragraph indentation, I, is measured in character spaces from the left margin. For more or less indentation than the default value of 5 spaces, delete the 5 and type in the value you want (up to 20). The number may be negative for outdenting. For block-style paragraphs, without any indentation of the first line, enter the number 0 (and make sure that your paragraph spacing is greater than your line spacing). Top and bottom margins, T and B, are measured from the top and bottom, respectively of each page. So, to change them both from one inch (12 half-lines) to one and a half inches, set them at 18 instead of 12. Only even numbers can be used. Left and right margins, L and R, on the other hand, are both measured from the left edge of the page. For wider margins, try substituting 15 for 10 as the value for L, and 65 for 70 as the value for R. You'll probably want to experiment a bit to find the left and right margins you prefer, depending on the print style you select (see below) and the kind of printer you have. ST Writer will accept values 1 through 188 for the left margin and 11 through 198 for the right margin. If you have a 40-column printer, be sure to set your right margin within the range of 2 through 40. The justified right margins command, J, works like a simple On/Off switch. The default value of 0 gives you nonjustified (ragged) right margins. For justified right margins, delete the 0 after the J and type in 1. Page length, Y, does not determine the number of lines printed on a page (that's set by your top and bottom margins). Rather, ST Writer uses the page length setting to determine where the next printed page will begin. Keep your page length set at 132 for 8 1/2 by 11-inch paper. 224 is ST Writer's maximum page length (for 14" paper length and printer setting of 8 lines per inch [Note: default lines are 6 per inch]). Only even numbers can be used. To print out a text file continuously, without page breaks, set your top and bottom margins to 0. In print styles, G, also known as fonts, your choices depend on what kind of printer you have. The default print style of ST Writer is 10 CPI (PICA), represented by the 0 next to the G in the Print Formatting Block. To format for condensed print, delete the 0 and type in 2; for italics, type in 4; for ELITE, type in 8. Although the print styles you select are not represented as such on your screen in print preview, the number of characters displayed per line is normally the same as it will be in your printed file. For double-column printing, you must enter formatting commands and values for the margins of the second (right-hand) column of print. Enter these commands and values at the top of your text file to format the entire file for double-column printing -- just insert them as if you were adding text at the beginning of the line just below the Print Formatting Block. To set the left margin for the second column, press [Control M], then type the number of the margin setting you want (measured in character spaces from the left edge of the page). To set the right margin for the second column, press [Control N] and type the number of the setting you want. To discontinue double-column printing, set the second left margin [Control M] to 0 (zero). You cannot change print pitch while printing double-column. Of course, you may also have to adjust your settings for L and R, which control the margins for the first (left-hand) column of print in double column printing. Always be sure that your first-column right margin and second-column left margin do not overlap. Also, do not make the T or B margin settings different for the two columns. Formatting variations within a file You can specify variations in the format wherever you want within a file by entering commands directly in your text. In addition, ST Writer offers a number of special formatting features; for these, too, you enter commands directly in your text. You can enter these commands singly or in combination, when creating or editing a text file. For best results, enter new format commands on a separate line (that is, don't type text on the same line), type a space after the numeric value for each command, and press [Return] to start subsequent text on a new line. Note: the one exception to this case is Print style, ([Control G]), with which you can include text on the same line. For example, you can italicize a single word on a line. Follow the [Control G] with the number (0 through 15) for the print style followed by a hyphen (or any character except for a number. This delimiting character will not be printed in the text. However, remember, you cannot change print pitch while printing double-column. You may do bold, italics, or elongated print in double column, nevertheless. To specify variations from the overall formatting values displayed in the Print Formatting Block, use the commands shown below, followed by the new value. ST Writer displays the appropriate letter (in inverse video) and number wherever you enter one of these commands. (These letters and numbers will not appear on your printed pages.) Bottom margin [Control B] Double-column printing: 2nd-column left margin [Control M] 2nd-column right margin [Control N] Justified right margins [Control J] Left margin [Control L] Line spacing [Control S] Paragraph indentation [Control I] Paragraph spacing [Control D] Print style(font) [Control G] Right margin [Control R] Top margin [Control T] At the end of the portion of text that you want varied from the overall format, use the same commands to re-enter the original overall formatting value -- or whatever new value you want for the text that follows. The special formatting features of ST Writer also require you to enter commands directly in your text. Again, you can enter these commands singly or in combination with other formatting commands, while creating or editing a file. ST Writer displays the appropriate letter or letters in inverse video wherever you enter one of these commands. Elongated print With some printers, including the ATARI SMM 804 Dot Matrix Printer, ST Writer enables you to print text in elongated characters, which are twice normal width. Any print style can be elongated. To format a portion of text for elongated print, press [Shift F9] at the beginning of that portion of text and [Shift F9] again at the end. If you like, try this feature in combination with the next feature described to add a striking title to your passage from Alice in Wonderland. When you examine a formatted text file in print preview, elongated characters are displayed as normal. But keep in mind that when printed they'll be twice as wide as normal, so anything more than half a line of text that you format for elongated print will run over to the next line. Centering text To center lines of text -- a useful option for titles and headings -- press [Control C] at the beginning of each line to be centered. At the end of the line, press [Return]. (If you decide to center a line while editing, don't forget to insert a [Return], if necessary, at the end of the line.) If you like, add a centered title in elongated print at the top of your passage from Alice in Wonderland -- something like: [Control C][Shift F9] Alice Gets a Surprise [Return] [Control C] For Her Prize [Shift F9] [Return] Always be sure that no line of text to be centered exceeds the overall line length determined by the left and right margins that you set. Blocking text right To have a line of text print out flush with the right margin of the page, press [Control C] twice in succession at the beginning of the line to be blocked. Each line to be blocked right must be ended with a [Return]. If you like, try this out by adding something like this at the end of your passage from Alice in Wonderland: [Control C][Control C] -- from Alice in Wonderland [Return] [Control C][Control C] by Lewis Carroll [Return] Always be sure that no line of text to be blocked right exceeds your overall page margins. Headers, footers, and page numbering A header is a line or two of text that is printed at the top of every page of your final printed output. A footer appears on the bottom of each page. If you want, ST Writer will place headers or footers of one or two lines on each page of your printed text files. By using a page numbering command in combination with a header or footer command, you can also have ST Writer number your printed pages. To specify a header, press [Control H], then type the text of the header and press [Return]. Enter [Control H], then the text and a [Return] for each separate line of a two-line header. To specify a footer, press [Control F], then type the text of the footer and press [Return]. Enter [Control F], then the text and a [Return] for each separate line of a two-line footer. Headers appear two and four half-lines below the top of the page, and footers two and four half-lines above the bottom of the page. Therefore, to use headers or footers, the top [Control T] or bottom [Control B] margin settings must be at least 8 to leave room. By default, headers and footers are aligned to the left margin of the printed page; however, you can also have them centered or blocked right (aligned with the right margin) by following your headder or footer command with a center text command ([Control C]) or block text right command ([Control C][Control C]) just before your text (and on the same screen line). If you want your headers or footers printed in elongated print, enter a [Shift F9] before and after the header or footer text. If you want headers or footers on every page of your text file, beginning with the first page, enter the appropriate commands and text at the beginning of your file on the screen line or lines just below the formatting commands and values displayed on the first line. If you want headers or footers to begin on a page other than the first page, or if you want to change the text of a header or footer within the file -- say, for a multisection document where you want headers or footers that match each section -- you can enter the appropriate commands and text within the file. In this case, however, be sure to enter the commands and text (preceded if you like by elongated print, center text, block text right, or new left and right margin settings commands) as the only material on a screen line. No header or footer text line should exceed the overall page margins that you've set (and remember that elongated print is twice as wide as normal). Any header or footer text that exceeds your page margins will be dropped when ST Writer formats and prints your file. To discontinue printing headers in your file, type [Control H] [Control H] [Return]. Use two [Control F]'s for discontinuing footers. To number your printed pages, type the @ symbol ([Shift 2]) at that point in your header or footer text where you want page numbers to appear. ST Writer displays a @ symbol to show you where your page numbers will be printed. If you want page numbers only, just enter @ as your entire header or footer text. By default, ST Writer numbers the page where a page numbering command is entered as 1, and subsequent pages in order. To specify a different starting page number -- a useful option when you're combining separate text files into a larger document -- press [Control Q] after the [Return] that concludes your header or footer text, then enter the starting page number you want. ST Writer accepts starting page numbers of 1 through 999. A negative number (e.g. -1) instructs ST Writer to alternate blocked RIGHT headers and footers with blocked LEFT headers and footers. To add a blocked right header with a page number to each page of your passage from Alice in Wonderland, enter this at the beginning of your text file: [Control H][Control C][Control C]ST Writer Exercise - @ [Return] You may specify a different print style [Control G][number][hyphen], or different left [Control L][number] or right [Control R][number] margins within your header or footer without affecting the print style or L or R margins within your main text body. The header or footer disregards double column instructions, creating a line length up to the entire width of the page. Indexing and deleting text files There are two more selections on the ST Writer menu that can help you manage your text files: Index of Files and Delete File. Before trying these options, save your passage from Alice in Wonderland -- it will make for a more interesting index and, along with your letter about ST Writer, will give you a choice of files to delete! For an index of files on a diskette, insert the diskette into your disk drive. If your system has two drives, use either one. Then select Index Disk Files from the ST Writer menu. ST Writer then prompts 'P' to printer, 'S' to screen: S -- press [Return] to accept the default (screen print), or P to send the index to your printer. Next ST Writer prompts you for a Path name: and prints the specifier for the current drive, that is, the drive from which you loaded ST Writer (or from which you last obtained a directory). For instance, if you loaded ST Writer from drive A:, you're prompted Path name: A:. You can change the drive specifier by pressing [Backspace] a few times and entering the new specifier. If you want a directory of a specific folder on your disk, enter the drive specifier, then a reverse slash (\), then the name of that folder. Then press [Return], at which time ST Writer displays a list of files and folders on the diskette. Folders and files created with ST Writer will be indicated as such in the listing. Also shown is the number of bytes occupied by each file; any file that you've locked (using the GEM desktop) is noted with an asterisk (see Diskette Management in the Reference Guide). When there are more than 21 files on a diskette, ST Writer scrolls your directory upward on your screen to show you every entry. To halt this scrolling, press any key; press any key again to restart the scrolling. For a printed directory, simply type P at the first prompt, and make sure your printer is connected and turned on. To delete a file on diskette, you follow much the same procedure as when you save or load a file to or from diskette. First make sure that the diskette containing the file that you want to delete is in your disk drive, then return to the ST Writer menu and select Delete File. When ST Writer prompts you to enter the File to be deleted:, type in the drive specifier followed by a colon and the filename and extender of the file you want to delete, and press [Return]. As a precaution, ST Writer prompts Type 'Y' to delete file:. When you respond by typing Y, ST Writer erases the specified file from your diskette. Some further features of ST Writer Like Alice, the Dodo, and the Mouse, you've probably now been "running half-an-hour or so" at least with ST Writer -- but don't stop yet! Briefly described, here are a few additional features of ST Writer. You can find complete instructions for using each one in the Reference Guide. Byte count at cursor position. You can tell at a glance where you are in the file by pressing [Alternate =]. Although this number represents all characters including formatting data and comments, you can get an idea of how far you are in the document. Chaining print files. If you have a disk drive, this feature allows you to chain text files together in any order to be printed as if they were one file. Duplicating text. This feature enables you to take a word, sentence, or more from one part of a text file and duplicate it wherever else you want within the same file. Format disk. You can use this selection from the ST Writer menu to prepare a blank diskette for storing your text files. Form printing. Especially handy for business or form letters, this feature lets you leave blanks in a text file -- for names and addresses, account numbers, and the like -- and fill them in with specifics each time ST Writer prints the file. You can, if you like, create a separate DATA file containing the words or phrases, each separated by a carriage return. Just be sure that they match the spaces left in your form, and are in the correct order. The DATA file must be printed to disk with top and bottom margins set to 0 (zero), L set to 1, R set to 198, G set to 2 and Y set to twice the number of lines in the file (maximum Y is 224). Alternatively, you can also use mailing addresses created and sorted by DB Master One. Simply print the sorted addresses to a disk file. The computer will prompt you asking for the file name of your DATA file if you indicate that STWRITER is to use a disk file as the data source. If you do not wish to use a data file as a source of your insert data, you may simply type in each specific as you are prompted to by the computer. Merging text files. This feature allows you to merge an ST Writer text file on disk together with the file currently in your computer's memory. Files not saved in ST Writer format should be first loaded separately, saved, then merged with the desired file. Page eject. Basically a formatting command, this feature enables you to halt printing on a given page and space to the top of the next page before resuming printing. It can be useful when you're formatting and printing a multisection document where you want each section to begin on a fresh page. By typing a number greater than zero after [Control E] you can specify a conditional page eject, with the number representing the number of lines to appear on the same page. If they will not fit, they will appear in a block on the following page. This feature is useful for printing tables and material with fixed numbers of lines. To work with paragraphs and formatable blocks of print with variable numbers of lines, one would first need to print the entire document and count by hand the number of lines in the paragraph which are not be broken at a page break. Page wait. Also a formatting command, this feature allows you to print your text files on individual sheets of paper -- a convenient option when you want to do your printing on bond, letterhead, or your personal stationery. If this command is active when printing to the screen, scrolling will halt when the screen is full. Pressing any key except [Esc] continues scrolling. [Esc] cancels printing. Printer controls. You can send special decimal-code commands to your printer by entering them directly in your text files -- a useful option if you have a printer that ST Writer does not support, and do not have a printer driver. Section headings. Use this feature to number section and subsection headings in the body of a text file. Special characters. You can access the special characters in the international character set by typing [Alternate X]. A letter [A] appears near the bottom right of the screen indicating alternate character mode. Use the table in STWCODES.DOC to find what key combinations to use to print the character you want. Foreign characters can be obtained directly without using the [Alternate X] function by using the deadkey function. Type [Control][Clr Home], and a "D" appears in the status line near the bottom of the screen. You can get foreign characters by using the following combination of key strokes: First type ",',~,`,^,_,-, or /, then the vowel or letter that the mark is used in combination with. For example, to get a small umalut u, type ["] first, then [u]. If you merely want a quote mark ["], you must either exit the deadkey mode by typing [Control][Clr Home], or by typing quote ["] twice in succession while still in deadkey mode. In addition, you can also include characters with ASCII values between 0 and 31 in your text file. Note, however, that most of these characters are unprintable, and may do strange things if you attempt to print them on the printer. Nevertheless, you can get them by typing [Control X] before and after the character. For example, to get a [Control J] (ASCII 10) to be in the text, type: [Control X][Control J][Control X] These characters will not be counted as taking up space on a line like normal characters. The [Control X] is needed to tell the formatter in ST Writer Elite that these are NOT formatting characters, but ones which need to be sent to the output device. All control characters can be printed by using [Control] plus a letter key with the following exceptions: To get: Use: ASCII 0 (null) [ Return ] [ Control A ] [ Control U ] [ Control U ] [ Shift F5 ] [ Control X ] \[ Control X ] [ Control Z ] [ Control : ] [ Escape ] [ Control [ ] or [ Control ; ] ASCII $1C [ Control < ] or [ Control \ ] ASCII $1D [ Control = ] or [ Control ] ] ASCII $1E [ Control > ] or [ Control ^ ] ASCII $1F [ Control ? ] or [ Control _ ] Subscripts and superscripts. Especially useful when you're writing about mathematical or chemical formulas or including footnote numbers in your text, subscripts and superscripts can easily be included in your printed text files. Tabs. With ST Writer you can set and use Tab stops much as you do with a conventional typewriter. Tab stops can be especially useful when you're setting up columns or tables in a text file. GEM mode. By popular request, features of Digital Research's GEM (Graphics Environment Manager) have been added to ST Writer. This allows use of drop down menu items, Dialog Boxes, File Selector Boxes, and use of the mouse. The GEM mode is activated by pressing one of the mouse buttons. An "Alert" box appears allowing you to select or reject GEM mode. If you are happy with ST Writer as it already is, click on "CANCEL". Clicking on "OK" will produce a blank screen with the familiar GEM menu bar at the top. You can make your menu selections from here using the mouse. In GEM mode, keyboard menu commands will no longer work. S T W R I T E R R E F E R E N C E G U I D E ALTERNATE RIGHT AND LEFT BLOCK HEADERS/FOOTERS. To have ST Writer take headers and footers set for right blocking, and on alternate pages block them left, use a negative number after the [Control Q] (page number start) command. This is useful for pages which will go "back to back" as in a textbook or newsletter. ALTERNATE CHARACTERS. Use the Alternate key in combination with the X key to toggle the alternate characters set. A capital 'A' will appear near the bottom right of the screen indicating alternate character mode. Pressing [Alternate X] again returns to normal characters. Since the keys are not marked for alternate characters, you can often find the proper key to use by subtracting 128 from the ASCII value of the alternate character you wish to type, and finding the corresponding key on the keyboard. For example, to print the 'pi' symbol, press [Alternate X], then type a lower case 'c'. For some characters, it will be necessary for you to refer to the ST Writer Key Code Table. Note: If you have pressed the [CapsLock] key, a capital 'C' will indicate this at the bottom right of your screen. Also see SPECIAL CHARACTERS. BLOCK TEXT RIGHT. To block right, or print a line of text flush with the right margin of the printed page, press [Control C] twice in succession before typing the line, and [Return] at the end of the line. When editing, insert [Control C] twice at the beginning of each line to be blocked right, and be sure that each such line ends with [Return]. Always be sure, also, that no line of text to be blocked right exceeds your overall page margins. CAPITALIZATION. See Upper and lowercase characters. CENTER TEXT. To center a line of text, press [Control C] before typing the line, and [Return] at the end of the line. When editing, insert a [Control C] at the beginning of each line to be centered, and be sure that each such line ends with [Return]. Always be sure, also, that no line of text to be centered exceeds your overall page margins. CHAINING PRINT FILES. You can use this feature to tie together any number of files, in any order that you wish, to be printed as if they were one file. This is especially useful when you want to print a long document that you've written and saved in segments with distinctive filenames or extenders. Here's how to chain two files named REPORT.001 and REPORT.002, for example. While writing or editing REPORT.001, position the cursor at the end of the file and press [Control V]. Then type REPORT.002 (include the drive specifier, if necessary, before the filename) and press [Return]. It does not matter whether you enter the filename or specifier in upper or lower case. While printing these chained files, ST Writer would display the message CHAINING REPORT.002 as it finished with REPORT.001 and proceeded to find and format REPORT.002 prior to printing it. After printing, the first file is reloaded from disk. Each file in a chain will be formatted according to the formatting commands and values within it. So if you want consistent overall formatting throughout a chain of files, be sure that the values in the Print Formatting Block are the same in every file. A header or footer entered in the first file in a chain will be carried through subsequent files -- unless, of course, you modify it -- and a page numbering command entered in the first file will give you consecutively numbered pages throughout the chain. Note: You cannot load a file, edit it, then print it out while chaining to another file -- if you try, the message Cannot chain appears after the first file is printed. In order to chain properly, save the first file before printing it out. This is because when you load a file and then edit it, ST Writer will not let you load another file without verifying that you want to erase the existing text. COMMENT. Use [Control K] before and a comment in your text which you do not wish to have printed out. Terminate the comment with a [Return]. Since [Control K] also is used to cancel a search command, you may still search for a [Control K] character in your text. Use a [Control +] combination of key strokes for this. CONDENSED PRINT. See Print styles (fonts). CREATE FILE. Select this from the ST Writer menu to begin writing a new text file. While in the Create File mode, you can write, edit, rewrite, and enter or change formatting commands. Each time you select Create File, ST Writer refreshes the default values for formatting in the Print Formatting Block at the top of your monitor screen. DEADKEY FUNCTION. This function is toggled on and off with [Control][Clr Home]. If the character you wish to use has an accent mark, for example, type the ['] character followed by the appropriate vowel. DEFAULT VALUES. Each time you select Create File, ST Writer refreshes the default values for formatting in the Print Formatting Block at the top of your monitor screen. ST Writer will format your entire file according to these values unless you change them, or modify them by entering the appropriate formatting commands and values within the body of the file. Here are the default values: B12 Bottom margin, 12 half-lines (1 inch) D4 Paragraph spacing, 4 blank half-lines (double spacing) G0 Print style, 10 characters per inch I5 Paragraph indentation, 5 spaces from left margin J0 Justified right margins OFF L10 Left margin, 10 spaces from left edge of page R70 Right margin, 70 spaces from left edge of page S2 Line spacing, 2 half-lines (single spacing) T12 Top margin, 12 half-lines (1 inch) Y132 Page length, 132 half-lines (11 inches) ST Writer also defaults to a starting page number of 1 when you enter a page numbering or print file command -- unless of course you enter a different starting page number. DELETE FILE. To delete a file from diskette, select Delete File from the ST Writer menu by pressing D. Then enter the Path name of the file (see Path name) to delete. As a precaution, ST Writer prompts Type 'Y' to delete file:; Type Y to erase the file. You cannot delete a locked file from the disk -- if you try, ST Writer will give you the message Unable to delete file. DELETE TEXT. See your Quick Reference Guide for the keystrokes used to delete text. You can delete: a character, line, or portion of a line at a time; all text from the position of the cursor to the end of your text file; a defined block of text, or the entire document. In case you change your mind about a deletion or delete something by accident, you can press the [Undo] key to restore the last line or block of text (up to about 40,000 characters) that you've deleted; the restored material is inserted at the position of the cursor. Note: exceptions to this are deleted single characters, blocks larger than 40,000 characters (warning message appears), and deletion of the entire text ([Clr Home]). DISKETTE MANAGEMENT. In order to load the ST Writer program into your Computer, if you don't have TOS in ROM, you must first load the TOS operating system from your ATARI TOS System Disk. Consult your ST Computer Owner's Manual for further instructions. Before you can store your ST Writer text files on a data disk, the disk must be formatted -- that is, organized into sectors so that your disk drive can keep track of where information is stored on it. You can format blank diskettes from the GEM desktop (see Owner's Manual). Or use the Format Disk selection from the ST Writer menu to format a blank disk while in the middle of a work session with ST Writer. For your own peace of mind, always make a backup copy of any disk you store ST Writer files on -- just so you'll have a duplicate in the event that something happens to your original. Your ST Owner's Manual also contains further details on this and other disk management functions. DOUBLE-COLUMN PRINTING. You can format a text file for double-column printing on any printer. To do so, you must enter formatting commands and values of the second (right-hand) column. You can do this either at the beginning of your file -- to print the whole file in double columns -- or at that point in the file where you want double-column printing to begin. To set the left margin for the second column, press [Control M], then type the number of the setting you want. Then press [Control N] and type the number of the setting you want for the right margin of the column. You may also have to adjust your settings for L and R, which control the margins for the first (left-hand) column of print in double-column printing. Always be sure that your first-column right margin and second-column left margin do not overlap, and that T and B margins are set the same for both columns. When you print to the screen a file that you've formatted for double-column printing, the two columns appear as they will print. DUPLICATING TEXT. To duplicate a portion of text from one part of a text file to another part of the file, first position the cursor at the beginning of what you want to duplicate and press [Shift F5]. Next, position the cursor at the end of what you want to duplicate and press [Shift F5] again. Finally, position the cursor where you want the text to be duplicated (the cursor must be outside the marked block), and press [F2]. From this point until you perform another deletion or duplication, the marked block of text is held in a failsafe buffer, and can be inserted anywhere in the document simply by positioning the cursor and pressing the [Undo] key. You may duplicate a block of text as many times as you like. If you want to duplicate it more than once, however, be careful not to delete anything until you've completed your duplication procedures. A block of text that you duplicate is stored in the failsafe text buffer of your computer, where it will be replaced by the next deletion. Also keep in mind that the capacity of your failsafe text buffer is about 40,000 characters of text. So if you want to duplicate a block of more than 13 pages or so, do it in segments. EDIT FILE. Select this option from the ST Writer menu when you want to revise or reformat a text file already in your computer's memory. ELONGATED PRINT. See Print styles (fonts). ERROR MESSAGES. When ST Writer finds a mistake in an entry or command that you've given, or detects a problem in your computer system, it displays the appropriate error message in the Message Window at the bottom of your screen. Press any key to continue. FILENAMES. Filenames may be up to eight characters in length, optionally followed by a period and a three-character extender -- for example, RFGUIDE.001. You must give every file a filename in order to save it on a disk. ST Writer uses the same conventions as your TOS operating system for allowable characters in filenames -- letters, numbers, and punctuation are permissible. Lower case letters are converted to upper case in the actual filename. FONTS. See Print styles. FOOTERS. See Headers, footers, and page numbering. FORMAT DISK. In order to store your ST Writer text files, disks must be formatted with TOS. While it's always a good idea to keep an extra formatted diskette on hand, (see Diskette management), you can use the Format Disk selection from the ST Writer menu to format a disk during a work session with ST Writer. Simply insert the diskette you want to format in your disk drive and select Format Disk from the menu by pressing F. The Message Window shows All data will be erased, 'Y' to format. Type Y to continue with the format operation. Type any other letter to return to the SELECT LETTER prompt. After typing Y, type A or B for the drive containing the disk you wish to format. Next you're asked Sides to format ( 1 or 2 ):2. Note that the default response for a double-sided drive is already supplied, and you need only press [Return] to begin such a format. To format single-sided, if you have an SF354 drive, type 1 and press [Return] -- the 2 disappears at the first keypress. At the prompt Enter name for disk: enter in a disk name following filename conventions (up to eight characters with an optional three-character extender), or just press [Return] for no disk name. The message Formatting disk appears and the disk is formatted. If there are any problems (such as the disk being write-protected), the message Unable to format disk. appears. Press any key to return to the SELECT LETTER prompt. FORMATTING TEXT FILES. How ST Writer formats your text files is controlled by a variety of formatting commands and values entered either in the Print Formatting Block at the top of each file or within the body of the file. Each time you select Create File from the ST Writer menu, the program's default values for formatting are refreshed in the Print Formatting Block, but you can change them or add to them as you wish. You can edit formatting commands and values -- delete or modify them -- just as you can text. See your Quick Reference Guide for a summary of all formatting commands used with ST Writer. You can examine a formatted text file on your screen prior to printing by using Print to Screen. FORM PRINTING. (Also called Database Merge.) You can leave blanks in a text file that you want to use as a form, and fill them in -- with names and addresses, account numbers, and the like -- each time you print the file. Wherever you want to leave a blank, press function key F9. An inverse video ? appears at that point on your screen. Press F9 at the desired location for each entry that you'll be filling in. When ST Writer prints the file, it stops when it encounters each such command and prompts you FORM DATA FROM FILE Y/N? If you have previously created a data file, type Y. The prompt DATA FILE NAME? will appear. Type in the data file name and press [Return]. ST Writer will read the data file and insert the data in sequence into your text. If you do not have a data file, you will be prompted to MAKE ENTRY?. Type what you want to fill in the blank -- up to 55 characters per blank -- and press [Return]. When you complete each entry, ST Writer continues printing the file. Alternately, you can supply information for each blank from a text file output by a database management program such as the mailing list option of DB Master One. After sorting the desired addresses with DB Master One, "print" them to disk. See the instructions from compatible database managers for further instructions. If you're using the hand-entry method and have left a number of blanks, it's a good idea to jot down a list of them, because you won't be able to see the file on your screen when you're prompted to make your entries during printing. FREE MEMORY. When first creating a file in ST Writer, you start off with approximately 200,000 bytes, or characters, of memory (more or less depending on system) available for your text -- room for over 130 double-spaced pages. This number is reduced if you have any of the accessories such as the Control Panel installed in your desktop. To remove desktop accessories, use the GEM desktop to change resolution with a non-system disk in the default drive, or if you have a monochrome monitor (cannot change resolution), rename the desk accessories on your system disk and reboot the system. ST Writer constantly displays the available memory, expressed in bytes, in the Message Window at the bottom of your screen. One byte equals roughly one typed character, and you can figure on about 1500 bytes for each standard double-spaced page. In any case, it's a good idea to leave yourself with a margin of free memory with every file you write, just so you'll have some memory to work with if you want to edit (or add to) a file later on. When your computer's memory will accept only about one more screen full of text, ST Writer alerts you by displaying a "memory low" message. When this happens, save the file and start a new file to continue the document you're working on. GEM MODE. To get the features of GEM, click one of the mouse buttons. An alert box will appear to allow you to select GEM or CANCEL. Besides allowing you to use the mouse in Menus, Dialog and Alert Boxes, on the EDIT screen you can place the alpha cursor anywhere in the text on the screen instantly. You can also exit edit mode by clicking on Esc in the last line of the command box, and you can scroll up or down a page by clicking on the up and down arrows on the same line. You can exit GEM mode from the main menu by clicking on "Mouse" in the Options menu. NOTE: Sometimes when you press the [Esc] key, you will seem to be "stuck" on the Edit screen. This occurs when the mouse is on the top line, regardless if you are in GEM mode or not, or whether the mouse is visible or not. A peculiarity of GEM makes it necessary for you to move the mouse downward to exit the Edit screen if this should occur. GLOBAL FORMAT. In GEM mode only, Global Format allows you to set up the Format line at the top of a file you are about to Create. It does not work on files already created in memory. HEADERS, FOOTERS, and PAGE NUMBERING. For headers or footers of one or two lines on every page of your printed text file, enter the appropriate commands and text at the beginning of the file, on the screen line or lines just below the formatting commands and values displayed on the first line. To begin headers or footers elsewhere than on the first page, or to change the text of your headers or footers, you can also enter the required commands and text within the file. In this case, however, each header or footer command and line of text (preceded, if you like, by elongated print and center text or block text right commands) must be the only material entered on a screenline. In either case, be sure that no line of header or footer text exceeds your overall page width margins. To specify a header, press [Control H], then type the text of the header and press [Return]. For a two-line header, enter a [Control H], then the text and a [Return] for each separate line. To specify a footer, press [Control F], then type the text of the footer and press [Return]. For a two-line footer, enter a [Control F], then the text and a [Return] for each separate line. To discontinue a header or a footer, type two [Control H]'s or two [Control F]'s followed by a [Return]. For consecutively numbered printed pages, type @ ([Shift 2]) at that point in your header or footer text where you want page numbers to appear (for page numbers only, use the @ symbol as the entire text of your header or footer). ST Writer will number the page where you enter your page numbering command as 1, and subsequent pages in order, unless you specify a different starting page number. To do this, press [Control Q] after the [Return] that concludes your header or footer text, then type in the number of the starting page number you want (from 1 through 999). A negative value following the [Control Q] indicates that you want your left and right blocked headers and footers to each block to the opposite margin on alternate pages. Headers or footers appear one full line below or above the top or bottom of your printed pages. By default, ST Writer prints headers, footers, and page numbers in the print style you've formatted for the entire text file, and aligns them to the left margin. If you want to change the print style or left or right margins, or want elongated print, centered or flush right, enter the appropriate commands just after your header or footer commands. The main text body will not be affected by these formatting commands in your header or footer. INDEX OF FILES. For a directory of files on a disk or within a folder, press I from the ST Writer menu. At the prompt 'P' to printer, 'S' to screen: S, press [Return] to accept the default (screen print), or P for a printed index (make sure your printer is ready). Next ST Writer asks for the Path name: -- see Path name for details. When you enter the Path name, ST Writer reads the disk directory and prints it on the indicated device. Also shown are the number of bytes contained in each file. Files generated by ST Writer and folders are indicated as such, and locked files are marked with an asterisk (see Locking files). If you have more than 21 files and folders on your disk, ST Writer scrolls the directory listing upward on your screen to show every entry. To momentarily pause the listing, press any key; press it again to restart the scrolling. At the end of the directory listing, ST Writer again presents you with the printer/screen prompt, in case you wish to index a different disk or folder. To return to the menu, press [Esc]. There is no corresponding selection for Index in GEM mode, as File Selector Boxes contain filenames. Unfortunately, information on file size or whether or not they are ST Writer files is not available in GEM mode. INSERTING TEXT. To insert text, simply position the cursor where you want and begin typing. ST Writer pushes the text to the right of and below your insertion as far as necessary to accomodate the new text. Use the same procedure to enter formatting commands within a text file that you've already written. Pressing the [Insert] key toggles between insertion and type-over mode. A capital 'I' near the bottom right of the screen indicates insert mode, and an inverse capital 'T' indicates type-over mode. INSTALL PRINTER. The Install Printer accessory from the Desk menu on the GEM desktop allows you to choose the type printer you will be using (dot matrix or daisywheel, black and white or color, dot configuration), paper use (single sheet or continuous feed), and quality of print (draft or final). If the codes for draft or final have been placed in your printer configuration file, you can selec single- (draft) or double- (final) strike printing. You may also change ports so that your text gets printed via the modem (RS232) serial port, rather than to the parallel printer port. JUSTIFIED RIGHT MARGINS. The justified right margin command works like a simple On/Off switch. The default value of 0, displayed next to the inverse video J in the Print Formatting Block, gives you nonjustified (ragged) right margins. For justified right margins, change this value to 1. You can change from one to the other within a text file by entering [Control J] and the appropriate value. LINE SPACING. ST Writer measures line spacing in half-lines. The default value for line spacing is single spacing, represented by the 2 next to the inverse video S in the Print Formatting Block. For double spacing, change this value to 4. To vary line spacing within a document, press [Control S] and type in the appropriate value wherever you want the spacing to change. The new value must be an even number. When you use [Return]s to create blank lines in a text file, keep in mind that ST Writer inserts blank lines according to the value of S for each such [Return]. LOAD FILE. To load a text file from a disk drive, select Load File from the ST Writer menu by pressing L. At the Load file: prompt, enter the Path name (see Path name) for the file you wish to load. If you've previously loaded or created a text file during the current session, ST Writer first asks, Erase file in memory, Y/N ?. An exception to this happens if you've previously saved the file and did not edit it after the last save -- the new file is simply loaded when you enter its name. If you press Y, the file in memory is erased, whether or not you proceed with the load. In GEM mode, you are supplied with a File Selector Box from which you click on the file you want loaded. See PATH NAME for details. If while loading a file ST Writer finds that your computer's memory is full, Buffer is full, file not loaded appears in your Message Window. That part of the file that's been loaded is erased from memory. If you load in a non-ST Writer file, the file must be converted to ST Writer format, and this takes some time. Essentially, all line-feeds are discarded, and all carriage returns replaced with nulls. Also, all tabs are replaced with 5 blank spaces. You can toggle off the tab conversion when prompted by answering 'N' (No) to the query Change Tabs to Spaces? In this case, your file may be punctuated with a lot of [Control I] characters, which represents the tab character. This would usually be done only by experienced computer users. LOCKING FILES. To lock a text file that you've saved to disk, you must return to the GEM desktop (see Quit). Open a window for the drive that contains the file to be locked, and select the file by pointing to its icon (or filename) and clicking the left mouse button once so the icon is highlighted. Then point at the File heading on the Menu Bar, and select the Show Info option. This is the same Dialog Box you would use to rename the file. To lock the file, select Read-Only, then OK. If you load a locked text file, revise it with ST Writer, and then try to save it again under the same filename, ST Writer asks, ALREADY EXISTS, 'Y' to replace it. If you type Y (no [Return] necessary) ST Writer gives you the message ERROR trying to open the file. Press any key to return to the Save file: prompt and enter a different name under which to save the file. MARGINS. ST Writer measures a page from top to bottom in half-lines, and from left to right in character spaces. The default values for page margins are represented in the Print Formatting Block as follows: T12 B12 L10 R70 Top Bottom Left Right To change any of these margins for the entire text file, simply delete the value shown and type in your own. You can also change margins within a file; just press [Control] and the appropriate letter, then type in the value you want. Values for the top and bottom margin must be even numbers. You may have to experiment a bit, adjusting the paper in your printer, to get the correct top margins on your printed pages. With the default value of 12 for T, your top margins should be one inch. For a continuous printout of a file, without page breaks, set your top and bottom margins at 0 and delete any headers or footers from the file. MERGING TEXT. You can merge a saved ST Writer file, or other ASCII file from disk with the file currently in your computer's memory with this command. Keep in mind, though, that when merging files you run the risk of overflowing your computer's free memory. To merge two files, first position the cursor where you want the merged text to appear in the file currently in your computer's memory. Then press function key [F8]. ST Writer then prompts Load file:, at which you should enter a Path name for the file to be merged (see Path name). If while merging one file with another ST Writer finds that your computer's free memory is full, a warning message appears in the Message Window, the merge is halted and that portion of the merged file that has loaded is erased. MOVING TEXT. To move a block of text from one place to another in a text file, position the cursor at the beginning of the passage you want to move and press [Shift F5]. Then move the cursor to the end of the passage and press [Shift F5] again. Next, move the cursor to the point where you want to reposition the passage, and press [Shift F2]. Remember that you can move only about 40,000 bytes of text (the capacity of your failsafe buffer) at a time. If you want to move a larger block of text, do it in segments. PAGE EJECT. Use this command when you want ST Writer to halt printing at a given point in a text file and space to the top of the next page before printing is resumed -- for example, in a multisection document where you want each section to begin on a fresh page. To enter this command, position the cursor where you want a page eject to take place and press [Control E]. A number following [Control E] specifies a conditional page eject. The number is the number of lines to appear in a block, and should not exceed the number of lines between the top and bottom margins. If the block will not fit on the current page, it will appear on the following page. PAGE LENGTH. When formatting and printing a text file, ST Writer uses this formatting command -- represented by the inverse video Y in the Print Formatting Block -- to determine where the next printed page should begin. Keep your page length set at the default value of 132 (half-lines) for 8 1/2 by 11-inch paper. For a continuous printout of a text file without page breaks, set your top and bottom margins at 0 and delete any headers or footers from the file. Values for page length must be even numbers, and 224 is the maximum value of Y that ST Writer allows. PAGE NUMBERING. See Headers, footers, and page numbering. PAGE WAIT. Use this command when you want to print a text file on separate sheets of paper -- for example, on bond, letterhead, or your personal stationery. Enter [Control W] in the Print Formatting Block at the top of your file for a page wait on every page of the file. ST Writer will stop printing at the bottom of each page; after inserting a fresh sheet of paper in your printer, press any key to start printing the next page. You may also invoke this command by using the Install Printer desk accessory, and using the "single" sheet selection. When printing to the screen, [Control W] causes the screen scrolling to halt when the screen is full. Hit any key to continue scrolling, or [Esc] to exit. PARAGRAPHS. Mark the beginning of every paragraph by pressing [Control P] -- ST Writer displays an inverse video letter P at that point on your screen. Press [Return] at the end of each paragraph -- ST Writer displays an inverse video 'less than' symbol at that point. Two formatting commands control how your paragraphs appear when formatted and printed by ST Writer. The default value for paragraph spacing, displayed next to the inverse video D in the Print Formatting Block, is 4 blank half-lines, or double spacing, between paragraphs. To change this value, just delete the 4 and type in the value you want. The default value for paragraph indentation, displayed next to the inverse video I in the Print Formatting Block, is 5 spaces (from the left page margin). For a different paragraph indentation, delete the 5 and substitute the value you want. To vary paragraph spacing within a new file, press [Control D] and type a new value where you want the spacing to change, then press [Return]. To change paragraph indentation, press [Control I] and enter a new value. For bibliographies, ST Writer also allows negative indentation (outdenting or undenting). Type [Control I] followed by a negative value (eg., [-5]). Each time a [Control P] is encountered thereafter, the first line of the paragraph will be alligned flush with the left margin, and succeeding lines will be indented. PATH NAME. Path names are used to indicate files held in folders on your disk. See your ATARI ST Owner's Manual for a description of folders and how to use them. Path names can be entered at any of ST Writer's prompts for filenames or Path names. A path name is similar to a filename, but may also optionally indicate a folder name (or folder names) in order to tell ST Writer what path to take through your various directories and subdirectories in order to access your file. Say, for example, that you would like to use a folder named TEXT to hold your ST Writer files. To create the folder, follow the instructions for Creating Folders in your ATARI ST Owner's Manual. Then, after invoking ST Writer and creating your file, press [Esc] to return to the main menu and select Save File by pressing the S key. At the prompt, first enter the drive identifier (A:, B:, or C:), then type a reverse slash (the key to the right of the [Return] key), then the folder name (TEXT), then another reverse slash, then the filename under which you wish to save the file (e.g. B:\TEXT\MYFILE.TXT). Thus, a path name is simply a filename with one or more folder names inserted, offset by reverse slash marks. To obtain a directory listing of the folder TEXT, select Index of Files from the main menu, select Screen or Printer, then at the prompt for Path name:, type B:\TEXT and [Return]. Since folders can contain folders, you can use more than one folder name in a path name. For instance, if the disk in drive B: contains a folder named LETTERS in the folder named TEXT, a path name to file MYFILE would resemble this: B:\TEXT\LETTERS\MYFILE. In GEM mode, file selection is done slightly differently. A File Selector Box appears with the current "path" on the top line. You may change the path by placing the cursor on the line by pointing and clicking the mouse, then either back-spacing over it, or pressing [Esc]. You can then type in the above path name ( B:\TEXT\LETTERS\*.* ). Move the mouse inside the File Selector Box and click. All files in the LETTERS folder will be listed. This is because you used a "wild card" specifier [*]. If you only wanted files ending with .TXT, you would have typed: B:\TEXT\LETTERS\*.TXT [TAB] (Note: File Selector Boxes use the [TAB] key in place of the [RETURN] key.) You may then click on the file wanted followed by clicking the OK box, or double click on the selected file, and it will load, be saved, or delete, depending which function you had selected. PRINTER CONTROLS. If you do not have an Epson or Epson-compatible printer (including the ATARI SMM804), you can still format and print your ST Writer text files by entering the desired printer controls directly in your files. Wherever you want to enter a printer control, first press [Control O], then type in the decimal equivalent of the appropriate code understood by your printer. For instance, to send a decimal code 15, type [Control O]15. Be sure to type a space after the number -- ST Writer uses this space as a delimiter. You should be able to find a listing of codes used by your printer in the manual that came with it. Note: when you enter a printer control code with [Control O] on a page, that entire page will be formatted by the code you enter. PRINT FILE. You can print your text to the screen (see Print preview), to a disk file, to a serial printer or modem, or to a parallel printer. (Note: To print to a printer or modem connected to your computer's RS232 serial port, first use the Install Printer option from the GEM desktop Desk menu to set the Printer Port to Modem, -- see your ST Owner's Manual -- then print to the printer as usual.) To print a file, load it in memory if not already present, go to the ST Writer menu, and press P. ST Writer prompts, Enter Printer, Disk, Screen, spooLer? -- press the highlighted capital letter of the desired output device. For further instructions on printing to the screen, see Print preview. The message Searching for printer config file on disk appears in the Message Window as soon as ST Writer has loaded into the computer, and the disk drive spins momentarily. When this happens, ST Writer is looking for the file XYZZX.DAT on your default drive; the drive from which you loaded the ST Writer program. For further information on this file, see Printer Configuration File. Whether or not the printer configuration file is found, ST Writer still can print your file. From the ST Writer menu, to print your file to a printer, press P. Note: If your printer supports proportional print and you wish to use this, you must first return to the GEM desktop and use the Install Printer option from the Desk menu to set Printer Type to Daisy. To send the formatted text to a disk file that you can later transmit to another computer or print out directly from the GEM desktop, press D. ST Writer prompts you for a file name and then sends the formatted text to that file. The spooler option (press L) lets you print to a disk file with all your printer control codes embedded along with your text. A properly formatted file for your printer can later be printed directly to your type of printer from the GEM desktop. The next prompt, Enter number of copies?, is followed by the number 1. Press [Return] to accept the default value of one copy. To print more than one copy, type the new number of copies, then press [Return]. Next ST Writer prompts Print whole document Y/N?. Type Y (or just press [Return]) to print the entire text, or type N to print a range of pages. If you press N, ST Writer asks you for the beginning page number with the prompt Enter first?. Press [Return] to accept the default value, page 1, or press [Backspace] once and type a new beginning page number and [Return]. Then at the prompt Enter last?, press [Return] to accept the default last page 999, or use [Backspace] to edit the entry. Finally, you are asked if you want letter quality print, and a 'Y' appears if you have selected letter quality print in the printer configuration desk accessory, or an 'N' if you did not. You may change the 'Y' to 'N' or vice versa at this point, or simply press [Return] if the correct letter is present. To temporarily halt printing, press [Control S], and to resume, press any key. You can stop printing and return to the main menu at any time by pressing the [Esc] key. Hint: Printing your file to a disk file is a convenient way of creating documentation on disk for a program you've written. Users can show a file printed to disk on the screen or print it out from the GEM desktop by double-clicking the file's icon or filename. Type instructions for your program into ST Writer, then print the text to a file named README.DOC, then write "Show (print) README.DOC for instructions" on your disk label. Remember to adjust the left margin to one. In GEM mode, there is one dialog box which allows you to select the number of copies, the range of pages to print, and the device to print to. PRINT PREVIEW. This feature of ST Writer lets you examine a formatted text file on your monitor screen prior to printing it. You can use Print preview at any time while creating or editing a file. For a print preview, press [Esc] from the editor to return to the ST Writer menu, then select Print File. At the prompt Enter Printer, Disk, Screen SpooLer? press S for screen print. For directions for responding to the next prompt, Print whole document Y/N?, see Print File above. Next, ST Writer prints your formatted file to the screen, showing each page break with a dotted line across the screen width. To pause this screen print, press [Control S], then press any key to resume the listing. Return to the ST Writer menu any time by pressing [Esc]. PRINT STYLES. (fonts). ST Writer offers you a choice of sixteen combinations of print styles or fonts -- check the manual that came with your printer to see which ones your printer is capable of. The default print style of ST Writer, represented by the 0 next to the inverse video G in the Print Formatting Block is Pica, or 10 characters per inch (CPI). To format your entire file for condensed print (16.7 CPI), change this value to 2. For bold print, change it to 1, and to print in italics, change it to 4. To print in Elite style, type 8 after the inverse video G. To vary the print style within a file, position the cursor where you want a new print style to begin, press [Control G], and type in the value desired. You can add the above values to use more than one style at a time -- use this table: CONTROL G STYLE CODE 0 Pica 1 Bold 2 Condensed 4 Italics 8 Elite To combine print styles, add the values for the required styles. For instance, to print Bold Elite, type [Control G]9, then a hyphen, then the text. The hyphen will not appear in the text printout. The print styles you select are not represented as such in Print preview except for elongated, which appears as letters with single spaces in between. The GLOBAL FORMAT dialog box simplifies this task. See GLOBAL FORMAT. PRINTER CONFIGURATION FILE. ST Writer comes with a special printer configuration program called CONFIG.TOS. When run, CONFIG.TOS looks on disk for a file names CONFIG.TXT and reads it into memory. CONFIG.TXT is nothing more than a saved ST Writer file containing all necessary printer codes for the user's individual printer. After reading CONFIG.TXT, CONFIG.TOS converts the text into special code and saves it back to disk, creating a file named XYZZX.DAT. ST Writer searches on the disk it was booted from for XYZZX.DAT and uses its codes to properly interface with the printer. Once you create an XYZZX.DAT file for your particular printer, you never need to go through it again. Be sure to make a backup copy of CONFIG.TXT. The only two files you need on any disk to operate ST Writer are the STWRITER.PRG program itself and XYZZX.DAT. To modify the printer configuration file, pull up your printer manual and load a backup copy of CONFIG.TXT into ST Writer and examine it. Any line of text beginning with an asterisk (*) is a comment for your information only and is ignored by the CONFIG.TOS program. For the moment, let's skip over the first section of the file and edit a fairly simple example. Look for the comment: *underline on. Following *underline on are a list of numbers: 27, 45, 1, 255, 255, 255, etc. Each of these numbers is a printer code in decimal representing the command to turn on the underline. The 255's are fillers where there is no printer code number. Look in your printer manual for the proper codes to turn on the underline. If your printer codes are listed in decimal--sometimes shown as CHR$(27), CHR$(45), CHR$(1)--you're lucky. Printer codes are also often listed in hexadecimal or ASCII form. Hex is indicated by either a preceding dollar sign or by the presence of the letters A through F. The underline on codes above would appear in hexadecimal as: $1B, 2D, $01. In ASCII notation underline on would be: Esc., -, SOH. Whichever the case, if your printer codes are in hexadecimal you wil need to convert them to decimal with a table, and if they are in ASCII, you will need an ASCII chart. Fortunately, many printer manuals have conversion charts in their appendeces. Go down the line of CONFIG.TXT codes and replace any codes that disagree with those codes in your printer manual. If your printer requires, say, four codes for a function that prviously contained three, replace one of the the 255's with the fourth code. Likewise, if your printer is one code short, replace the old, extra code number with a 255. It is very important that each function segment in CONFIG.TXT contains eight codes, so edit carefully. If you are uncertain about a particular function, leave it alone. Change as little as possible. You can always re-edit and try again. Go back and look at the top of CONFIG.TXT. A short chart at the top shows the necessary code numbers to use for certain parameters. It is set up for 80-column printers, but if you have at least 132 columns, substitute 8712 for 5280. This number is critical if you want more than 160 columns (condensed elite on an 80-column printer). You can get 198 columns (condensed on a 132-column printer) if you don't try printing more columns than your printer can handle. The character translation table may appear confusing, but it merely lists the ASCII equivalent of all the characters in the character set, from 0 to 255. Unlike the remainder of CONFIG.TXT, these numbers are in hexadecimal (represented in this case by 0x), so if you are not sure what they represent, see a table or the character set in your printer manual. Beyond the standard range of alphanumeric ASCII characters is an extra character set. The ST sees these extra characters as one thing, but your individual printer sees them as another. Many printers have their own special character set. The character translation table in CONFIG.TXT is designed to make the two jibe as much as possible. Currently, the table is set up for Atari printers. If you don't have an Atari printer, you won't have all the special characters, so you can configure your printer driver to print the characters you do have, even if they have a different ASCII number. For example, my Star Micronics NX-10 printer has the paragraph symbol located at 0x14 (decimal 20), but on the ST, that symbol has the value 0xbc (decimal 188). I found 0xbc in the table and replaced it with 0x14. Now, every time I use the paragraph symbol in text to be printed, it will print as though I were using an Atari printer. Don't bother changing table values below 0x20 because ST Writer uses those for formatting codes, and they will never be sent to your printer. Once you have completed editing CONFIG.TXT, save it back to disk under the same name. Return to the GEM Desktop and make sure you have both CONFIG.TOS and the newly edited CONFIG.TXT on the same disk. Double-click on CONFIG.TOS. In as short while, it will create a XYZZX.DAT file on your disk. Place this file on the same disk as STWRITER.PRG and you're ready to go. You might create a short ST Writer file which uses all the printer commands you wish to test. This way you can quickly try out the different functions and see how successful your edit has been. QUIT. Use this command to exit ST Writer and return to the GEM desktop. From the main menu press Q. If you have made any changes to your text file since the last time you saved it, ST Writer prompts Quit without saving file in memory?. Press Y or y to exit ST Writer, or any other key to return to the main menu. RECEIVE ATARIWRITERTM. Use this function to transfer a file from an ATARI 400, 800, XL or current XE Computer using AtariWriter or AtariWriter Plus to your ST. You must have an ATARI 850 Interface Module (or equivalent) connected to your 400, 800, XL or XE Computer and a "null-modem cable" (see below) in order to make this transfer (300 baud). You may also load in an 8-bit AtariWriter file from disk, and ST Writer will convert the file. A special cable called a "null modem cable" is required to connect the two computers. You probably will not be able to find such a cable ready-made -- you must either make it yourself or have it made for you. Most cities have stores that will custom-make a cable for a reasonable fee. To make the cable, obtain a female 25-pin connector for the ST end, a female 9-pin connector for the 850 end, and a length of cable with at least five wires. Connect these pins on the two connectors: 25-pin pin # TO: 9-pin pin # ------------ --- ----------- 2 4 3 3 4 8 7 5 8 7 To transfer a file, first load AtariWriter or AtariWriter Plus and the file to be transferred into your ATARI 400, 800, XL or XE. Make sure that you have downloaded the RS232 handler from the 850 -- follow the instructions with your DOS manual. If using AtariWriter Plus, make sure your 850 Interface is connected and turned on before you load the program disk. Next, on your ST, run ST Writer. Connect the two computers with your cable. Next, press R on the ST keyboard to activate the Receive file from 850 command. Then press S on the other computer's keyboard to Save File. When prompted for DEVICE:FILENAME, enter R: and press [Return]. The file is then transferred to the ST Writer text buffer, where you see it appear. After the transfer is finished, it's a good idea to save the transferred file to disk for safekeeping before editing it. SAVE ASCII. This is a MENU selection in GEM mode, but in non-GEM mode when you type 'S' to SAVE a file, you will be asked if you want to "Save in ASCII format?" The default is 'N' (No), and merely pressing the [Return] key negates an ASCII save. However, selecting ASCII SAVE allows you to write an ASCII file to disk. This is the same as printing to disk, as every line gets a carriage return and line feed appended to it. The major exception is that the left margin will be 1, and the right can be set up to 160 (for an 80 column printer driver). All blank spaces at the end of a line or page will be discarded. If you MUST have blanks at the end of a line, use the Elongated text control [Shift F9] followed by exactly 1/2 the number of blank spaces needed, and then a terminating [Shift F9]. This tricks the formatter into writing blank spaces at the end of a line or page. SAVE ASCII files will not re-load into ST Writer Elite without conversion to ST Writer format, but can be easily loaded into other word processors or text editors. It is a good idea to use a ".DOC" extender on ASCII filenames so as not to confuse them with files saved in ST Writer format. SAVE BLOCK. After marking the beginning and end of a block of text with [Shift F5], you can save the marked block to a disk file. Mark the block, then press [Shift F8]. ST Writer prompts for a filename with: Save block as:. Enter a filename or Path name, then press [Return] to save the block on disk. You can merge this text with another file with the F8 key (see Merging text.) Hint: an easy way to delete the block markers after saving the block (40,000 bytes or less only) is to press [F5] to delete the block, then [Undo] to restore it. SAVE FILE. To store a text file on a diskette, select Save File from the ST Writer menu by pressing S. When asked "Save in ASCII format?", hit the return key. Insert a formatted disk in your disk drive (if you don't have a formatted disk on hand, you can have ST Writer format one for you -- see Format Disk.) Then type a filename (optionally including Path name -- see Path name), and press [Return]. If your file already has a filename associated with it (i.e. you previously loaded it from disk, rather than creating it from scratch), ST Writer prints out that name after the Save file: prompt. Simply press [Return] to save the file. Important Note: In the latter case, or if the filename you have entered already exists on disk, ST Writer does not print a warning message in the Message Window. Therefore if you wish to retain an original copy of the document you are editing, save the edited version under a different filename. In GEM mode, this is done by selecting "Save". Selecting "Save AS..." allows you to specify another filename to save it under. SEARCH AND REPLACE. Use this feature of ST Writer to search for, replace, or delete any string of text up to 57 characters in length. On command, ST Writer executes a search from the current position of the cursor to the end or the beginning of a text file, in either direction. There are four ways to search; Search Reverse, Search Forward, Replace, and Query Replace. To conduct a Forward Search, from the cursor position to the end of a file, press function key F6. ST Writer then prompts Forward search : in the Message Window. Enter the character, word, or phrase you wish to find, then press the [Esc]. Using the [Esc] key as a terminator in the search phrase allows you to search for phrases that include the [Return] character. You can also search for other non-alphanumeric characters, including all [Control] key combinations. Pressing [Esc] activates the search, whereupon ST Writer moves the cursor to the first incidence of the sought phrase. If it does not appear in the text, the Message Window shows String was not found. If found, to search again for the same phrase, press F6 again. The Forward search : prompt reappears, followed by the last seach phrase. Simply press [Esc] to search for that phrase. To search for a different phrase, press any key and the old search phrase is automatically deleted, making room for a new search phrase. To search backwards in your file, press [Shift F6]. Reverse Search works identically to Forward Search, except that it searches from the cursor position to the beginning of the file, rather than to the end. Forward Search and Reverse Search use the same buffer for the search phrase. If you want to replace the phrase you're searching for with a different phrase, use function key F7. Pressing F7 alone causes ST Writer to confirm each replacement operation with you, and [Shift F7] effects replacement of all occurrences of the sought phrase without verification, also known as global replace. After pressing either, ST Writer prompts: (Query) Replace :. Enter the search phrase (including presses of [Return], if applicable), then press the [Esc] key. Next, ST Writer prompts: With :. Enter the phrase that is to replace the search phrase. For instance, you can use Replace to change the name John to Jack through your entire manuscript. If you have selected Query Replace, and the search phrase is found, the message window prompts: Type 'Y' to replace string:. Pressing Y replaces the phrase and moves the cursor forward to the next occurrence of the search phrase (if any). Pressing any other key does not perform the replacement, but still moves the cursor to the next incidence of the search phrase. Note that Replace and Query Replace search forward only from the cursor position. Note: if, while entering a search or replace phrase, you decide not to make the search after all, press [Control K] to abort the process and return to editing your document. If you press [Shift F7] for global replace, all incidences of the search phrase are automatically replaced by the replace phrase without query. This is a powerful command, and should be used carefully! When entering a search phrase, you must type it exactly as it appears in your file. When the string is a single short word that might appear in your file as a part of longer words, it's a good idea to type in blank spaces before and after it. If you do this, though, include the same blank spaces in your replace phrase. And keep in mind that ST Writer will not recognize occurrences of such a search phrase that have punctuation marks immediately before or after them. To halt a search-and-replace operation, press [Esc]. SECTION HEADINGS. Use this feature of ST Writer to number section and subsection headings in a multisection document. The easiest way to explain its use is with an example. Say you're writing a text file about nutrition. In outline, it includes the following sections and subsections: Fruits and vegetables Fruits Fresh fruits Preserves Vegetables Dairy Products To number each of these section and subsection headings when entering them in your file, press [Control U] and type the number of the section level, then the text of the heading and [Return]. In this case, Fruits and vegetables is the highest level of headings, so you type 1 after [Shift F8]. The section level for both Fruits and Vegetables is 2, and 3 for both Fresh fruits and Preserves. For Dairy products, you return to a section level of 1. You can specify section levels of 1 through 9. Wherever you enter a section heading command and number, ST Writer displays a European paragraph symbol followed by the section level number you've entered. When it formats and prints your file, ST Writer numbers your section headings, raising the numbers for each occurrence of a section heading command at a given level. In other words, the section headings in your file on nutrition would be numbered as follows: 1 Fruits and vegetables 1.1 Fruits 1.1.1 Fresh fruits 1.1.2 Preserves 1.2 Vegetables 2 Dairy products You should format your section headings according to your preferences. Add as many spaces between each section level number and heading as you want between the section number and heading. And use paragraph markers, center or block text right commands, and print style commands in combination with your section heading commands to format your headings the way you want them. To reset your numbering of section headings -- say, in a large document where you want a numbered system of headings in each chapter -- press [Control U] and type the number 0. Then press [Control U] again and the desired level number when you enter your next heading. SOURCE FILES. You can create source code files in BASIC, LOGO, C, etc. with ST Writer. Set [Control B] to 0 (zero), [Control G] to 10, [Control L] to 1, [Control R] to 160 and [Control T] to 0. Be certain that none of your lines of code exceed the 160 (80 column printer driver) or 198 character (136 column printer driver) limit without an intervening carriage return. Also, the last page of your source code may not fill up the whole page, and when printed will have several carriage returns following the text. Use the print preview to find the page break (occurring at the end of the each page). When you see the beginning of the last page, make note of the position and number of lines on the final page in the file. Then edit your file by inserting [Control Y] followed by a number that is double the number of lines on the last page, somewhere in the text prior to the end. Then Print your file to disk. It is a good idea to also Save your text file under another name in case you wish to edit it later. SPECIAL CHARACTERS. Ordinarily, all ST characters with ASCII values less than 32 ($20 Hex) cannot be used in your text, as these have special meaning to printers, and are used internally by ST Writer as formatting directives. However, using [Control X] before and after such characters will temporarily shut off the interpretation of such characters in their usual meaning and will actually insert them into your text (particularly useful if you are planning to "SAVE ASCII" (GEM mode only) and the disk file you are creating requires such characters to maintain its integrity. This feature is for experienced programmers. Most control codes can be produced using [Control X][Control {Key}][Control X]. You may use as many [Control {key}] characters between the [Control X] formatting commands as needed, but no normal chararacters (ASCII numbers greater than 31, $1F Hex) with the exception of [\] which is used solely before a [Control X] to differentiate it from a terminating [Control X] formatting command. Exceptions to the normal {key} characters are: To get: Use: ASCII 0 (null) [ Return ] [ Control A ] [ Control U ] [ Control U ] [ Shift F5 ] [ Control X ] \[ Control X ] [ Control Z ] [ Control : ] [ Escape ] [ Control [ ] or [ Control ; ] ASCII $1C [ Control < ] or [ Control \ ] ASCII $1D [ Control = ] or [ Control ] ] ASCII $1E [ Control > ] or [ Control ^ ] ASCII $1F [ Control ? ] or [ Control _ ] SUBSCRIPTS AND SUPERSCRIPTS. Printed a half-line below or above the line, subscripts and superscripts are especially useful when you're writing about chemical or mathematical formulas or including footnote numbers in your text files. (Check the manual that came with your printer to see if it's capable of printing subscripts and superscripts.) To specify a subscript, press function key F10 before typing the material to be subscripted and [Shift F10] after. To specify a superscript, press [Shift F10] before and F10 after the material to be superscripted. ST Writer displays inverse video up and down arrows where these commands are entered. So the chemical formula for water would appear on your screen as H(down arrow)2(up arrow)O, and Einstein's famous Theory of Relativity as E=mc(up arrow)2(down arrow). If you wanted to use a superscript o as a degree symbol, the boiling point of water would appear as 212(up arrow)o(down arrow)F. TABS. The series of arrows that appear every five spaces along the top of your Message Window each time you begin a work session with ST Writer are the default Tab settings of ST Writer. To remove any of the default Tab settings (or stops), first move your cursor to a Tab stop and press [Shift F4]. ST Writer prompts you to Type 'Y' to clear current tab stop: -- pressing Y clears the stop and removes its arrow from the Message Window. Conversely, to set a new Tab stop, simply position the cursor at the desired setting and press function key F4. To clear all Tab stops, press [Control Tab], and to restore ST Writer's default tab stops, press [Shift Tab]. Here are some important facts to know about using Tabs. Using the Tab key alone always inserts spaces to the next Tab stop. To tab forward to the next stop without inserting spaces, press [Shift (right arrow)], and to tab backward to the previous tab stop, press [Shift (left arrow)]. Also, Tab settings are saved along with your text file; thus, you don't need to reset them each time you load and edit the file. Tabs are perhaps most often used to create columns of numbers or words. In such applications, we highly recommend that you use ST Writer in TOS's medium or high resolution to take advantage of the 80-column screen for proper layout of your document. UNDERLINING TEXT. To enter underlined text in a file, press [Shift F3] before typing in the text. An inverse video underline character appears. Press [Shift F3] again to return to ordinary text. UPPER AND LOWERCASE CHARACTERS. To enter a single upper-case character, of course, you hold down the [Shift] key while typing the character. For all uppercase letters, press the [Caps Lock] key, whereupon the letter C appears in the right half of the message window, and press it again to return to all lowercase. With ST Writer you can also change letters that you've already entered from lower to uppercase or vice versa. To do this, position the cursor on the letter you want to change and press function key F3. To change a series of characters, simply hold down the F3 key. rn. Just be sure that they match the spaces left in your form, and are in the correct order. The DATA file must be printed to disk with top and bottom margins set to 0 (zero), L set to 1, R set to 198, G set to 2 and Y set to twice the number of lines in the file (maximum Y is 224). Alternatively, you can also use mailing addresses created and sorted by DB Master One. Simply print the sorted addresses to a disk file. The computer will prompt you asking for the file name of your DATA file if you indicate that STWRITER is to use a disk file as the data source. If you do not wish to use a data file as a source of your insert data, you may simply type`1Q` Efv*oM\ m HPHUBg?<JNA(m)m -:gS)@ -OK1PC#HN Hx?<HNA@)@l/?<HNA)@h&@)@XЬl)@d)@`ARCpr Ѝ"QHNFALNHz2?< NA\pdAxr0XQ)K\NNHAᤐ NuN ,`NuJrBjNuHz?<&NN\CAp$L Qp NBlJpNNpMN9@pdAr 0Q0tr N9lNupealp`NuaNJHz?<&NNBWNANC2A@p222NrҌ0<NB0,rNurA9Ar`v C9Cr`rt9@9A9BNrrҌpsNB0,Nu9@N`rDҌpsNBNuC2 @ e @}bA@p222Nr,Ҍ0<NBNu Hn 2$4BBNuAd RdQRB BbABJk 0NuJBjBBXNu 0Nu 2$NuE`B<gJEgEjCDEDF Fe( F dF8BCHC` F0bFHC8v` HD8HDkDуdQRBNuDdBDA@kgAр[SBk0NuJlJBk&Nu0g H@rB JkЀ[` BbNuJBj prtNuHPAJgPpr$< _Nup _NtNu&8*JEgJBgJjBEB:HC҅H@:|ۆ҄ۆ<HC>H@ЃdHA@B@H@хk HAҁHAрSB BbNuNpNNuCDEJEgJBgJjBEBQ*HE?<>0rHGGdHGGdSWDуdi\?<>0rHGGdHGGdSWDуdiN?<>0rHGGdHGGdSW2 H@Nx?<,>CEdGH@0r`?<`JBgVB&8TTDуdQRBNuDAр&AdRAрAрDуNuprt|=|  g +g -f .g20  b 0e 9b da`RF` .f 0e 9b dajSF` Eg efX +g -f 0e 9oSH`00  b&Hz0  b E Do`HJjDDDS4</NJFkSFk&aQN`Ha"FFaQL8N^6.JgtBnNupr$<NuJBk4<rpAC v JBgJjv-| Bb BkH>aaNRFBdL8?N^<JBga2SF Be BgQRB`ApdR e <rRF&0xafEv+0JFjDFv-Hƌd0BFHF 0HF0ANuprt|`2:HQ A dNAXJ@jNNu ::/rI IN<,(k$/<??<?N`NA Jj ?a0NNHrO INLA NNN` A$ HJo d*b` QjNuQjNubNNpvN)@p `H@)@prtNAHplrtNB 2pNpNpapaprapalpalpalpaTpaTpaTBp'a?<NNT@B){L9|0<rtNpapap9@p`pvNv`v`vj`v `v`v`v`?Aa*` Al 2l 4)lVH)lRprtNAl 2l 4HVNu9Cp rtNAv` Av `Avl 2l 4)lVHNaBp0,l 2Nua40,HNua*p0,l 4Nuaprt0,l 22,l 44,NuN9||BlBlrҌpsNBNu0<}Nr& ?<NNC`&?<NNT"@ C <}N`Np@((?<NN.?<NNX@LvA HA HNuNup9@HA)A,N^ FN @e024E$ Bb5B5A6CC5CK5CAB008:Dk`Ek\00<,>,SFSGFnHGnDDDk9DBlDEk9EBlFcllGcll0,lb 0,lcNuRpmrtA)HA)HNpNrHHPN^4 _:8><DbFEbGCHP@dʾAdBD2ƞE29|C???FF22N23BRG0@\@Nr"2)INR(* 9AJA)H@@[000][ˈN Evz`* [g" ]g |g QSz` zQSpQ][ɈN Dvx`* [g" ]g |g QSx` xQSpQ]Bp4NHNu*( INA)H @depd ae zb QB DNA\)H @ e` ae zb \gQBA BhNpZNA BP"`#|}N*A"H0,tg"Hg \f`A\fS A ENrAR@H`2QNu2(g"P@g2RADAH""l`r2oZAe 1@#)I`Nuk1@Nup NN"l`dpNAtrdJhk\QpaNH ld$l`"Hg: k&@0+R`g k#&@0+S@H3 Q&f)I`LNu?<?<NAXJgJgNlAH@B pNA NuApNA0pNN$N$BS@kH2QNupC ұd"X0Pg"RA$D#Nu"X0NuNJ@gpNu _0HpN _0HpNp"_0HqNp"_0HqNE ұeHHQ0)Nr$_$ZR@H`2QNu$Y0gHR@@"D%$X0P2g# R@%NupE $ $X0dP.gRG,D%pr Y2dP.gRG,D!p4Ae4v`VfANuN`WHNuJhg N1NlNu Ihd*N$E$RR@H`2QˈN ENu Ihd"*N$E8*$R`"QˈN ENu2)A IJAfr4(Ae*RBBc0*SA?N$E$R`QˈN ENup`(* 0(iN$E 4R`Q$D 4R`QˈN DN ENu2p <0N`QNur ,* N& ( EN C"Sj|AcJf`CfSHj-D@Hd0H@H 0H@0`fSC\fS , @a"C\fApNNNxHP?< NA\NuH@aa/a a Nu@0 9c^Nu| PC>$Error # ][Abort]\f.B &lX)K\)ld` lp ,BQjNup(NV"l`Yd&-KNN"l`YepN&#k"C-KN"Cփk փk2##`փk"`2`$Y8gHRDD*D%H8#$c2g# HRDD%H`?<NNT+@HA1nNX -HJWHfN ?<HxHx?<NN pp@pWBg?<NN\pp@pW?<?<NN\pp@pW?<?<NN\pp@pW?<?<NN\ -HU]HfN +|ǀLN!+|LNO Page: Page: Line Up: Line Down: Start: End: Quit: CN <NC N N/ - /p""_N+|PA NAPNHm -P"_N,HPp Nl"_NfN!Hm pNl"-P"_N:N`NqNqHm p"_NN !]HfN"bA NU]HgN"bHm A NNfH <r$<L8NN"_NC N `Hm p"_NN !]HfN"A NU]HgN"Hm A NNfH <r$<L8NN"_NC N `A NU]HfN#2N\*.*HPA HPA""_NANJWHfN#,A1NXN#>A CN NJWHgN\+| T -TC퀔Np rRNCN p NlHPp Nl"_NpCN +|X -TNfH <r$<L8NNAXN/-XAC퀔NN`NqNqBAC퀔NpINlHPAr"_N,pN+@\ -\ ^HfN$:p"<NRC$N N$Lp"-\NRC$N pNHm$A"_N+@`N+@d -dNfH <@r$< L8NNC*N -dNfH -\Nf&<x*<N|&<@x*< N L8NFfN$A/NX -`JWHfN%A/NX -` ^HfN%(A0NXA C$N -\Nf&<x*<N|&<x*<N NC퀚NN -HU]HfN%pN*pN.pN2N%pN*pN.pN2prNn -L"<N -HJWHfN&?<?<?<??-NA0" Nr?<@?<A0"NNN LOADING ANN -- Length of File: -\NfNNN BytesNHmpC퀚N"_NNN,File LOAD is complete. Text FORMAT requires -\Nf&C6N A6NUWHfN*A6NN+@PA6NSWHfN*A6N+@| -|Nf&<x*<NFpJBgp/ -|Nf&<x*<NLpJBgp$VHfN+ -NfH -NfH -|NfH <r$<L8NL8NH -xNfL8NL8N N+@A-xNXB| -P PWHfN++|x+| -Э+@A-xNXBP -P HWHfN,,+|x+| -+@A-xNXBP -P KWHfN,l+|x+| -+@A-xNXBP -P MWHfN,+|x+| -Э+@A-xNXBP -P GWHfN,+|x+|+|A-xNXBP -P aWHfN-A1NX -P RWHfN-f+|x+| -tNfH <r$<L8NN+@A-xNXBP`&A1NXNxN -NfH -tNfH <r$<L8NL8NLfN- -tNfH <r$<L8NN+@ -J_HfN-+| -Nf&<x*<N H -tNfL8NjfN.l -+@X -tAXNN -XC퀔NNN`NqNqN. -+@X -AXNN -XC퀔NNN`NqNqNprN4pNlNppN+|ANA퀈NHmp"-"_N2N??<?<NM\N`NqNqNpNlNpqNN~N< ERROR! FILE TOO LONG!| File Must Be Text File Less|Than HPA*"_NpHPN2 Bytes With No Lines| Longer Than 240 Characters!"_NpC8pNAGEMENT. In order to load the ST Writer program into your Computer, if you don't have TOS in ROM, you must first load the TOS operating system from your ATARI TOS System Disk. Consult your ST Computer Owner's Manual for further instructions. Before you can store your ST Writer text files on a data disk, the disk must be formatted -- that is, organized into sectors so that your disk drive can keep track of where information is stored on it. You can format blank diskettes from the GEM desktop (see Owner's Manual). Or use the Format Disk selection from the ST Writer menu to format a blank disk while in the middle of a work session with ST Writer. For your own peace of mind, always make a backup copy of any disk you store ST Writer files on -- just so you'll have a duplicate in the event that something happens to your original. Your ST Owner's Manual also contains further details on this and other disk management functions. DOUBLE-COLUMN PRINTING. You can format a text file for double-column printing on any printer. To do so, you must enter formatting commands and values of the second (right-hand) column. You can do this either at the beginning of your file -- to print the whole file in double columns -- or at that point in the file where you want double-column printing to begin. To set the left margin for the second column, press [Control M], then type the number of the setting you want. Then press [Control N] and type the number of the setting you want for the right margin of the column. You may also have to adjust your settings for L and R, which control the margins for the first (left-hand) column of print in double-column printing. Always be sure that your first-column right margin and second-column left margin do not overlap, and that T and B margins are set the same for both columns. When you print to the screen a file that you've formatted for double-column printing, the two columns appear as they will print. DUPLICATING TEXT. To duplicate a portion of text from one part of a text file to another part of the file, first position the cursor at the beginning of what you want to duplicate and press [Shift F5]. Next, position the cursor at the end of what you want to duplicate and press [Shift F5] again. Finally, position the cursor where you want the text to be duplicated (the cursor must be outside the marked block), and press [F2]. From this point until you perform another deletion or duplication, the marked block of text is held in a failsafe buffer, and can be inserted anywhere in the document simply by positioning the cursor and pressing the [Undo] key. You may duplicate a block of text as many times as you like. If you want to duplicate it more than once, however, be careful not to delete anything until you've completed your duplication procedures. A block of text that you duplicate is stored in the failsafe text buffer of your computer, where it will be replaced by the next deletion. Also keep in mind that the capacity of your failsafe text buffer is about 40,000 characters of text. So if you want to duplicate a block of more than 13 pages or so, do it in segments. EDIT FILE. Select this option from the ST Writer menu when you want to revise or reformat a text file already in your computer's memory. ELONGATED PRINT. See Print styles (fonts). ERROR MESSAGES. When ST Writer finds a mistake in an entry or command that you've given, or detects a problem in your computer system, it displays the appropriate error message in the Message Window at the bottom of your screen. Press any key to continue. FILENAMES. Filenames may be up to eight characters in length, optionally followed by a period and a three-character extender -- for example, RFGUIDE.001. You must give every file a filename in order to save it on a disk. ST Writer uses the same conventions as your TOS operating system for allowable characters in filenames -- letters, numbers, and punctuation are permissible. Lower case letters are converted to upper case in the actual filename. FONTS. See Print styles. FOOTERS. See Headers, footers, and page numbering. FORMAT DISK. In order to store your ST Writer text files, disks must be formatted with TOS. While it's always a good idea to keep an extra formatted diskette on hand, (see Diskette management), you can use the Format Disk selection from the ST Writer menu to format a disk during a work session with ST Writer. Simply insert the diskette you want to format in your disk drive and select Format Disk from the menu by pressing F. The Message Window shows All data will be erased, 'Y' to format. Type Y to continue with the format operation. Type any other letter to return to the SELECT LETTER prompt. After typing Y, type A or B for the drive containing the disk you wish to format. Next you're asked Sides to format ( 1 or 2 ):2. Note that the default response for a double-sided drive is already supplied, and you need only press [Return] to begin such a format. To format single-sided, if you have an SF354 drive, type 1 and press [Return] -- the 2 disappears at the first keypress. At the prompt Enter name for disk: enter in a disk name following filename conventions (up to eight characters with an optional three-character extender), or just press [Return] for no disk name. The message Formatting disk appears and the disk is formatted. If there are any problems (such as the disk being write-protected), the message Unable to format disk. appears. Press any key to return to the SELECT LETTER prompt. FORMATTING TEXT FILES. How ST Writer formats your text files is controlled by a variety of formatting commands and values entered either in the Print Formatting Block at the top of each file or within the body of the file. Each time you select Create File from the ST Writer menu, the program's default values for formatting are refreshed in the Print Formatting Block, but you can change them or add to them as you wish. You can edit formatting commands and values -- delete or modify them -- just as you can text. See your Quick Reference Guide for a summary of all formatting commands used with ST Writer. You can examine a formatted text file on your screen prior to printing by using Print to Screen. FORM PRINTING. (Also called Database Merge.) You can leave blanks in a text file that you want to use as a form, and fill them in -- with names and addresses, account numbers, and the like -- each time you print the file. Wherever you want to leave a blank, press function key F9. An inverse video ? appears at that point on your screen. Press F9 at the desired location for each entry that you'll be filling in. When ST Writer prints the file, it stops when it encounters each such command and prompts you FORM DATA FROM FILE Y/N? If you have previously created a data file, type Y. The prompt DATA FILE NAME? will appear. Type in the data file name and press [Return]. ST Writer will read the data file and insert the data in sequence into your text. If you do not have a data file, you will be prompted to MAKE ENTRY?. Type what you want to fill in the blank -- up to 55 characters per blank -- and press [Return]. When you complete each entry, ST Writer continues printing the file. Alternately, you can supply information for each blank from a text file output by a database management program such as the mailing list option of DB Master One. After sorting the desired addresses with DB Master One, "print" them to disk. See the instructions from compatible database managers for further instructions. If you're using the hand-entry method and have left a number of blanks, it's a good idea to jot down a list of them, because you won't be able to see the file on your screen when you're prompted to make your entries during printing. FREE MEMORY. When first creating a file in ST Writer, you start off with approximately 200,000 bytes, or characters, of memory (more or less depending on system) available for your text -- room for over 130 double-spaced pages. This number is reduced if you have any of the accessories such as the Control Panel installed in your desktop. To remove desktop accessories, use the GEM desktop to change resolution with a non-system disk in the default drive, or if you have a monochrome monitor (cannot change resolution), rename the desk accessories on your system disk and reboot the system. ST Writer constantly displays the available memory, expressed in bytes, in the Message Window at the bottom of your screen. One byte equals roughly one typed character, and you can figure on about 1500 bytes for each standard double-spaced page. In any case, it's a good idea to leave yourself with a margin of free memory with every file you write, just so you'll have some memory to work with if you want to edit (or add to) a file later on. When your computer's memory will accept only about one more screen full of text, ST Writer alerts you by displaying a "memory low" message. When this happens, save the file and start a new file to continue the document you're working on. GEM MODE. To get the features of GEM, click one of the mouse buttons. An alert box will appear to allow you to select GEM or CANCEL. Besides allowing you to use the mouse in Menus, Dialog and Alert Boxes, on the EDIT screen you can place the alpha cursor anywhere in the text on the screen instantly. You can also exit edit mode by clicking on Esc in the last line of the command box, and you can scroll up or down a page by clicking on the up and down arrows on the same line. You can exit GEM mode from the main menu by clicking on "Mouse" in the Options menu. NOTE: Sometimes when you press the [Esc] key, you will seem to be "stuck" on the Edit screen. This occurs when the mouse is on the top line, regardless if you are in GEM mode or not, or whether the mouse is visible or not. A peculiarity of GEM makes it necessary for you to move the mouse downward to exit the Edit screen if this should occur. GLOBAL FORMAT. In GEM mode only, Global Format allows you to set up the Format line at the top of a file you are about to Create. It does not work on files already created in memory. HEADERS, FOOTERS, and PAGE NUMBERING. For headers or footers of one or two lines on every page of your printed text file, enter the appropriate commands and text at the beginning of the file, on the screen line or lines just below the formatting commands and values displayed on the first line. To begin headers or footers elsewhere than on the first page, or to change the text of your headers or footers, you can also enter the required commands and text within the file. In this case, however, each header or footer command and line of text (preceded, if you like, by elongated print and center text or block text right commands) must be the only material entered on a screenline. In either case, be sure that no line of header or footer text exceeds your overall page width margins. To specify a header, press [Control H], then type the text of the header and press [Return]. For a two-line header, enter a [Control H], then the text and a [Return] for each separate line. To specify a footer, press [Control F], then type the text of the footer and press [Return]. For a two-line footer, enter a [Control F], then the text and a [Return] for each separate line. To discontinue a header or a footer, type two [Control H]'s or two [Control F]'s followed by a [Return]. For consecutively numbered printed pages, type @ ([Shift 2]) at that point in your header or footer text where you want page numbers to appear (for page numbers only, use the @ symbol as the entire text of your header or footer). ST Writer will number the page where you enter your page numbering command as 1, and subsequent pages in order, unless you specify a different starting page number. To do this, press [Control Q] after the [Return] that concludes your header or footer text, then type in the number of the starting page number you want (from 1 through 999). A negative value following the [Control Q] indicates that you want your left and right blocked headers and footers to each block to the opposite margin on alternate pages. Headers or footers appear one full line below or above the top or bottom of your printed pages. By default, ST Writer prints headers, footers, and page numbers in the print style you've formatted for the entire text file, and aligns them to the left margin. If you want to change the print style or left or right margins, or want elongated print, centered or flush right, enter the appropriate commands just after your header or footer commands. The main text body will not be affected by these formatting commands in your header or footer. INDEX OF FILES. For a directory of files on a disk or within a folder, press I from the ST Writer menu. At the prompt 'P' to printer, 'S' to screen: S, press [Return] to accept the default (screen print), or P for a printed index (make sure your printer is ready). Next ST Writer asks for the Path name: -- see Path name for details. When you enter the Path name, ST Writer reads the disk directory and prints it on the indicated device. Also shown are the number of bytes contained in each file. Files generated by ST Writer and folders are indicated as such, and locked files are marked with an asterisk (see Locking files). If you have more than 21 files and folders on your disk, ST Writer scrolls the directory listing upward on your screen to show every entry. To momentarily pause the listing, press any key; press it again to restart the scrolling. At the end of the directory listing, ST Writer again presents you with the printer/screen prompt, in case you wish to index a different disk or folder. To return to the menu, press [Esc]. There is no corresponding selection for Index in GEM mode, as File Selector Boxes contain filenames. Unfortunately, information on file size or whether or not they are ST Writer files is not available in GEM mode. INSERTING TEXT. To insert text, simply position the cursor where you want and begin typing. ST Writer pushes the text to the right of and below your insertion as far as necessary to accomodate the new text. Use the same procedure to enter formatting commands within a text file that you've already written. Pressing the [Insert] key toggles between insertion and type-over mode. A capital 'I' near the bottom right of the screen indicates insert mode, and an inverse capital 'T' indicates type-over mode. INSTALL PRINTER. The Install Printer accessory from the Desk menu on the GEM desktop allows you to choose the type printer you will be using (dot matrix or daisywheel, black and white or color, dot configuration), paper use (single sheet or continuous feed), and quality of print (draft or final). If the codes for draft or final have been placed in your printer configuration file, you can selec single- (draft) or double- (final) strike printing. You may also change ports so that your text gets printed via the modem (RS232) serial port, rather than to the parallel printer port. JUSTIFIED RIGHT MARGINS. The justified right margin command works like a simple On/Off switch. The default value of 0, displayed next to the inverse video J in the Print Formatting Block, gives you nonjustified (ragged) right margins. For justified right margins, change this value to 1. You can change from one to the other within a text file by entering [Control J] and the appropriate value. LINE SPACING. ST Writer measures line spacing in half-lines. The default value for line spacing is single spacing, represented by the 2 next to the inverse video S in the Print Formatting Block. For double spacing, change this value to 4. To vary line spacing within a document, press [Control S] and type in the appropriate value wherever you want the spacing to change. The new value must be an even number. When you use [Return]s to create blank lines in a text file, keep in mind that ST Writer inserts blank lines according to the value of S for each such [Return]. LOAD FILE. To load a text file from a disk drive, select Load File from the ST Writer menu by pressing L. At the Load file: prompt, enter the Path name (see Path name) for the file you wish to load. If you've previously loaded or created a text file during the current session, ST Writer first asks, Erase file in memory, Y/N ?. An exception to this happens if you've previously saved the file and did not edit it after the last save -- the new file is simply loaded when you enter its name. If you press Y, the file in memory is erased, whether or not you proceed with the load. In GEM mode, you are supplied with a File Selector Box from which you click on the file you want loaded. See PATH NAME for details. If while loading a file ST Writer finds that your computer's memory is full, Buffer is full, file not loaded appears in your Message Window. That part of the file that's been loaded is erased from memory. If you load in a non-ST Writer file, the file must be converted to ST Writer format, and this takes some time. Essentially, all line-feeds are discarded, and all carriage returns replaced with nulls. Also, all tabs are replaced with 5 blank spaces. You can toggle off the tab conversion when prompted by answering 'N' (No) to the query Change Tabs to Spaces? In this case, your file may be punctuated with a lot of [Control I] characters, which represents the tab character. This would usually be done only by experienced computer users. LOCKING FILES. To lock a text file that you've saved to disk, you must return to the GEM desktop (see Quit). Open a window for the drive that contains the file to be locked, and select the file by pointing to its icon (or filename) and clicking the left mouse button once so the icon is highlighted. Then point at the File heading on the Menu Bar, and select the Show Info option. This is the same Dialog Box you would use to rename the file. To lock the file, select Read-Only, then OK. If you load a locked text file, revise it with ST Writer, and then try to save it again under the same filename, ST Writer asks, ALREADY EXISTS, 'Y' to replace it. If you type Y (no [Return] necessary) ST Writer gives you the message ERROR trying to open the file. Press any key to return to the Save file: prompt and enter a different name under which to save the file. MARGINS. ST Writer measures a page from top to bottom in half-lines, and from left to right in character spaces. The default values for page margins are represented in the Print Formatting Block as follows: T12 B12 L10 R70 Top Bottom Left Right To change any of these margins for the entire text file, simply delete the value shown and type in your own. You can also change margins within a file; just press [Control] and the appropriate letter, then type in the value you want. Values for the top and bottom margin must be even numbers. You may have to experiment a bit, adjusting the paper in your printer, to get the correct top margins on your printed pages. With the default value of 12 for T, your top margins should be one inch. For a continuous printout of a file, without page breaks, set your top and bottom margins at 0 and delete any headers or footers from the file. MERGING TEXT. You can merge a saved ST Writer file, or other ASCII file from disk with the file currently in your computer's memory with this command. Keep in mind, though, that when merging files you run the risk of overflowing your computer's free memory. To merge two files, first position the cursor where you want the merged text to appear in the file currently in your computer's memory. Then press function key [F8]. ST Writer then prompts Load file:, at which you should enter a Path name for the file to be merged (see Path name). If while merging one file with another ST Writer finds that your computer's free memory is full, a warning message appears in the Message Window, the merge is halted and that portion of the merged file that has loaded is erased. MOVING TEXT. To move a block of text from one place to another in a text file, position the cursor at the beginning of the passage you want to move and press [Shift F5]. Then move the cursor to the end of the passage and press [Shift F5] again. Next, move the cursor to the point where you want to reposition the passage, and press [Shift F2]. Remember that you can move only about 40,000 bytes of text (the capacity of your failsafe buffer) at a time. If you want to move a larger block of text, do it in segments. PAGE EJECT. Use this command when you want ST Writer to halt printing at a given point in a text file and space to the top of the next page before printing is resumed -- for example, in a multisection document where you want each section to begin on a fresh page. To enter this command, position the cursor where you want a page eject to take place and press [Control E]. A number following [Control E] specifies a conditional page eject. The number is the number of lines to appear in a block, and should not exceed the number of lines between the top and bottom margins. If the block will not fit on the current page, it will appear on the following page. PAGE LENGTH. When formatting and printing a text file, ST Writer uses this formatting command -- represented by the inverse video Y in the Print Formatting Block -- to determine where the next printed page should begin. Keep your page length set at the default value of 132 (half-lines) for 8 1/2 by 11-inch paper. For a continuous printout of a text file without page breaks, set your top and bottom margins at 0 and delete any headers or footers from the file. Values for page length must be even numbers, and 224 is the maximum value of Y that ST Writer allows. PAGE NUMBERING. See Headers, footers, and page numbering. PAGE WAIT. Use this command when you want to print a text file on separate sheets of paper -- for example, on bond, letterhead, or your personal stationery. Enter [Control W] in the Print Formatting Block at the top of your file for a page wait on every page of the file. ST Writer will stop printing at the bottom of each page; after inserting a fresh sheet of paper in your printer, press any key to start printing the next page. You may also invoke this command by using the Install Printer desk accessory, and using the "single" sheet selection. When printing to the screen, [Control W] causes the screen scrolling to halt when the screen is full. Hit any key to continue scrolling, or [Esc] to exit. PARAGRAPHS. Mark the beginning of every paragraph by pressing [Control P] -- ST Writer displays an inverse video letter P at that point on your screen. Press [Return] at the end of each paragraph -- ST Writer displays an inverse video 'less than' symbol at that point. Two formatting commands control how your paragraphs appear when formatted and printed by ST Writer. The default value for paragraph spacing, displayed next to the inverse video D in the Print Formatting Block, is 4 blank half-lines, or double spacing, between paragraphs. To change this value, just delete the 4 and type in the value you want. The default value for paragraph indentation, displayed next to the inverse video I in the Print Formatting Block, is 5 spaces (from the left page margin). For a different paragraph indentation, delete the 5 and substitute the value you want. To vary paragraph spacing within a new file, press [Control D] and type a new value where you want the spacing to change, then press [Return]. To change paragraph indentation, press [Control I] and enter a new value. For bibliographies, ST Writer also allows negative indentation (outdenting or undenting). Type [Control I] followed by a negative value (eg., [-5]). Each time a [Control P] is encountered thereafter, the first line of the paragraph will be alligned flush with the left margin, and succeeding lines will be indented. PATH NAME. Path names are used to indicate files held in folders on your disk. See your ATARI ST Owner's Manual for a description of folders and how to use them. Path names can be entered at any of ST Writer's prompts for filenames or Path names. A path name is similar to a filename, but may also optionally indicate a folder name (or folder names) in order to tell ST Writer what path to take through your various directories and subdirectories in order to access your file. Say, for example, that you would like to use a folder named TEXT to hold your ST Writer files. To create the folder, follow the instructions for Creating Folders in your ATARI ST Owner's Manual. Then, after invoking ST Writer and creating your file, press [Esc] to return to the main menu and select Save File by pressing the S key. At the prompt, first enter the drive identifier (A:, B:, or C:), then type a reverse slash (the key to the right of the [Return] key), then the folder name (TEXT), then another reverse slash, then the filename under which you wish to save the file (e.g. B:\TEXT\MYFILE.TXT). Thus, a path name is simply a filename with one or more folder names inserted, offset by reverse slash marks. To obtain a directory listing of the folder TEXT, select Index of Files from the main menu, select Screen or Printer, then at the prompt for Path name:, type B:\TEXT and [Return]. Since folders can contain folders, you can use more than one folder name in a path name. For instance, if the disk in drive B: contains a folder named LETTERS in the folder named TEXT, a path name to file MYFILE would resemble this: B:\TEXT\LETTERS\MYFILE. In GEM mode, file selection is done slightly differently. A File Selector Box appears with the current "path" on the top line. You may change the path by placing the cursor on the line by pointing and clicking the mouse, then either back-spacing over it, or pressing [Esc]. You can then type in the above path name ( B:\TEXT\LETTERS\*.* ). Move the mouse inside the File Selector Box and click. All files in the LETTERS folder will be listed. This is because you used a "wild card" specifier [*]. If you only wanted files ending with .TXT, you would have typed: B:\TEXT\LETTERS\*.TXT [TAB] (Note: File Selector Boxes use the [TAB] key in place of the [RETURN] key.) You may then click on the file wanted followed by clicking the OK box, or double click on the selected file, and it will load, be saved, or delete, depending which function you had selected. PRINTER CONTROLS. If you do not have an Epson or Epson-compatible printer (including the ATARI SMM804), you can still format and print your ST Writer text files by entering the desired printer controls directly in your files. Wherever you want to enter a printer control, first press [Control O], then type in the decimal equivalent of the appropriate code understood by your printer. For instance, to send a decimal code 15, type [Control O]15. Be sure to type a space after the number -- ST Writer uses this space as a delimiter. You should be able to find a listing of codes used by your printer in the manual that came with it. Note: when you enter a printer control code with [Control O] on a page, that entire page will be formatted by the code you enter. PRINT FILE. You can print your text to the screen (see Print preview), to a disk file, to a serial printer or modem, or to a parallel printer. (Note: To print to a printer or modem connected to your computer's RS232 serial port, first use the Install Printer option from the GEM desktop Desk menu to set the Printer Port to Modem, -- see your ST Owner's Manual -- then print to the printer as usual.) To print a file, load it in memory if not already present, go to the ST Writer menu, and press P. ST Writer prompts, Enter Printer, Disk, Screen, spooLer? -- press the highlighted capital letter of the desired output device. For further instructions on printing to the screen, see Print preview. The message Searching for printer config file on disk appears in the Message Window as soon as ST Writer has loaded into the computer, and the disk drive spins momentarily. When this happens, ST Writer is looking for the file XYZZX.DAT on your default drive; the drive from which you loaded the ST Writer program. For further information on this file, see Printer Configuration File. Whether or not the printer configuration file is found, ST Writer still can print your file. From the ST Writer menu, to print your file to a printer, press P. Note: If your printer supports proportional print and you wish to use this, you must first return to the GEM desktop and use the Install Printer option from the Desk menu to set Printer Type to Daisy. To send the formatted text to a disk file that you can later transmit to another computer or print out directly from the GEM desktop, press D. ST Writer prompts you for a file name and then sends the formatted text to that file. The spooler option (press L) lets you print to a disk file with all your printer control codes embedded along with your text. A properly formatted file for your printer can later be printed directly to your type of printer from the GEM desktop. The next prompt, Enter number of copies?, is followed by the number 1. Press [Return] to accept the default value of one copy. To print more than one copy, type the new number of copies, then press [Return]. Next ST Writer prompts Print whole document Y/N?. Type Y (or just press [Return]) to print the entire text, or type N to print a range of pages. If you press N, ST Writer asks you for the beginning page number with the prompt Enter first?. Press [Return] to accept the default value, page 1, or press [Backspace] once and type a new beginning page number and [Return]. Then at the prompt Enter last?, press [Return] to accept the default last page 999, or use [Backspace] to edit the entry. Finally, you are asked if you want letter quality print, and a 'Y' appears if you have selected letter quality print in the printer configuration desk accessory, or an 'N' if you did not. You may change the 'Y' to 'N' or vice versa at this point, or simply press [Return] if the correct letter is present. To temporarily halt printing, press [Control S], and to resume, press any key. You can stop printing and return to the main menu at any time by pressing the [Esc] key. Hint: Printing your file to a disk file is a convenient way of creating documentation on disk for a program you've written. Users can show a file printed to disk on the screen or print it out from the GEM desktop by double-clicking the file's icon or filename. Type instructions for your program into ST Writer, then print the text to a file named README.DOC, then write "Show (print) README.DOC for instructions" on your disk label. Remember to adjust the left margin to one. In GEM mode, there is one dialog box which allows you to select the number of copies, the range of pages to print, and the device to print to. PRINT PREVIEW. This feature of ST Writer lets you examine a formatted text file on your monitor screen prior to printing it. You can use Print preview at any time while creating or editing a file. For a print preview, press [Esc] from the editor to return to the ST Writer menu, then select Print File. At the prompt Enter Printer, Disk, Screen SpooLer? press S for screen print. For directions for responding to the next prompt, Print whole document Y/N?, see Print File above. Next, ST Writer prints your formatted file to the screen, showing each page break with a dotted line across the screen width. To pause this screen print, press [Control S], then press any key to resume the listing. Return to the ST Writer menu any time by pressing [Esc]. PRINT STYLES. (fonts). ST Writer offers you a choice of sixteen combinations of print styles or fonts -- check the manual that came with your printer to see which ones your printer is capable of. The default print style of ST Writer, represented by the 0 next to the inverse video G in the Print Formatting Block is Pica, or 10 characters per inch (CPI). To format your entire file for condensed print (16.7 CPI), change this value to 2. For bold print, change it to 1, and to print in italics, change it to 4. To print in Elite style, type 8 after the inverse video G. To vary the print style within a file, position the cursor where you want a new print style to begin, press [Control G], and type in the value desired. You can add the above values to use more than one style at a time -- use this table: CONTROL G STYLE CODE 0 Pica 1 Bold 2 Condensed 4 Italics 8 Elite To combine print styles, add the values for the required styles. For instance, to print Bold Elite, type [Control G]9, then a hyphen, then the text. The hyphen will not appear in the text printout. The print styles you select are not represented as such in Print preview except for elongated, which appears as letters with single spaces in between. The GLOBAL FORMAT dialog box simplifies this task. See GLOBAL FORMAT. PRINTER CONFIGURATION FILE. ST Writer comes with a special printer configuration program called CONFIG.TOS. When run, CONFIG.TOS looks on disk for a file names CONFIG.TXT and reads it into memory. CONFIG.TXT is nothing more than a saved ST Writer file containing all necessary printer codes for the user's individual printer. After reading CONFIG.TXT, CONFIG.TOS converts the text into special code and saves it back to disk, creating a file named XYZZX.DAT. ST Writer searches on the disk it was booted from for XYZZX.DAT and uses its codes to properly interface with the printer. Once you create an XYZZX.DAT file for your particular printer, you never need to go through it again. Be sure to make a backup copy of CONFIG.TXT. The only two files you need on any disk to operate ST Writer are the STWRITER.PRG program itself and XYZZX.DAT. To modify the printer configuration file, pull up your printer manual and load a backup copy of CONFIG.TXT into ST Writer and examine it. Any line of text beginning with an asterisk (*) is a comment for your information only and is ignored by the CONFIG.TOS program. For the moment, let's skip over the first section of the file and edit a fairly simple example. Look for the comment: *underline on. Following *underline on are a list of numbers: 27, 45, 1, 255, 255, 255, etc. Each of these numbers is a printer code in decimal representing the command to turn on the underline. The 255's are fillers where there is no printer code number. Look in your printer manual for the proper codes to turn on the underline. If your printer codes are listed in decimal--sometimes shown as CHR$(27), CHR$(45), CHR$(1)--you're lucky. Printer codes are also often listed in hexadecimal or ASCII form. Hex is indicated by either a preceding dollar sign or by the presence of the letters A through F. The underline on codes above would appear in hexadecimal as: $1B, 2D, $01. In ASCII notation underline on would be: Esc., -, SOH. Whichever the case, if your printer codes are in hexadecimal you wil need to convert them to decimal with a table, and if they are in ASCII, you will need an ASCII chart. Fortunately, many printer manuals have conversion charts in their appendeces. Go down the line of CONFIG.TXT codes and replace any codes that disagree with those codes in your printer manual. If your printer requires, say, four codes for a function that prviously contained three, replace one of the the 255's with the fourth code. Likewise, if your printer is one code short, replace the old, extra code number with a 255. It is very important that each function segment in CONFIG.TXT contains eight codes, so edit carefully. If you are uncertain about a particular function, leave it alone. Change as little as possible. You can always re-edit and try again. Go back and look at the top of CONFIG.TXT. A short chart at the top shows the necessary code numbers to use for certain parameters. It is set up for 80-column printers, but if you have at least 132 columns, substitute 8712 for 5280. This number is critical if you want more than 160 columns (condensed elite on an 80-column printer). You can get 198 columns (condensed on a 132-column printer) if you don't try printing more columns than your printer can handle. The character translation table may appear confusing, but it merely lists the ASCII equivalent of all the characters in the character set, from 0 to 255. Unlike the remainder of CONFIG.TXT, these numbers are in hexadecimal (represented in this case by 0x), so if you are not sure what they represent, see a table or the character set in your printer manual. Beyond the standard range of alphanumeric ASCII characters is an extra character set. The ST sees these extra characters as one thing, but your individual printer sees them as another. Many printers have their own special character set. The character translation table in CONFIG.TXT is designed to make the two jibe as much as possible. Currently, the table is set up for Atari printers. If you don't have an Atari printer, you won't have all the special characters, so you can configure your printer driver to print the characters you do have, even if they have a different ASCII number. For example, my Star Micronics NX-10 printer has the paragraph symbol located at 0x14 (decimal 20), but on the ST, that symbol has the value 0xbc (decimal 188). I found 0xbc in the table and replaced it with 0x14. Now, every time I use the paragraph symbol in text to be printed, it will print as though I were using an Atari printer. Don't bother changing table values below 0x20 because ST Writer uses those for formatting codes, and they will never be sent to your printer. Once you have completed editing CONFIG.TXT, save it back to disk under the same name. Return to the GEM Desktop and make sure you have both CONFIG.TOS and the newly edited CONFIG.TXT on the same disk. Double-click on CONFIG.TOS. In as short while, it will create a XYZZX.DAT file on your disk. Place this file on the same disk as STWRITER.PRG and you're ready to go. You might create a short ST Writer file which uses all the printer commands you wish to test. This way you can quickly try out the different functions and see how successful your edit has been. QUIT. Use this command to exit ST Writer and return to the GEM desktop. From the main menu press Q. If you have made any changes to your text file since the last time you saved it, ST Writer prompts Quit without saving file in memory?. Press Y or y to exit ST Writer, or any other key to return to the main menu. RECEIVE ATARIWRITERTM. Use this function to transfer a file from an ATARI 400, 800, XL or current XE Computer using AtariWriter or AtariWriter Plus to your ST. You must have an ATARI 850 Interface Module (or equivalent) connected to your 400, 800, XL or XE Computer and a "null-modem cable" (see below) in order to make this transfer (300 baud). You may also load in an 8-bit AtariWriter file from disk, and ST Writer will convert the file. A special cable called a "null modem cable" is required to connect the two computers. You probably will not be able to find such a cable ready-made -- you must either make it yourself or have it made for you. Most cities have stores that will custom-make a cable for a reasonable fee. To make the cable, obtain a female 25-pin connector for the ST end, a female 9-pin connector for the 850 end, and a length of cable with at least five wires. Connect these pins on the two connectors: 25-pin pin # TO: 9-pin pin # ------------ --- ----------- 2 4 3 3 4 8 7 5 8 7 To transfer a file, first load AtariWriter or AtariWriter Plus and the file to be transferred into your ATARI 400, 800, XL or XE. Make sure that you have downloaded the RS232 handler from the 850 -- follow the instructions with your DOS manual. If using AtariWriter Plus, make sure your 850 Interface is connected and turned on before you load the program disk. Next, on your ST, run ST Writer. Connect the two computers with your cable. Next, press R on the ST keyboard to activate the Receive file from 850 command. Then press S on the other computer's keyboard to Save File. When prompted for DEVICE:FILENAME, enter R: and press [Return]. The file is then transferred to the ST Writer text buffer, where you see it appear. After the transfer is finished, it's a good idea to save the transferred file to disk for safekeeping before editing it. SAVE ASCII. This is a MENU selection in GEM mode, but in non-GEM mode when you type 'S' to SAVE a file, you will be asked if you want to "Save in ASCII format?" The default is 'N' (No), and merely pressing the [Return] key negates an ASCII save. However, selecting ASCII SAVE allows you to write an ASCII file to disk. This is the same as printing to disk, as every line gets a carriage return and line feed appended to it. The major exception is that the left margin will be 1, and the right can be set up to 160 (for an 80 column printer driver). All blank spaces at the end of a line or page will be discarded. If you MUST have blanks at the end of a line, use the Elongated text control [Shift F9] followed by exactly 1/2 the number of blank spaces needed, and then a terminating [Shift F9]. This tricks the formatter into writing blank spaces at the end of a line or page. SAVE ASCII files will not re-load into ST Writer Elite without conversion to ST Writer format, but can be easily loaded into other word processors or text editors. It is a good idea to use a ".DOC" extender on ASCII filenames so as not to confuse them with files saved in ST Writer format. SAVE BLOCK. After marking the beginning and end of a block of text with [Shift F5], you can save the marked block to a disk file. Mark the block, then press [Shift F8]. ST Writer prompts for a filename with: Save block as:. Enter a filename or Path name, then press [Return] to save the block on disk. You can merge this text with another file with the F8 key (see Merging text.) Hint: an easy way to delete the block markers after saving the block (40,000 bytes or less only) is to press [F5] to delete the block, then [Undo] to restore it. SAVE FILE. To store a text file on a diskette, select Save File from the ST Writer menu by pressing S. When asked "Save in ASCII format?", hit the return key. Insert a formatted disk in your disk drive (if you don't have a formatted disk on hand, you can have ST Writer format one for you -- see Format Disk.) Then type a filename (optionally including Path name -- see Path name), and press [Return]. If your file already has a filename associated with it (i.e. you previously loaded it from disk, rather than creating it from scratch), ST Writer prints out that name after the Save file: prompt. Simply press [Return] to save the file. Important Note: In the latter case, or if the filename you have entered already exists on disk, ST Writer does not print a warning message in the Message Window. Therefore if you wish to retain an original copy of the document you are editing, save the edited version under a different filename. In GEM mode, this is done by selecting "Save". Selecting "Save AS..." allows you to specify another filename to save it under. SEARCH AND REPLACE. Use this feature of ST Writer to search for, replace, or delete any string of text up to 57 characters in length. On command, ST Writer executes a search from the current position of the cursor to the end or the beginning of a text file, in either direction. There are four ways to search; Search Reverse, Search Forward, Replace, and Query Replace. To conduct a Forward Search, from the cursor position to the end of a file, press function key F6. ST Writer then prompts Forward search : in the Message Window. Enter the character, word, or phrase you wish to find, then press the [Esc]. Using the [Esc] key as a terminator in the search phrase allows you to search for phrases that include the [Return] character. You can also search for other non-alphanumeric characters, including all [Control] key combinations. Pressing [Esc] activates the search, whereupon ST Writer moves the cursor to the first incidence of the sought phrase. If it does not appear in the text, the Message Window shows String was not found. If found, to search again for the same phrase, press F6 again. The Forward search : prompt reappears, followed by the last seach phrase. Simply press [Esc] to search for that phrase. To search for a different phrase, press any key and the old search phrase is automatically deleted, making room for a new search phrase. To search backwards in your file, press [Shift F6]. Reverse Search works identically to Forward Search, except that it searches from the cursor position to the beginning of the file, rather than to the end. Forward Search and Reverse Search use the same buffer for the search phrase. If you want to replace the phrase you're searching for with a different phrase, use function key F7. Pressing F7 alone causes ST Writer to confirm each replacement operation with you, and [Shift F7] effects replacement of all occurrences of the sought phrase without verification, also known as global replace. After pressing either, ST Writer prompts: (Query) Replace :. Enter the search phrase (including presses of [Return], if applicable), then press the [Esc] key. Next, ST Writer prompts: With :. Enter the phrase that is to replace the search phrase. For instance, you can use Replace to change the name John to Jack through your entire manuscript. If you have selected Query Replace, and the search phrase is found, the message window prompts: Type 'Y' to replace string:. Pressing Y replaces the phrase and moves the cursor forward to the next occurrence of the search phrase (if any). Pressing any other key does not perform the replacement, but still moves the cursor to the next incidence of the search phrase. Note that Replace and Query Replace search forward only from the cursor position. Note: if, while entering a search or replace phrase, you decide not to make the search after all, press [Control K] to abort the process and return to editing your document. If you press [Shift F7] for global replace, all incidences of the search phrase are automatically replaced by the replace phrase without query. This is a powerful command, and should be used carefully! When entering a search phrase, you must type it exactly as it appears in your file. When the string is a single short word that might appear in your file as a part of longer words, it's a good idea to type in blank spaces before and after it. If you do this, though, include the same blank spaces in your replace phrase. And keep in mind that ST Writer will not recognize occurrences of such a search phrase that have punctuation marks immediately before or after them. To halt a search-and-replace operation, press [Esc]. SECTION HEADINGS. Use this feature of ST Writer to number section and subsection headings in a multisection document. The easiest way to explain its use is with an example. Say you're writing a text file about nutrition. In outline, it includes the following sections and subsections: Fruits and vegetables Fruits Fresh fruits Preserves Vegetables Dairy Products To number each of these section and subsection headings when entering them in your file, press [Control U] and type the number of the section level, then the text of the heading and [Return]. In this case, Fruits and vegetables is the highest level of headings, so you type 1 after [Shift F8]. The section level for both Fruits and Vegetables is 2, and 3 for both Fresh fruits and Preserves. For Dairy products, you return to a section level of 1. You can specify section levels of 1 through 9. Wherever you enter a section heading command and number, ST Writer displays a European paragraph symbol followed by the section level number you've entered. When it formats and prints your file, ST Writer numbers your section headings, raising the numbers for each occurrence of a section heading command at a given level. In other words, the section headings in your file on nutrition would be numbered as follows: 1 Fruits and vegetables 1.1 Fruits 1.1.1 Fresh fruits 1.1.2 Preserves 1.2 Vegetables 2 Dairy products You should format your section headings according to your preferences. Add as many spaces between each section level number and heading as you want between the section number and heading. And use paragraph markers, center or block text right commands, and print style commands in combination with your section heading commands to format your headings the way you want them. To reset your numbering of section headings -- say, in a large document where you want a numbered system of headings in each chapter -- press [Control U] and type the number 0. Then press [Control U] again and the desired level number when you enter your next heading. SOURCE FILES. You can create source code files in BASIC, LOGO, C, etc. with ST Writer. Set [Control B] to 0 (zero), [Control G] to 10, [Control L] to 1, [Control R] to 160 and [Control T] to 0. Be certain that none of your lines of code exceed the 160 (80 column printer driver) or 198 character (136 column printer driver) limit without an intervening carriage return. Also, the last page of your source code may not fill up the whole page, and when printed will have several carriage returns following the text. Use the print preview to find the page break (occurring at the end of the each page). When you see the beginning of the last page, make note of the position and number of lines on the final page in the file. Then edit your file by inserting [Control Y] followed by a number that is double the number of lines on the last page, somewhere in the text prior to the end. Then Print your file to disk. It is a good idea to also Save your text file under another name in case you wish to edit it later. SPECIAL CHARACTERS. Ordinarily, all ST characters with ASCII values less than 32 ($20 Hex) cannot be used in your text, as these have special meaning to printers, and are used internally by ST Writer as formatting directives. However, using [Control X] before and after such characters will temporarily shut off the interpretation of such characters in their usual meaning and will actually insert them into your text (particularly useful if you are planning to "SAVE ASCII" (GEM mode only) and the disk file you are creating requires such characters to maintain its integrity. This feature is for experienced programmers. Most control codes can be produced using [Control X][Control {Key}][Control X]. You may use as many [Control {key}] characters between the [Control X] formatting commands as needed, but no normal chararacters (ASCII numbers greater than 31, $1F Hex) with the exception of [\] which is used solely before a [Control X] to differentiate it from a terminating [Control X] formatting command. Exceptions to the normal {key} characters are: To get: Use: ASCII 0 (null) [ Return ] [ Control A ] [ Control U ] [ Control U ] [ Shift F5 ] [ Control X ] \[ Control X ] [ Control Z ] [ Control : ] [ Escape ] [ Control [ ] or [ Control ; ] ASCII $1C [ Control < ] or [ Control \ ] ASCII $1D [ C