Newword 1.18 Messages Released on 30 Nov 83 Copyright (C) 1983 Newstar Software Incorporated. All rights reserved.  FZWDNELÿOPMCXYRJH\ÿÿÿÿÿÿ FZWDNELÿOPMCXYRJH\^ÿÿÿÿÿÿ ÿ ÿÿÿ ÿ ÿ DXSBKHCVYRWQOJL AYBRCFPSDEX LRXOWJEGSCHINTFD ÿ ÿÿ?^. ÿ ÿ ?^ ÿ DXSBKHCVYRWQOJL AYBRCFPSDEX LRXOWJEGSCHINTFD    ÿ -ÿ @DIRECTORY Drive   @DIRECTORY Printers   ^W scroll up ^Z scroll down  @TYPE THE ESCAPE (ESC) KEY TO CONTINUE.  @TYPE THE ESCAPE (ESC) KEY FOR MORE.  @H Y P H E N H E L P Newword has positioned the cursor within a word that is too long to fit nicely within the margins. You may move the cursor left to a spot where it should be hyphenated and then type a hyphen (-), or you can just type ^B again to continue with the alignment. You may turn hyphen help off with ^U. (^OH while editing also turns it on and off.)  WHILE ENTERING: @DEL or @^H erases a mistake. @RETURN when done. @^U safely cancels in mid-stream.  CONTROLS: @RET done @^S left @^D right @^R recall @^U cancel @^P accept ERASING: @DEL left @^H left @^G cursor @^Y line @^X line left Please type Y for yes, or N for no.  Insufficient memory.  Unable to store data on disk. Disk is probably full. @You may be able to make room by erasing or copying files using ^KJ and ^KO. Can't create temporary files. Disk might be full or protected.  Demonstration versions of Newword are not capable of printing. Normally here, you would be able to specify which document to print, and then specify a variety of things about how it should be printed including: the number of copies, whether or not to pause for each sheet of paper, the first and last pages to be printed, and which printer should be used (if you have more than one on your computer). Cannot run program. Type any key to return to Newword. A:STAT The S command shows the amount of space remaining on the logged disk drive, the default drive, and any other active drives  #*2" appear at the cursor if block markers have not been hidden (see ^KH). (To help you remember, "B" begins the word "block" and it also marks the beginning of a block when used with ^K.) You can mark the end of a block of text using ^KK. You will see a "" appear at the cursor if block markers have not been hidden (see ^KH). (To help you remember, "K" ends the word "block" and it also marks the end of a block when used with ^K.) If the block markers and are distorting how the text looks, you can "hide" them using ^KH. By using ^KH a second time, they will re-appear. Once a block has been marked, you can copy it to another spot in the text by moving your cursor to the spot and using ^KC. Once a block has been marked, you can move it to another spot in the text by moving your cursor to the spot and using ^KV. Once a block has been marked, you can erase the whole thing by using ^KY. If the block is too large to later unerase using ^U, Newword will ask you if you are sure. Once a block has been marked, you can store it to disk by using ^KW. ^KO allows you to make a copy of another document while you are editing. This could come in handy if you run out of room on the disk by letting you copy a document elsewhere and then erasing it to make more room. ^KJ lets you erase another document while you are editing. This could be used to make more room on a disk if it is getting too full. ^KL lets you log onto a different disk while you are editing. You might do this to look at the directory there. However, the current document you are editing will not be moved there. You can use ^KR to "read" another document into the current document you are editing. This might be used for things such as boilerplate or for getting a blank form to fill out.  @P R I N T C O N T R O L S @START-STOP @CHANGES @SPECIAL @CUSTOM @B bold @A alternate pitch @H overprint char @Q custom 1 @D double strike @N standard pitch @RET overprint line @W custom 2 @S underline @C pause @O binding space @E custom 3 @X strike out @Y change color @F phantom space @R custom 4 @V subscript @T superscript The print control ^PB will be displayed as ^B in the text. It is used to turn bolding on and off (the first occurence of ^B turns bolding on, the next one turns it off). Many printers will print bold characters by striking the character, moving a very small amount, and striking the same character again. Printers that aren't capable of moving very small amounts will strike the character in the same spot several times. The print control ^PD will be displayed as ^D in the text. It is used to turn double-striking on and off (the first occurence of ^D turns double-striking on, the next one turns it off). Each char- acter is printed twice in the same spot to highlight it. The print control ^PS will be displayed as ^S in the text. It is used to turn underlining (sometimes called underscoring) on and off (the first occurence of ^S turns underlining on, the next one turns it off). The print control ^PX will be displayed as ^X in the text. It is used to turn strike-out on and off (the first occurence of ^X turns strike-out on, the next one turns it off). Struck-out text looks like the text with dashes through it. The print control ^PV will be displayed as ^V in the text. It is used to turn subscripting on and off (the first occurence of ^V turns subscripting on, the next one turns it off). Some printers do not support subscripting. In this case the subscripted characters appear on a line by themselves immediately below the line they appear in. This may be acceptable for drafts. The print control ^PT will be displayed as ^T in the text. It is used to turn superscripting on and off (the first occurence of ^T turns superscripting on, the next one turns it off). Some printers do not support superscripting. In this case the superscripted char- acters appear on a line by themselves immediately above the line they appear in. This may be acceptable for drafts. The print control ^PA will be displayed as ^A in the text. It is used to select an alternate pitch. Since 10 pitch is usually the normal pitch, 12 pitch is the alternate pitch. However, the effect of ^A depends on how Newword has been configured for your printer. The print control ^PN will be displayed as ^N in the text. It is used to select the standard (normal) pitch. Usually 10 pitch is the normal pitch, and 12 pitch the alternate pitch. The print control ^PC will be displayed as ^C in the text. It is used to cause printing to stop until manually started again. This could be used, for example, to allow you to change to print wheel on your printer to a different font. The print control ^PY will be displayed as ^Y in the text. It is used to change the ribbon color if your printer has two colors. The first occurence of ^Y changes the color, the second occurence changes the color back to the original. The print control ^PH will be displayed as ^H in the text. It is used to cause the character following it to print on top of the character preceding it. This can be useful, for example, for printing accent marks on a letter. The print control ^PRET (^P followed by the RETURN key) will end the current line being typed in a manner similar to typing the RETURN key without the ^P. However, instead of a "<" appearing at the right edge of the screen, a "-" will appear. When this line is printed, the line will not advance, causing the following line to print on top of it. The print control ^PO will be displayed as ^O in the text. It is used to "bind" what Newword would normally consider to be two words into one word so that they will not be split apart during paragraph fixes using ^B. When printed, the ^O will be converted to a blank. The print control ^PF will be displayed as ^F in the text. It is used to send a special character code to the printer which is used on some daisywheel printers for special characters. On other types of printers, it will display as a blank. The print controls ^PQ, ^PW, ^PE, and ^PR will be displayed as ^Q, ^W, ^E, and ^R respectively in the text. They are used for custom functions on your printer depending on how Newword has been configured. If they have not been implemented for your printer, they will be ignored.  @O N - S C R E E N F O R M A T @MARGINS @TYPING @DISPLAY @L set left @W turn word wrap  @D turn print controls  @R set right @J turn right justify  @H turn hyphen help  @X release @E soft hyphen @T turn ruler  @G temporary indent @TABS @F ruler from text @S set line spacing @I set tab stop @O ruler to text @C center line at cursor @N clear tab stop  @P R O T E C T E D O N - S C R E E N M E N U @MARGINS @DISPLAY @F ruler from text @D turn print controls   @T turn ruler   Tab stops are now every  columns.  Enter new stop (2, 4, 8, 16).   Left margin currently at column   Enter a new margin either by typing a column number, or by typing the escape (ESC) key if it should go where the cursor last was in the text.  You may only type ESC or a number from 1 to 255.  The left margin must be to the left of the right margin.  New left margin?   Right margin currently at column   New right margin?   Newword could not use the ruler specified in the text.  Newword will use whatever spacing you specify as you are entering new text and when paragraphs are aligned. You may enter any spacing from 1 through 9. For single spacing, enter a 1. For double spacing, enter a 2. Enter new spacing.   Spacing can only be from 1 through 9.  Current tabs:  Decimal tabs:  None  Tab stops can be put at any column from 1 through 255. For decimal tabs, precede the column number with a "#" (for example, #15). Type the escape (ESC) key if the cursor spot in the text should be used.  Enter new tab stop.   Only numbers from 1 through 255 are valid.  No room for additions. Clear a tab first.  You may clear one tab stop by specifying its column. All tab stops can be cleared at once if you type an "A" instead of a number.  Enter a tab stop to be cleared.   Could not find that tab. You can change the position of the left margin using ^OL. Newword will ask you to either type in the column number where the left margin is to go, or to type the escape (ESC) key if the left margin is to go at the column where the cursor last was in the text. You can change the position of the right margin using ^OR. Newword will ask you to either type in the column number where the right margin is to go, or to type the escape (ESC) key if the right margin is to go at the column where the cursor last was in the text. You can release the margins by using ^OX. This allows you to type either to the left of the left margin, or to the right of the right of the right margin. The margin release is turned off by: typing a RETURN, typing within the margins, using ^OX again, or by using editing control keys that moves the cursor to a different line. If released, "Mar-Rel" appears in the status line. You can display or not display the ruler line by using ^OT. If the ruler line is currently displayed, ^OT turns it off. If the ruler line is not displayed, ^OT turns it back on. Note that even though the ruler line is not displayed, the margins and tabs still remain in effect as if it was. You can create a new ruler line by typing one into your text as if it was a normal line, and then using ^OF to pick it up and use it. See the reference manual for tricks on how to best do this. After you have gotten the ruler just the way you like it, you can use ^OO to move it into your text for use by either ^OF, or for the .RR automatic ruler dot command. As you type in a paragraph, when you come to the right margin, Newword can automatically end that line (with a "soft" ending) and move down to the next one. You can turn this "word wrap" feature on and off by using ^OW. If word wrap is now on, ^OW turns it off. If it is now off ^OW turns it back on. As paragraphs are typed or later aligned with a ^B, Newword can make the right margin either straight (justified) or ragged. To turn justification on and off, use ^OJ. If justification is now on, ^OJ turns it off. If it is off, ^OJ turns it on. Newword can recognize two different kinds of hyphenation, "hard" and "soft". Hard hyphenation means that the hyphen you see on the screen is always displayed and printed. Soft hyphenation means that the hyphen is a special print control that is printed only if it is at the end of a line. When you type ^OE, Newword acts as though you have typed a soft hyphen at the place in the text where the cursor last was. A paragraph indent allows you to temporarily create an indent for the paragraph you are typing. The indent works the same as if you tabbed in for each line of the paragraph, except it is automatic. The para- graph indent remains in effect until you type the RETURN key. Note that this means that it is best used with word wrap turned on. You can paragraph indent to more than one tab stop by using more than one ^OG in a row. Each time you use ^OG you will see one of the tab stops in the ruler line change to a "V" to show where the indent is. You can set the line spacing for your typing by using ^OS. Newword will ask you what spacing to use. Answer with 2 for double spacing, 3 for triple spacing, etc. From then on, each line you type will be spaced that way. Also, if you align a paragraph using ^B or ^QB, its spacing will be changed to whatever spacing you are currently using. Using ^OC will center the text on the line where the cursor last was in the text. Normally, the print controls that you put into your text with ^P are displayed as control characters (bolding is displayed as ^B for example). However, this can sometimes make it hard to align columns of text since these control characters shift the display wherever they occur. You can use ^OD to turn the display of the print controls on and off. If print controls are on, ^OD turns them off. If off, ^OD turns them back on. When you align a paragraph using ^B, Newword can stop in the middle of the paragraph to ask you for help with hyphenating a word. It only does this if "hyphen help" is on, and if Newword cannot make the paragraph look nice by splitting the sentence between words. To set the tab stops, use ^OI. Newword will ask you to enter either the column number where the tab goes, or to type the escape (ESC) key if the tab is to go where the cursor last was in the text. To set a decimal tab, either type a number sign (#) before the column number (for example, #24), or type the number sign and then the escape (ESC) key. To clear the tab stops, use ^ON. Newword will ask you to enter either the column number where the tab is to be cleared, to to type the escape (ESC) key if the tab is to be cleared where the cursor last was in the text, or for an "A" if all tabs are to be cleared. To clear a decimal tab, either type a number sign (#) before the column number, or type the number sign and then the escape (ESC) key.