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- $faf|1-Lordy me, it's the...
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- $ffa|2-Article Formats
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- $faf|1-Text file, with many fine examples!
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- $fff by Freak of NFA
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- With the new format of The Word comes a new control code for your
- article, so now's a good time to go over the lot of them so that your
- articles will look good and we have the minimum of formatting to do. If
- you're unsure about anything in this article, go into your favourite
- text editor and load the file "00-ArticleFormats.txt", and examine it.
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- $ffa|1-Plain ASCII Please!
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- $fff
- Please don't use a text editor that inserts control codes into the doc
- to make it look pretty. We require only plain ASCII text and so
- recomment that you use the same thing that you'd use on your Startup-
- Sequence, something like CygnusEd, or just plain old Ed will do.
-
- The width of the articles is set to 72 characters and the text is
- indented by four spaces. This means that if you format your text so
- that it is 72 characters wide it will appear centred on the screen.
- Lines longer than 72 chars WILL be displayed and will wrap around the
- screen on a graphical basis, so that text that comes in from the left
- after wrapping will be one pixel lower than that on the line it
- originated from.
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- Either set CygnusEd to a 72-character width (Shift+Amiga+"6") and set
- word wrap to ON (Amiga+"6") or tap the spacebar 71 times, followed by a
- character to act as a marker, and don't go beyond this marker when you
- type your text.
- $ffa
- |1-Big Text!
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- $fff
- Big Text is a single phrase that you want to appear in the above
- 24-point font. Because it is a 24-point font it takes three lines of
- the normal text to display, so you should leave at least 2 empty lines
- after it. To display a string in Big Text you simply preface it with
- the control string "|1-" and ensure that the "|" character is the first
- character on that line. For example: The string:
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- |1-This is Big Text
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- when placed up against the left-hand edge of the screen, will produce:
- $faf
- |1-This is Big Text
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- $fff
- and two blank lines are left after it so that the bit text doesn't over-
- write any subsequent lines of ASCII.
- $ffa
- |2-Big Big Text!
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- $fff
- Big Big Text is another single phrase, as above, but it is displayed in
- a stonking 60-point font for super-emphasis. As it's 60-point it needs
- 6 empty lines after it to ensure it doesn't overwrite anything else, and
- if you want to display descender characters (g, j, p, q, y) then you
- should leave 7 blank lined after it.
-
- Again, the display code is similar to the Big Text, you simply preface
- your string with "|2-" and it's all done automatically, so for example
- the line:
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- |2-Blimey!
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- when placed up against the left-hand border of your file, will produce:
- $faf
- |2-Blimey!
- 1-
- 2-
- 3-
- 4-
- 5-
- 6-
- 7-
- $fff
- and in this case 7 extra lines are required as there's a "y" in the
- string, taking up another line. In both of these bigger-text examples,
- no small (normal?) type can be on the same line that the bigger stuff
- starts on, it'll be included in the big text string, however you CAN put
- normal ascii on the subsequent lines if you take care that they don't
- overap the main text, illustrated by the numbers 1 to 7 above.
- $ffa
- |1-Clip Art:
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- $fff
- Due to time constraints, Clipart is yet to be included in this version
- of The Word's magazine engine (many apologies to Bootblock/Terraform who
- spent ages inserting requests!), however it'll be first on the list of
- "Things To Do" for issue 11, and should see a much easier-to-use control
- method than before.
- $ffa
- |1-Colour!!
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- $fff
- This is a new addition into the article text, every line in your article
- can have it's own colour assigned to it. By default your article text
- will be displayed in white, but you can change the current line colour
- at any point by inserting a standard 2-Byte RGB value into the start of
- the line. These values are used by all paint programs, such as Deluxe
- Paint and Personal Paint, and so you can find nice colour combinations
- beforehand by playing with these packages.
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- As before with the large text codes, these sequences must appear at the
- start of the line where you want the colour change to take effect, the
- codes go in the format $RGB where R=Red, G=Green and B=Blue, all colours
- having standard values from 0 to F. Note that full green *must* be
- requested with $0F0 and *NOT* $F0, which would be logical.
- $ffa
- |1-What's first then?
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- $fff
- Here's how you should produce your articles, this is the easiest order
- for less-experienced people.
- $faf
- 1> Main body of text, type your article, leave titles and subtitles
- as normal text for now, don't worry about spacing. Format the
- text to 72 columns, and split it into paragraphs where required.
-
- 2> Go to each title or subtitle in turn, and insert either "|1-" or
- "|2-" (do not include quotes) at the left-hand border to use the
- larger fonts. If you have used font 1 then ensure there are 2
- blank lines AFTER the one starting "|1-", if you have used font
- 2 then ensure there are 7 blank lines (8 if you have used either
- q,y,p or j in lower case) AFTER the one starting "|2-". Ensure
- there are no spaces between the "-" and the start of your title.
-
- 3> Change the colour at the START of any line by inserting the hex
- value for it at the left border. It DOES NOT MATTER if a colour
- code pushes the width of your text beyond 72 colums.
- $aff
- |1-The Word Article Tester...
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- $fff
- The Word Article Tester (TWAT :) can be found on disk 2, you should copy
- it to your C: directory (on your hard drive, non-HD owners should
- SERIOUSLY think about getting one!) and run it from the CLI. Simply
- load any .txt article file via the gaudy green requester and you can see
- what the file will look like in the magazine.
- $aff
- The keypresses for TWAT are as follows:
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- C/Up - Scroll upwards through the text
- C/Down - Scroll downwards through the text
- Sh+C/Up - Scroll quickly upwards through the text
- Sh+C/Up - Scroll quickly downwards through the text
- Esc - load another file view the requester
- F1-F8 - Speed set to 1-8 pixels per frame
- F10 - Quit
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- $fffTWAT will search the Ram Disk for a file called "TWAT.loadme" which
- should contain the full name (including path) of the file you want to
- pre-load, so you can use it via Directory Opus by creating a MENU entry:
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- AmigaDOS C:Echo >RAM:TWAT.loadme {f}
- AmigaDOS C:TWAT
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- End
-