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- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
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- SHAREWARE DISK/FILE MANAGER
-
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- Copyright 1991-92 Charles F. Martin
-
- President, NoVaSoft - Member ASP
-
- 3239 Riverview Dr.
- Triangle, VA 22172-1421 USA
-
- Phone (703) 221-1471/1833 CompuServe 72130,1400
- Internet 72130.1400@compuserve.com
-
-
- _______
- ____|__ | (R)
- --| | |-------------------
- | ____|__ | Association of
- | | |_| Shareware
- |__| o | Professionals
- -----| | |---------------------
- |___|___| MEMBER
-
-
-
-
- Assembled using Wolfware Assembler WASM Ver 2.22x,
- (c) 1985-1991 Eric Tauck, Wolfware
-
- Manual developed using PC-Write Ver 3.04,
- (c) 1983-90 Bob Wallace, Quicksoft
-
-
-
-
-
- FOREWORD CONCERNING SHAREWARE AND CMFiler:
-
- _____
-
- Definition of Shareware. . .
-
- Shareware distribution gives users a chance to try software before
- buying it. If you try a shareware program and continue using it, you are
- expected to register. Individual programs differ on details -- some
- request registration while others require it, some specify a maximum
- trial period. With registration, you get anything from the simple right
- to continue using the software to an updated program with printed manual.
-
- Copyright laws apply to both shareware and commercial software, and
- the copyright holder retains all rights, with a few specific exceptions
- as stated below. Shareware authors are accomplished programmers, just
- like commercial authors, and the programs are of comparable quality. (In
- both cases, there are good programs and bad ones!) The main difference
- is in the method of distribution. The author specifically grants the
- right to copy and distribute the software, either to all and sundry or to
- a specific group. For example, some authors require written permission
- before a commercial disk vendor may copy their shareware.
-
- Shareware is a distribution method, not a type of software. You
- should find software that suits your needs and pocketbook, whether it's
- commercial or shareware. The shareware system makes fitting your needs
- easier, because you can try before you buy. And because the overhead is
- low, prices are low also. Shareware has the ultimate money-back
- guarantee -- if you don't use the product, you don't pay for it.
-
- CMFiler is a copyrighted shareware program by Charles F. Martin,
- President, NoVaSoft and author member of the Association of Shareware
- Professionals. The evaluation edition of CMFiler is offered at no charge
- to any potential user for evaluation. Feel free to share the evaluation
- edition with your friends, but please do not give it away altered or as
- part of another system. The essence of "user-supported" software is to
- provide personal computer users with quality software without high
- prices, and yet to provide incentive for programmers to continue to
- develop new products.
-
-
-
- _____
-
- Ombudsman Statement. . .
-
- This program program is produced by a member of the Association of
- Shareware Professionals (ASP). ASP wants to make sure that the shareware
- principle works for you. If you are unable to resolve a shareware-
- related problem with an ASP member by contacting the member directly, ASP
- may be able to help. The ASP Ombudsman can help you resolve a dispute or
- problem with an ASP member, but does not provide technical support for
- members' products. Please write to the ASP Ombudsman at 545 Grover Road,
- Muskegon, MI 49442 or send a CompuServe message via CompuServe Mail to
- ASP Ombudsman 70007,3536.
-
- _____
-
- CMFiler Disclaimer - Agreement. . .
-
- Users of CMFiler must accept this disclaimer of warranty:
- CMFiler is supplied as-is. The author disclaims all warranties,
- expressed or implied, including, without limitation, the warranties of
- merchantability and of fitness for any purpose. The author assumes no
- liability for damages, direct or consequential, which may result from the
- use of CMFiler.
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- CMFiler - Foreword 2
-
-
-
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- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
-
- TABLES OF CONTENTS:
- _____
-
- INDEX TO TOPICS AND OPERATIONS:
- _____
-
- OVERVIEW:
-
- File Contents. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ov-1
- Program Logical and Physical Organization. . . . . . . Ov-3
- Security Features. . .
- Monitor Options. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ov-4
- Precautions and Limitations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ov-5
- Assumption about User's Familiarity with DOS . . . . . Ov-6
- Additional Note for Windows Users. . .
- Assertion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ov-7
- Special Thanks . . .
- _____
-
- TUTORIAL -- Chapter 1: File Handling:
-
- GETTING STARTED, or the "Kernel" and the "Overlay": . . 1-1
- Rename CMFILER to Spare My Fingers. . .
- The Screen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-2
- The Help Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3
- More on the "Modifier Keys" . . .
- Two Panels. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4
- Color Palette . . .
- Alphabetic Case Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5
- Cursor Movement . . .
- Switching Drives or Disks . . .
- Subdirectories. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-6
- Copy Some Files, then Do It with Tags . . .
- Tagging, Backing Up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-7
- Moving Files. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-8
- Deleting a File . . .
- The Tagging Convention Expounded on . . . . . . . . . . 1-9
- Renaming a File OR a Directory. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-10
- Some Additional Tagging Options . . .
- Copy with Rename. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-11
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- The File Freshener. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-11
- Different Ways to Show the Files. . .
- The Data Entry Window . . .
- Disk Space Occupied versus Actual File Size . . . . . . 1-12
- File Attributes . . .
- Changing the Date/Time Stamp of a File. . . . . . . . . 1-13
- "Alt-Tagging" and Appending. . .
- Printing a File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-14
- Making Some Notes About Your Files. . .
- Printing a Directory Listing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-15
- Comparison Mode. . .
- Hide Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-16
- Mask Template. . .
- Displaying Date and Time. . .
- Changing or Adding a Volume Label . . .
- Some Safeguards. . .
- Saving User Setup Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-17
- Help. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-19
- Command Line Parameters . . .
- Quitting CF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-20
-
- _____
-
- TUTORIAL -- Chapter 2: File Viewing and Editing:
-
- Viewing a File. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
- Record Delimiters . . .
- Information Area. . .
- Line Wrapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2
- Cursor Movement . . .
- Find a String . . .
- Leading and Trailing Blanks in the Data Window. . . . . 2-3
- Editing a File. . .
- Edit Mode Limitations . . .
- Typeover vs Insert. . .
- Editing a Line. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4
- More on Record Delimiters . . .
- Alt-Keypad and Alt-N . . .
- Block Operations. . .or the REAL Power of CF's Editor
- Marking a Block, and the Copy Buffer. . . . . . . . . . 2-5
- Delete, Copy, Move. . .
- Restoring from Inadvertent Block Deletion . . .
- Sending a Block of Text to the Line Printer . . .
- . . . or to a File. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-6
- Replace and Global replace. . .
- Leaving Edit Mode . . .
- Backup File Protection. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-7
- Creating a New File . . .
- Help. . .
-
-
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- CMFiler -- Table of Contents ii
-
-
- _____
-
- TUTORIAL -- Chapter 3: The TREE Functions:
-
- The Display . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1
- Copying structures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-2
- The "Copy Into" Function. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-4
- Moving structures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-5
- Copying Just the Files. . .
- Copying Just the Directory Array. . .
- Deleting Structures . . .
- Delete Just the Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-6
- Show the File List. . .
- Find (Goto) a File. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-7
- Goto a Directory. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-8
- Find Text . . .
- Viewing or Editing Files. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-9
- Deleting Files from the File List . . .
- Print a Hard Copy of the Tree . . .
- Precaution Regarding CF_TRASH.CAN . . .
- Help. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
- Leaving the Tree Functions. . .
-
- _____
-
- TUTORIAL -- Chapter 4: Launching User Applications:
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- Terminology: User Application as "Child" Program . . . 4-1
- Resident Footprint of CF. . .
- "Shelling" to DOS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2
- Review of DOS Command Line Structure. . .
- Launching a Program from the Main Screen. . . . . . . . 4-3
- Immediate Execution . . .
- Execution with Command Tail . . .
- Execution with a Single File Name in Command Tail . . . 4-4
- "Seeding" the Command Tail. . .
- Changing the Command Tail "Seed" Delimiter. . . . . . . 4-5
- Customizing Your User Application File Specifications .
- A Further Execution Option -- Instant ZIPping/UNZIPping 4-7
- ZIP a File. . .
- Now UNZIP a File. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-8
- Tailoring CF for custom ZIP/UNZIP spec. . .
- Using Other Compression Utilities . . . . . . . . . . . 4-9
- Specifying a Password for Access from Screen Saver. . . 4-10
-
- _____
-
- REFERENCE -- Description by Operation:
-
- _____
-
- MEMORY MAPS -- Information on Memory Allocation:
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-
-
- CMFiler -- Table of Contents iii
-
-
-
- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
-
- INDEX TO TOPICS AND OPERATIONS:
-
- Topic or Operation Module Command Page
- ------------------ ------ ------- ----
-
- Appending files:
- to target panel Main Alt-T, then C 1-13
- to source panel Main Alt-T, then B 1-13
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- Application launching: See
- Child process execution
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- ASCII entry with keypad: Edit Alt-Keypad 2-4
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- Attributes, directory:
- toggle "hide", at curs Main 2 1-12
- toggle "hide", at curs Tree 2 3-2
-
- Attributes, file:
- toggle "read", at curs Main 1, no tags 1-12
- toggle "read", tagged Main 1, w/ tags "
- toggle "hide", at curs Main 2, no tags "
- toggle "hide", tagged Main 2, w/ tags "
- toggle "sys", at curs Main 3, no tags "
- toggle "sys", tagged Main 3, w/ tags "
- toggle "arch", at curs Main 4, no tags "
- toggle "arch", tagged Main 4, w/ tags "
- zero all attrs, at curs Main 0, no tags "
- zero all attrs, tagged Main 0, w/ tags "
-
- Back up files in directory: 1-7
- file at cursor Main B, no tags
- tagged files in direc Main B, w/ tags
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- Block operations: Edit 2-4
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- Case options: Main Ctl-E 1-5
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- Change directories:
- to directory at cursor Main Enter 1-6
- to parent directory Main P "
- show direc in opp panel Main Shf-Enter "
- show parent in opp panel Main Shf-P "
- to root directory Main \ "
- Tree Home 3-2
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- Topic or Operation Module Command Page
- ------------------ ------ ------- ----
-
- Change to new drive or disk: Main N 1-5
- Tree N 3-2
-
- Child process execution:
- Shell to DOS Main S 4-2
- quick execute file at Main Q 4-3
- cursor, no command
- tail
- ready file at cursor Main X 4-3
- for execution
- seed command tail with Main Alt-C 4-4
- full path spec to file
- at cursor
- seed command tail with Main Alt-T 4-4
- name of file at cursor
- edit command tail and Main Alt-X 4-3,4-4
- execute readied file
- execute readied file, Main Shf-X 4-4
- no edit of command
- tail
- execute readied file, Main Ctl-X 4-4
- first adding name of
- file at cursor to
- command tail
- assign executable files Main Shf-F10 See Function
- to Function Keys Keys
-
- Color palette: Main Ctl-P 1-4
-
- Command line parameters: 1-19
-
- Compare mode, toggle: M/T Ctl-C 1-15,3-1
-
- Concatenating files:
- to target panel Main Alt-T, then C 1-13
- to source panel Main Alt-T, then B "
-
- Configuration file: 1-16
-
- Copy operations:
- file at cursor to target Main C, no tags 1-6
- tagged files to target Main C w/ tags "
- freshen one directory Main Shf-F 1-11
- from another
- structure, incl files Tree C 3-2,3-4,3-5
- structure w/o files Tree Alt-C 3-5
- text in marked block Edit Alt-C 2-5
-
- Copy with rename: Main Alt-R 1-11
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- CMFiler -- Index Ind-2
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- Topic or Operation Module Command Page
- ------------------ ------ ------- ----
-
- Create new file: Main F 2-7
-
- Cursor movement:
- in directory listings Main 1-4
- in tree structures Tree 3-2
- in editor Edit 2-1
-
- Data entry window: All 1-11
-
- Date/time, change file: Main Alt-F 1-13
-
- Date/time, display system: Main Space 1-16
-
- Definitions:
- CF_TRASH.CAN directory 1-7
- Child process 4-1
- Compare mode 1-15
- Hide mode "
- Kernel 1-1
- Module Ov-2,1-1
- Overlay 1-1
- Source panel 1-4
- Target panel "
-
- Delete operations:
- "soft" vs "hard" 1-8
- resetting D to hard 1-17
- file at curs, soft Main D, no tags 1-8
- file at curs, hard Main Ctl-D, no tags "
- tagged files, soft Main D, w/ tags "
- tagged files, hard Main Ctl-D, w/ tags "
- directory at cursor Main D, dir void 1-6
- structure at curs, soft Tree D 3-5
- structure at curs, hard Tree Ctl-D "
- text in marked block Edit Alt-Y 2-5
- line of text Edit Ctl-Y 2-4
- word of text Edit Ctl-T "
- text to end of line Edit Ctl-D "
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- CMFiler -- Index Ind-3
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- Topic or Operation Module Command Page
- ------------------ ------ ------- ----
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- Directory:
- delete (only if empty) Main D 1-6
- delete direc structure Tree D or Ctl-D 3-5
- make new Main M 1-6
- Tree M 3-2
- rename Main R 1-2,1-10
- Tree R 3-2
- display subdir in srce Main Enter 1-6
- display subdir in trgt Main Shf-Enter "
- display parent in srce Main P "
- display parent in trgt Main Shf-P "
- display root in source Main \ "
- display root in target Main Shf-\ "
- display source in trgt Main Shf-* "
-
- Display options:
- show Hidden files, Main Ctl-H 1-15
- dirs; toggle Tree Ctl-H 3-2
- Compare mode, toggle Main Ctl-C 1-15
- Tree Ctl-C 3-2
- define filename Mask Main Ctl-M 1-15
- Find text Tree Shf-F 3-8
- Goto (find) directory Tree Alt-G 3-8
- Goto (find) file Tree G 3-7
- Show file list Tree S 3-6
- file time, size in K Main - 1-12
- no file time, full size Main + 1-12
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- DOS, Shell to: Main S 4-2
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- Edit file at cursor: Main E 2-3
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- Edit file from notes screen Main Alt-E 1-14
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- Edit file from tree file Tree E 3-9
- list:
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- File Masking: Main Ctl-M 1-16
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- File sorting: Main Ctl-O 1-11
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- Find file: 3-7
- from main module Main Shf-T, then G
- from tree module Tree G
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- Find string: Edit Alt-F 2-2
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- Find text: Tree Shf-F 3-8
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- CMFiler -- Index Ind-4
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- Topic or Operation Module Command Page
- ------------------ ------ ------- ----
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- Form feed printer: Main Ctl-F 1-13
- Tree Ctl-F
- Edit Ctl-F
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- Freshen directory from Main Shf-F 1-11
- opposite panel:
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- Function Keys:
- assign applications to Main Shf-F10 4-5
- Function keys
- ready app at F1-F9 Main Fn 4-6
- for execution
- execute readied Fn app Main Alt-X, 4-6
- Shf-X, or
- Ctl-X
- execute app to operate Main Ctl-Fn 4-6
- on file at cursor
- execute app to operate Main Shf-Fn 4-6
- on constructed
- command line
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- Global replace string: Edit Alt-G 2-6
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- Goto file: Main G, then name 1-5
- Tree G, then name 3-7
- Goto subdirectory: Main Alt-G, name 1-5
- Tree Alt-G, name 3-8
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- Help, on-line: Main H Ov-2,1-19
- Tree H 3-10
- Edit Alt-H 2-7
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- Hide mode, toggle: M/T Ctl-H 1-16,3-1
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- Kernel, resident, set size: Main K 4-1,4-5
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- Launching applications: See
- Child process execution
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- Limitations:
- dir size (300,600,1200) Main Ov-5
- file size in edit mode Edit "
- memory required (182 K) "
- tree entries (500 dirs) Tree "
- dir nesting (8 levels) M/T "
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- Make new directory: Main M 1-6
- Tree M 3-2
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- CMFiler -- Index Ind-5
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- Topic or Operation Module Command Page
- ------------------ ------ ------- ----
-
- Masking, in direc listing: Main Ctl-M 1-16
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- Monitor options: Ov-4
-
- Moving operations:
- files within disk Main Shf-C 1-8
- structures w/in disk Tree Shf-C 3-5
- block of marked text Edit Alt-V 2-5
-
- New drive or disk, change: Main N 1-5
- Tree N 3-2
-
- Notes: edit Main Ctl-N 1-14
- view Main Shf-N "
-
- NULL character, entering Edit Alt-N 2-4
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- Options, user, saving Main Shf-S 1-17
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- Options, user, setting Main Shf-O 1-17
-
- Ordering scheme, select: Main Ctl-O 1-11
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- Overcopy switch, toggling: Main Shf-O 1-17
- Tree Shf-O 3-3
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- Password, entering: Main Shf-F10 Ov-3,4-9
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- Printing:
- put file in print queue Main L 1-14
- look at print queue Main Shf-L "
- cancel print queue Main Ctl-L "
- print directory listing Main Alt-L 1-15
- print directory listing Main Shf-N or Ctl-N "
- with notes then Alt-L
- print tree structure Tree Alt-L 3-9
- Print marked text block Edit Alt-P 2-5
- Output block to file Edit Alt-O 2-6
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- Quitting:
- to DOS from main module Main Esc-other, or 1-20
- Alt-Q
- to DOS from tree module Tree Alt-Q 3-9
- to main from tree module Tree Esc or Enter "
- to main from file edit Edit Esc 2-6
- to main from file view Edit Esc or Enter 2-6
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- Refresh panel from disk: Main Shift-R 1-5
- Tree Shift-R 3-2
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- CMFiler -- Index Ind-6
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- Topic or Operation Module Command Page
- ------------------ ------ ------- ----
-
- Remove (Delete) directory: Main D (must be void) 1-6
-
- Rename file or directory at Main R 1-1,1-10
- cursor: Tree R 3-2
-
- Replace string: Edit Alt-R 2-6
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- Resident kernel, set size: Main K 4-1,4-5
-
- Screen saver:
- normal timeout to Main Ov-3
- forcing before timeout Main Ctl-S Ov-3
- freshening directories Main Ov-6
- after return, switch
- setting
-
- Security features:
- cleared I/O buffers Ov-3
- password access denial Main Ov-3
-
- Self-checking: Main Ov-4
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- Setup options: Main Shf-O 1-16
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- Shell to DOS: Main S 4-2
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- Sorting of (Ordering) files: Main Ctl-O 1-11
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- Startup options: 1-19
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- Subdirectories:
- make new Main M 1-6
- Tree M 3-2
- rename Main R 1-1,1-10
- Tree R 3-2
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- Tagging operations on files:
- toggle Tag at cursor Main T or Space 1-6
- toggle All tags in direc Main Ctl-A 1-10
- clear or set All tags Main A 1-6
- all files same naMe as Main Alt-M 1-10
- all files same Ext as Main Alt-E "
- all files Newer Main Alt-N "
- all files Older Main Alt-O "
- all files same Date Main Alt-D "
- tag in oPposite panel Main Alt-P "
- "Append" or "Alt" Tag Main Alt-T 1-10,1-13
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- Time/date, change file: Main Alt-F 1-13
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- CMFiler -- Index Ind-7
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- Topic or Operation Module Command Page
- ------------------ ------ ------- ----
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- Time/date, display system: Main 5 or % 1-16
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- TSR's, precaution about: Ov-5
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- UNZIPping with PKZIP utils:
- with command line edit Main U 4-8
- no command line edit Main Shf-U "
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- View file at cursor: Main Enter 2-1
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- View file from notes screen Main Alt-V 1-14
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- View file from tree file Tree V 3-9
- list:
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- Volume label, setting: Main V 1-16
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- ZIPping with PKZIP utils:
- with command line edit Main Z 4-7
- no command line edit Main Shf-Z "
- designating files to ZIP Main T/Alt-T "
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- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
- File Contents. . .
-
- There are ten files in the CMFiler package:
-
- o CMFILER.COM - The "kernel" of the CMFiler program
-
- o CMFILER.OVY - Its supporting program overlay
-
- o CMFILER.DOC - This manual, which is the full documentation
-
- o CMFILER.BRF - A brief summary of features for quick reference
-
- o CMFILER.REG - A file containing the registration form, an
- explanation of the shareware concept, and a
- statement of the Association of Shareware
- Professionals concerning its ombudsman services
- for registered users of shareware applications.
-
- o DESC2NAR.COM- A program for 4DOS/NDOS users for converting the
- DESCRIPT.ION files containing file and directory
- notes into the CMFiler NARATIVE.CF file format.
-
- o DESC2NAR.DOC- The documentation for DESC2NAR.COM.
-
- o CHANGES - A brief compilation of the changes and bug fixes
- since Version 5.22.
-
- o READ.ME - A file with installation instructions.
-
- o FILE_ID.DIZ - A description file used by BBS system operators.
-
-
- CMFiler is not "public domain" software or "freeware". It is
- offered as shareware for evaluation and distribution unaltered to others,
- with the understanding that, if you find you are using it after a 60-day
- trial period, you will pay a registration fee of $30. Please refer to
- CMFILER.REG for registration information and a definition of shareware.
- I am so convinced of CMFiler's wide usability and appeal that, once you
- register your copy, I will send you an instant $10 commission each and
- every time someone else registers a copy and cites you as the source of
- it! You may make as much money by passing CMFiler to others as you care
- to. CMFiler MUST be passed as an UNALTERED collection of the evaluation
- editions of the files CMFILER.COM/.OVY plus the other files listed above,
- together on one disk, or as a compressed file, e.g., using the PKZIP
- utility.
-
-
-
- The form in which I prefer to pass CMFiler, because it requires no
- external decompression utilities, is as the self-extracting file
- CMFILER.EXE, which on execution extracts all ten files. A perfectly
- suitable alternative form, preferable if you have the PKZIP utilities
- because it takes up less space, is as the ZIP file CMFILER.ZIP, which on
- unZIPping yields all ten files. Any package that contains all ten files
- unaltered is acceptable.
-
- CMFiler provides a quick, simple, "one-touch" operating environment
- for your IBM-compatible 80x86-based computer running under DOS Version 2
- or later. While its name implies it is a file manager, it is much, MUCH
- more. Once you have used CMFiler for a few sessions, you will not want
- to struggle with the DOS COMMAND.COM command processor or your other file
- managers ever again! CMFiler was painstakingly written in Assembly
- language over a three-year period, carefully factoring in the suggestions
- of a dozen of the world's pickiest software critics. It is compact and
- lightning fast.
-
- CMFiler is capable of doing everything your DOS COMMAND.COM
- processor or other file manager can do, and more, but with EASE! --
- displaying two directories side-by-side; copying one or more files from
- one directory to another; backing up files in the same directory;
- deleting and renaming files and directories; setting file and directory
- attributes; concatenating (stringing together) multiple files; viewing
- and editing files; making and removing subdirectories; printing files in
- the "background" while you perform other tasks; setting disk volume
- labels; printing directory listings; keeping notes; displaying two disk
- structures side-by-side as "trees", and performing a full set of
- operations on their structures; and executing child processes -- all with
- a minimum number of keystrokes and maximum "transparency".
-
- Operations are keyed to single-letter mnemonics, making CMFiler
- intuitive and easy to learn. For example, the letter C means "copy", the
- letter D "delete", and so forth. Almost everything you need to know
- about CMFiler is contained in a two-line prompt at the bottom of the
- screen, or can be summoned instantly with a single keystroke (surprise! H
- for "help"), with no delay for external file reading, since the help is
- imbedded in the program code. There are only a few things for which you
- will need to refer to this manual once you begin using CMFiler.
-
- CMFiler employs the BIOS and DOS disk service routines which are
- embedded in ROM or loaded into RAM when your computer boots, and the DOS
- file operation safeguards and error flags are employed, such as denying
- access to remove non-void subdirectories. I have added a few of my own,
- such as protection of files against being overwritten by zero-length
- files of the same name (resulting from an occasional DOS read-write
- failure).
-
- CMFiler performs most operations immediately, and does not ask
- for confirmation as other file managers do, unless file destruction is
- involved. You must confirm with a separate keystroke, for example,
-
-
- CMFiler -- Overview Ov-2
-
-
- that you really DO want to delete files, or that you really DO want to
- overwrite a more recent version of a file during a copy operation.
- Otherwise CMFiler takes for granted that you are doing exactly what you
- had in mind, on the basis that a mistake can be recovered from with just
- a few more keystrokes. The "mass" operations, like copying large numbers
- of tagged files, all have an Esc bailout.
-
- _____
-
- Program Logical and Physical Organization. . .
-
- The CMFiler program code is organized "logically" (in the
- programmer's sense) into three sections, or "modules". These will be
- referred to variously as the "main module" or "main screen"; the "editor
- module" or "editor"; and the "tree module" or "tree functions". Each
- module performs some major function or group of functions which is
- fundamentally different from the rest, discussed further below. On the
- other hand, the program is broken PHYSICALLY into two main pieces, in
- this case two files, namely, the file "CMFILER.COM", sometimes referred
- to herein as the "kernel"; and the file "CMFILER.OVY", or the "overlay".
- The kernel contains the most vital part of the main module, the
- "starter", and the overlay, which the kernel loads contiguous to itself
- in memory, contains the rest of the main module, plus all of the editor
- and tree modules. A memory map is included in this manual for those
- interested.
-
- The main module displays one directory on the left side of the
- screen, or two directories in side-by-side panels. The subdirectories of
- each directory are always shown at the top of the listing in alphabetical
- order, following by the files in one of seven user-specified ordering
- schemes. Commands operate on a subdirectory or one or more files in one
- panel (the source panel). Some commands, like Copy, write to the
- directory in the other panel (the target panel). The main module gives a
- somewhat myopic or "microscopic" view of your disk, one directory at a
- time, but does so with the most complete set of file and directory
- services available in the file manager today. The other two modules
- (editor and tree) are accessed from the main, and the editor may also be
- accessed from the tree.
-
- The editor is called to create, edit or view a file. To view or
- edit an existing file in the main module, just put the cursor on it and
- press E or Enter. To create a file, press F and type in a name for the
- new file.
-
- The tree module is called from the main module with Shift-T. It
- displays the entire directory tree structure of one disk in the left
- panel, or two trees for the same or different disks in side-by-side
- panels. Whole structures ("branches") of a tree, or if you wish just the
- files in one directory, may be copied, moved or deleted in their
- entirety. Some file manager documentation call this kind of capability
- "prune-and-graft". This capability is "macroscopic" in scope, compared
-
-
- CMFiler -- Overview Ov-3
-
-
- to the main modules, as it deals with the big picture of your disk
- organization. But CMFiler does much more than most file managers. In
- addition to the "macroscopic" prune-and-graft-type operators, you may do
- some microscopic things as well, like display the files in each
- subdirectory as you navigate through the tree, find a specific file
- anywhere on the disk, search for a text string in all or some of the
- files on the disk -- even view or edit a file, and delete it without
- having to return to the main file services module. This latter feature
- in particular makes disk cleanup a breeze!
-
- _____
-
- Security Features. . .
-
- CMFiler incorporates security features which support its
- use on systems containing sensitive information:
-
- o You may specify a password, and change it at any time during a
- session, which must be given back to reenter CMFiler once it has gone
- to screen-saver mode (about 1-1/2 minutes after last keystroke from
- main screen display). This password is the bottom-most field in the
- data entry screen presented by the key combination Shift-F10 --discussed
- in further detail in Chapter 4.
-
- o You may force CMFiler into screen-saver mode with the key
- combination Ctrl-S. This is so that, if you want to secure access to
- your computer immediately, you don't have to wait the 1-1/2 minutes for
- the screen-saver and password to automatically be invoked.
-
- o If you set the option "Clear I/O buffers if located?" in the
- Shift-O Options screen, CMFiler will attempt to locate and overwrite all
- the DOS input/output buffers with the continuous string "CFCFCFCF..."
- before starting any file writing operations. This operation ensures that
- the file being written does not contain any stray data in the "slack
- space" of the last sector written that was hanging around from a previous
- I/O operation. ( ***DR DOS USERS:*** The option to clear I/O buffers
- should NOT be invoked if you are operating under DR DOS. This operating
- system responds very ungracefully to the buffer clearing feature. For
- this reason, I have set the default option to NOT clear I/O buffers.)
-
- CMFiler also employs a rudimentary check-summing routine to check
- the .COM and .OVY files each time they are loaded. This routine will
- sense any changes in the execution code and fixed data areas of either
- file, and warn the user of the corruption. Files may become corrupted as
- a result of an operating system error during data transmission, a sector
- going bad on a disk, or external tampering by a person or a virus. This
- check-summing feature can detect (and has detected) the presense of some
- older file infecting viruses, but may be foiled by modern stealth
- viruses, so DO NOT count on it for virus protection. There is no
- substitute for good antivirus software. I use and strongly recommend
- Wolfgang Stiller's Integrity Master. He is President of Stiller Research
-
-
- CMFiler -- Overview Ov-4
-
-
- and a member of the ASP's Virus Information Panel, and a recognized
- expert in the anti-virus community.
-
- _____
-
- Monitor Options. . .
-
- CMFiler should work with all reasonably current IBM-compatible
- CGA/EGA/VGA and monochrome monitors, though I have heard of some problems
- with machines under very early BIOS (Basic Input/Output System) versions.
-
- You may specify a type of monitor one of two ways:
-
- o When first run, if CMFiler cannot find a .CFG file containing
- previously specified user option data, and does not sense a monochrome
- monitor installed (which only supports one color set), it knows it cannot
- tell for sure what you have installed and will ask you to specify a
- monitor type by pressing C, L, T or M. Your choice is immediately
- recorded by CMFiler creating a .CFG file. If you have an LCD monitor
- other than Tandy, you may invoke a generic LCD color set with the letter
- L. For Tandy LCD's use T. (Tandy for some unfathomable reason inverts
- the function of the high-intensity bit in the color attribute.) If you
- have a "monochrome" monitor being driven by a color card, CMFiler senses
- the color card's presence, not the monitor's. Press M for this case to
- force the monochrome color set. You may also put one of these four
- letters in the command line, preceded by the character @, and bypass the
- initial question.
-
- _____
-
- Precautions and Limitations. . .
-
- There are a few precautions and limitations the user should be
- aware of:
-
- o Terminate-and-Stay-Resident programs should NOT be launched from
- CMFiler. At best you will end up with a fragmented memory when
- you exit CMFiler, and at worst you will have a SYSTEM CRASH.
-
- o CMFiler requires a minimum of 197 KB of free memory to run. This
- permits generous memory allocations for the directory listings,
- a print spooler buffer, and a large copy buffer. During
- application launching, however, the resident portion of CMFiler
- can be made to occupy as little as 19 KB, using the "Small"
- footprint option of the "Kernel" command (letter K pressed from
- the main screen -- discussed more in Chapters 1 and 4).
-
- o Maximum directory size recognized by the main module varies from
- 300 to 1200 entries, depending on free memory available. If
- the directory size limit is reached, an informational note is
- given. The rest of the directory is inaccessible, as though it
-
-
- CMFiler -- Overview Ov-5
-
-
- were hidden. This is a benign, non-damaging limitation.
-
- o The algorithms used by the editor module place certain
- limitations on it in "edit" mode which do not apply in "view"
- mode. If you attempt to edit a file which exceeds these
- limitations, the editor reverts to view mode automatically:
-
- o Files too large to fit in available memory in one
- shot, or
-
- o Files with more than 16,380 lines.
-
- o Files with lines longer than 8190 characters if editing
- in "NoWrap" mode.
-
- o The tree module limits the number of entries in a directory tree
- structure to 505 total subdirectories, and the total files to
- 3488.
-
- o The main and tree modules both limit the depth of directory
- nesting to eight levels (eg, "C:\1\2\3\4\5\6\7\8" is an example
- of the most deeply nested path allowed), and the length of path
- specifications to 66 characters (this is a DOS limitation).
-
- o A limitation of DOS itself which users frequently run into and
- are puzzled by, because of the cryptic error message DOS
- returns, is the maximum number of entries permitted in the root
- directory. This number is 112 for 5.25" disks formatted at
- 360KB and 3.5" @ 720KB; and 224 for 5.25" @ 1.2MB and 3.5" @
- 1.44MB. The error message returned is "Access denied creating
- file". Be aware that the volume label and each subdirectory is
- an "entry", as well as each file.
-
- o Finally, CMFiler does not yet support mouse or 43/50 line
- EGA/VGA display capability. I have concentrated on packing the
- MOST COMPLETE set of useful operational features into the
- smallest, most intuitively organized package I could, and have
- not yet had the time (and do not yet have the hardware
- capability myself) to write and debug these additional user
- interface features. With respect to the mouse, my feeling is
- that ease of use has less to do with the HARDWARE interface
- between the user and the computer than the LOGICAL interface,
- and I have concentrated on writing the best logical interface
- possible. (In other words, a cumbersomely constructed program
- remains cumbersome, EVEN when you add a mouse!)
-
- If there is overwhelming request for addition of mouse support
- or 43/50 line display, I will consider adding it. Otherwise I
- will stick with the basics.
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Overview Ov-6
-
-
- _____
-
- Assumption about User's Familiarity with DOS. . .
-
- It is assumed that the user knows at least a smattering about DOS
- system operation, and has at least a beginner's understanding of the
- use of the DOS COMMAND.COM processor, or other file management
- programs. I assume terms like "file", "subdirectory" and "path" need
- not be defined. If these are alien notions, however, there are any
- number of books on DOS written to different levels of proficiency
- which may be consulted as a resource.
-
- _____
-
- Additional Note for Windows Users. . .
-
- Though not designed as a Windows application, CMFiler appears to be
- operating satisfactorily as a DOS program in the Windows environmemt.
- One nuisance feature will probably need to be corrected if you are
- running it under Windows, however. The default assumption on return from
- screen saver mode is that the disk directories have not been altered
- while CMFiler has been idling. Under Windows, this is not necessarily a
- valid assumption, since another foreground application may have operated
- on the directories CMFiler was selected to when it went into the
- background. Therefore for Windows users there is a switch which may be
- set, using the command Shift-O (where O is for Options) telling CMFiler
- to refresh the directory listings on return from the screen saver.
-
- _____
-
- Assertion. . .
-
- I believe CMFiler is the most powerful and transparent file manager
- you will ever find anywhere for its price and size. It is being offered
- as a shareware utility in the hope that you will find it useful, and
- further that unregistered users will remit the required registration fee
- of $30 in recognition of the convenience CMFiler offers. Please remember
- that the shareware industry depends on the integrity, encouragement and
- financial support of its user public.
-
- _____
-
- Special Thanks. . .
-
- . . .to Nick Capik, Tom Vavoso, Dave Herman, Gene Feaster and Edward
- Mendelson, who found most of the subtle bugs, pushed CMFiler far past my
- expectations, and challenged me to include features that turned out to be
- useful to us all; to Eric Tauck, who provided an excellent and
- inexpensive Assembly language programming environment, then tailored it
- to my needs, and gave me some inside dope on several undocumented DOS
- features; and to Wolfgang Stiller, who offered advice on CMFiler's self-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Overview Ov-7
-
-
- checking features. Eric Tauck's Wolfware Assembler WASM can be had by
- sending $10 to Eric Tauck, 1304 Deerpass Road, Marengo, IL 60152.
- Wolfgang Stiller's Integrity Master anti-virus and data security system
- can be had by sending $39.50 to Stiller Research, 2625 Ridgeway St.,
- Tallahassee, FL 32310.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Overview Ov-8
-
-
-
-
-
- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
- TUTORIAL -- Chapter 1: File Handling:
-
- _____
-
- GETTING STARTED , or the "Kernel" and the "Overlay":
-
- As mentioned in the OVERVIEW above, I refer to the 19 KB CMFILER.COM
- file as the "kernel", the vital part of the main module, and the 82 KB
- CMFILER.OVY file as the "overlay", which contains the rest of the main
- module and the editor and tree modules. Physically breaking the program
- into two files served two purposes -- it got around an arcane 64 KB limit
- on .COM files imposed by DOS, and it let me give you two options for how
- much of the program to leave resident in memory when launchig
- applications from CMFiler (more in Chapter 4).
-
- For now, copy CMFILER.COM and CMFILER.OVY into the root directory of
- your hard disk or a working floppy using your good ol' DOS COMMAND.COM
- processor, and save a write-protected copy for your library. With the
- DOS system prompt showing the drive these two files are now on, run the
- kernel CMFILER.COM by entering "cmfiler" or "CMFILER". The DOS command
- processor will load and execute CMFILER.COM, which in turn will find and
- load the overlay CMFILER.OVY. The whole 101 KB (19+82) is now residing
- in memory, ready to respond to commands.
-
- The first thing you will likely see is a request for monitor
- information. CMFiler cannot distinguish between a color monitor and an
- LCD monitor, and the default color set for the color monitor is a poor
- choice for LCD monitors. When you see the message, press C, M, L or T
- (some Tandy LCD's employ a backwards convention on the high intensity
- attribute, and thus a separate color set has been dedicated to them). As
- soon as you press one of these letters, you will see disk activity.
- CMFiler is creating a file of user configuration data (called
- CMFILER.CFG) in the same directory the .COM file is in. It will update
- this file as you select other setup options.
-
- _____
-
- Rename CMFILER to Spare My Fingers. . .
-
- Now, feel free to rename CMFILER.COM to "CF.COM" for short, and the
- overlay and configuration files from CMFILER.OVY and CMFILER.CFG to
- "CF.OVY" and "CF.CFG". (It is important to keep all these files named
- THE SAME, by the way.) In fact I will refer to them simply as "CF" from
- here on, since that results in fewer keystrokes for me! Put the cursor
- on the line reading "CMFILER COM" and press the letter R (for "rename").
-
-
- A window will open up at the bottom that says:
-
- Rename CMFILER.COM
- to >CMFILER.COM<
-
- with the cursor blinking on the first position in the data entry field
- denoted by the "> <" pair. (CMFiler is assuming that you want to rename
- just the CMFILER.COM file, since the most frequent use of the rename
- facility is renaming single files; and is offering you the same name as
- the "default" entry in the new name field, since often when you rename a
- file, you may be only changing a few characters.)
-
- In this case we want to rename all the files that start with
- "CMFILER"; that is, we would really like to use the DOS "wild card"
- convention "*". If we were renaming this family of files from the DOS
- prompt, we would type in the command "ren cmfiler.* cf.*". In the
- CMFiler rename facility, the upper line is the first parameter of the DOS
- rename command, the lower line the second. We therefore want the upper
- line to read "CMFILER.*". To do this, press either the up arrow or PgUp,
- and press Tab to move over to the "C" in "COM". Type "*" and press Enter
- or down arrow. Now the window reads:
-
- Rename CMFILER.*
- to >CMFILER.* <
-
- Simply type "CF.*" and press Enter. The files are now renamed.
-
- This quick exercise sounded complicated when you read it, but won't
- be when you try it. And it illustrates a few "nice touches" I have tried
- to build in to minimize your keystrokes.
-
- From here on the explanations are not so detailed. I recommend you
- fiddle with scratch disks initially, until you are familiar with all of
- CF's capabilities. If you are running DOS Version 2, put CF, both the
- .COM and .OVY files, on one of the paths defined in a DOS "path" command,
- so that it can "find" itself after running other applications. This is
- not necessary under DOS Version 3 and later.
-
- _____
-
- The Screen. . .
-
- You should by now have noted an economy of screen usage. The left
- panel shows the contents of the root directory on the default drive.
- Line 1 of this active panel shows the disk volume name if any, and a
- prompt area for four display enhancement features: the key combination
- Ctrl-O (denoted by ^O to save space) allows selection of one of seven
- file Ordering schemes; ^H toggles the "Hide" mode switch; ^C toggles the
- "Compare" mode switch; and ^M allows specifying a file "Mask". Line 2
- shows the path to the current directory, whose first 20 entries are
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-2
-
-
- displayed in lines 3-22. Line 23 gives vital information about the disk,
- such as room left, and lines 24-25 contain an abbreviated help screen.
-
- The thick versus thin sections of the vertical line to the left of
- the file list denote the relative position and size of the current screen
- display within the full directory listing.
-
- If you do not press a key within about 1-½ minutes, the screen
- goes into screen-saver mode. Just press any key to return to the main
- display. You may force the screen-Saver mode with Ctrl-S.
-
- _____
-
- The Help Area. . .
-
- The two-line help area at the bottom of the screen contains a set of
- abbreviated cues to assist with the recollection of the mnemonic single-
- key commands. With no "modifier" keys pressed [i.e., the Shift-, Alt-
- and Ctrl- keys all up], the help area shows the operations available with
- the unmodified keys, with the mnemonic code highlighted. These are
- typically the most frequently used operations; the letter C for "Copy
- file(s), E for "Edit file", D for "Delete file or directory", T for "Tag
- file", the number 1 for "toggle the file Read-only attribute", and so
- forth.
-
- Additional commands are available which use similar mnemonic
- devices, but with the keyboard modified by Shift-, Alt- or Ctrl-. Press
- one of the Shift- keys, and notice the change in the bottom lines. These
- are the commands enabled by the letters shown in highlight, modified by
- the key you are holding down. Press Ctrl- and Alt- in turn. All these
- operations, both "unmodified" and "modified", will be explained as we go
- along. Just be aware that the visual cues for the modifier keys are there
- when you want them.
-
- _____
-
- More on the "Modifier Keys". . .
-
- Incidentally, there is some rationale for which of the Shift-, Alt-
- or Ctrl- keys was used as the modifier for a particular "modified"
- operation, and there are some devices which may help you remember the
- modified keys as well as the more straightforward mnemonic devices of the
- unmodified keys:
-
- o The modifier "Shift-" is often used for operations involving
- transfers of control or data to or from the other panel. For example,
- Shift-Enter, when the cursor is on a subdirectory entry, means display
- this subdirectory in the other panel and jump across to it. Other
- commands which follow this convention, and which you will encounter in
- more detail, are Shift-Left/Rt Arrow, Shift-P, Shift-*, Shift-\, and
- Shift-F.
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-3
-
-
- o The modifier "Ctrl-" is most often used to "toggle" the state of
- a "switch" or "tags" -- that is, to invert something. For example, Ctrl-
- H toggles the state of the "hide switch" , i.e., if Y ("yes" or "on") it
- goes to N ("no" or "off"), if N it goes to Y. Other examples include
- Ctrl-O, Ctrl-M, Ctrl-C, Ctrl-A, and Ctrl-L.
-
- o The modifier "Alt-" is most often used just to indicate an
- operation associated with a mnemonic alphabet key, but for which the
- unmodified key was already in use as a mnemonic for a more frequent
- operation. For example, C means "Copy", and is one of the most frequent
- operations; Alt-C means "add file spec to Command tail", and is used far
- less frequently. (In the editor, Alt-modified keys are used a LOT, since
- the unmodified keys are used for typing text!)
-
- _____
-
- Two Panels. . .
-
- Each of two "panels" corresponds to a "path" to files, in the DOS
- vernacular. Open the right panel by pressing the right arrow. You will
- be prompted at the bottom of the screen to specifiy a drive letter.
- (Lines 24-25 become the "dialog" area for information to you about
- what CF is doing, or what it is waiting for you to do.) Just press
- the letter corresponding to a valid drive -- don't press Enter, just a
- letter key. The root directory of that drive will be shown in the
- right panel in the same format as the left panel. The bright yellow
- color of the path specification on line 2 and the blinking cursor now
- identify the right panel as the "source" path. The left panel has
- become the "target" or "destination" path for copy and append
- operations.
-
- Whenever CF is in "compare" mode and the cursor is on the name of a
- file in the source panel that also happens to exist anywhere in the
- target path, the target panel display is adjusted so that the file
- appears in the panel, and its date/time signature is put in high-
- intensity to catch your eye and show you the duplication. If the date,
- time and size of the two files are not the same, the date/time signature
- of the NEWER file will blink. You can toggle compare mode off and on
- with the key combination Ctrl-C (the mnemonic is "compare").
-
- _____
-
- Color Palette. . .
-
- For display in CGA/EGA/VGA systems, CF has four choices of color
- palettes. The command Ctrl-P (for Palette) lets you cycle through the
- choices with the Spacebar, and select a different color scheme with Enter
- or return to the original one with Esc. The choice is permanently
- recorded in the .CFG file (discussed in more detail later).
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-4
-
-
- _____
-
- Alphabetic Case Options. . .
-
- CF also has four options for the alphabetic cases used in the panel
- displays. The command Ctrl-E (for casE) lets you cycle through the
- choices with the spacebar, as in the Palette above, which are: 1) files
- and directories all upper case, 2) directories in upper case, file in
- lower, 3) all in lower case, and 4) all in "modified-Tauck" convention,
- where all letters are lower case except the first and any that follows a
- non-alphabetic character (eg, Cmfiler.Com or Read-Me.1St). I have found
- this last convention by far the easiest to read.
-
- _____
-
- Cursor Movement. . .
-
- Shift back and forth with the left and right arrow keys. You are in
- effect switching source and target paths. Use the up/down arrows,
- PgUp/PgDn, Home and End keys to move the cursor within a panel.
- PgUp moves the cursor to the top of the panel if it was not already
- there, and then moves up 19 lines in the directory. PgDn is similar
- for the opposite direction. Home goes to the first line of the
- directory, End to the last.
-
- The command G (for "Go to...") lets you type in a file name to move
- the cursor to within the directory listing. As you type, the cursor is
- repositioned to the first file described by the character string you are
- building. When you have come to the file you want, press Enter or Esc.
- Alt-G is the equivalent "Go to. . ." for subdirectories.
-
- In "Compare mode", whenever there is a duplicate file name
- highlighted in the opposite panel, you may jump directly across to it
- with the move Shift-Lf/Rt Arr, vice the unmodified arrows.
-
- _____
-
- Switching Drives or Disks. . .
-
- CF cannot tell when you have changed disks in the drive whose
- contents are shown on one of the screen panels. You have to tell it by
- putting the cursor in that panel and pressing Shift-R (for "Refresh") or
- N (for "New drive") and the letter designator for that drive at the
- ensuing prompt. If you want to switch drives, say from A to B for the
- right-hand panel, put the cursor to the right, press N and B.
-
- Sometimes when you are doing single-panel operations, like
- constructing a note set or editing files, it is a distraction to have
- both screen panels open at once. To close the right-hand panel and
- return to single left-hand panel display, put the cursor in the right-
- hand panel and press N and Enter.
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-5
-
-
- _____
-
- Subdirectories. . .
-
- Make a new subdirectory in the source path by pressing M (for the
- DOS command "Mkdir") and entering a name. Find it in the display in
- alphabetical order, move the cursor to it and press Enter. Note the new
- path on line 2 of the screen display, and only the "<Parent>" entry in
- the file listing. Go back to the parent directory by pressing Enter with
- the cursor on the "<Parent>" entry, or P with the cursor anywhere in the
- panel. You can navigate down and back up through the directory levels in
- a path this way, one level at a time. If you are several levels deep,
- there is another quicker way back to the root directory than by hitting P
- repeatedly, and that is the backslash key \. It works like the DOS
- command "cd \".
-
- To put a subdirectory from the current source panel list into the
- target panel, put the cursor on its name and press Shift-Enter. The
- subdirectory is listed in the opposite panel, and the cursor shifts over
- to it. In similar fashion, Shift-P puts the source panel's parent
- directory into the opposite panel, and Shift-\ puts the source's root
- into the opposite panel. Finally, Shift-* puts the source directory
- itself into the target. This is handy for quickly setting up the same
- panels side-by-side for ZIPping/unZIPping, discussed in Chapter 4.
-
- Remove a subdirectory by placing the cursor on it and pressing D
- (for "Delete", which I use interchangeably for file deletion and
- subdirectory removal). Note that the subdirectory has to be empty first
- -- a DOS safeguard.
-
- _____
-
- Copy Some Files, then Do It with Tags. . .
-
- Put the cursor on a file name and press the letter C. This copies
- the file from the source to the target path. "Tag" several files with
- the letter T or the Spacebar. Now press C to copy this group from source
- to target. Clear all the tags with A (tag/untag All). Press A again,
- and see that all the files are now tagged. Untag an individual file with
- T. ("T" actually toggles the state of an internal tag bit assigned to
- each file and used for temporary marking purposes only. "A" clears all
- the tags if any were set, or sets all the tags if all were clear. No
- information is changed on the disk itself. These are "volatile" tags,
- maintained only until the directory is re-read for some reason, such as a
- file deletion or a copy operation into the directory.)
-
- CF looks first at the space available on the target path before
- it starts to copy. If it doesn't see enough room free, it doesn't start
- the operation, and alerts you to this limitation. This prevents write
- errors, messed up file allocation tables and incomplete files that can
- result when space runs out during a copy operation.
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-6
-
-
- CF has several special features in the copy operation:
-
- o If an identical file exists in the target path -- same name,
- extension, date, time AND size -- CF does not normally copy the source to
- the target, as this would be wasted motion, on the assumption that the
- files are identical. This "no overcopy" feature is controlled by one of
- seven switches which may be toggled in the user setup menu brought up
- with the command Shift-O (for " user Options"). It is sometimes useful
- to change its state.
-
- o If a file by the same name but newer date/time is found
- on the target, CF will ask you specifically to verify that you really
- do want the newer file overwritten.
-
- o If the source file has length 0 bytes, or if the source and
- target files have the same date/time but the source is smaller, CF will
- ask for overwrite confirmation. This provides some protection against
- overwriting a good file with one which has become corrupted by a previous
- copy error.
-
- o If a file by the same name but with the read-only
- attribute set is found on the target, CF will ask you to verify that you
- want it overwritten. (Likewise if the target file is hidden and the hide
- switch is on.)
-
- _____
-
- Tagging, Backing Up. . .
-
- With a couple of files tagged, look at the line just below the
- last line of the directory listing. You will see the space in use in the
- current directory ("KB Used"), the amount of disk space occupied by any
- tagged files ("Tagd") and the space still free ("Free"). Also, in the
- line below will appear after each tagging operation the current number of
- files tagged. Disk space is expressed in kilobytes, in integer multiples
- of the disk media cluster size, so what you see is the amount of space
- ACTUALLY tied up on the disk. (If your disk is a 5.25" DSDD floppy its
- clusters are probably one KB each. Every file takes up at least one
- cluster, so a 1-byte file takes up a one KB of disk space, the same as a
- 1024-byte file.)
-
- Assuming the amount of space represented by tagged files is less
- than or equal to space available, press B to back up all the tagged
- files. CF's convention for assigning backup file names in this operation
- is to reuse the fiorst two letters of the extension (filling blanks with
- exclamation points), and then make the last letter of the extension a
- tilde character (~). Thus the backup should always immediately follow
- the primary file in any alphabetical listing.
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-7
-
-
- _____
-
- Moving Files. . .
-
- With the panels selected to different subdirectories on the same
- disk, one or more files may be "moved" from one subdirectory to the
- other. This operation does not read and write the file data clusters,
- but only changes the subdirectory table entries, so large files may be
- moved around quickly. Tag files if desired, as with Copy, and press the
- move command Shift-C (instead of C -- think of moving as just another
- kind of "copying", but you are "shifting" files to a different directory
- instead).
-
- If the conditions are not satisfied for moving the files (e.g. the
- directories are not on the same disk), CF will copy the files to the
- target path, but will not delete the tagged files in the source. You may
- delete the tagged files with two more keystrokes if you wish, but CMFiler
- does not assume this is what you meant. This encumberance is deliberate;
- because CMFiler is so fast, I have made it require confirmation whenever
- any file destruction is requested.
-
- _____
-
- Deleting a File. . .
-
- With the cursor on a file and no files tagged, pressing D results in
- deleting the file under the cursor, after confirmation. If one or more
- files are tagged, they will be deleted after confirmation, not the file
- under the cursor. Alt-Tags, discussed below, are treated the same as
- normal tags as far as the delete operation is concerned.
-
- On hard disks, the default configuration of CF actually performs
- what I will call a "soft" delete for this operation. The files are not
- deleted using the DOS delete function, but rather are redated to the
- current date and time, and moved into a directory created by CF, called
- "CF_TRASH.CAN". If you delete files from your hard disk by mistake, they
- are RELIABLY recoverable just by switching to the CF_TRASH.CAN directory
- and moving them back to the directories they came from using Shift-C.
-
- If you delete a second file by the same name as a file already
- collected in the CF_TRASH.CAN directory by a previous soft delete
- operation, CF tries to rename this second file by replacing the last
- character in the extension with a "1". If this name is already in use,
- it tries to rename with a "2" instead, then a "3", and so on, through
- "9". Thus, you are assured under all reasonable circumstances of not
- losing any deleted files, even duplicates. The only problem is that you
- may have trouble telling which duplicate is the original, as CF redates
- each of them during the "soft" delete.
-
- Each time you select a new drive in the main module, CF looks to see
- if it is a hard drive (A and B are always taken to be floppies), creates
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-8
-
-
- the directory CF_TRASH.CAN if it is not already present, and then looks
- in CF_TRASH.CAN for the presence of files with any date earlier than the
- current date. If it finds any, it will ask you if you want to purge them
- -- that is, perform the "hard" DOS file delete on yesterday's trash. You
- have the options "yes", "no", or "Enter to view" to see what is in the
- thash can. You probably want to keep the CF_TRASH.CAN as uncluttered as
- possible, just to avoid tying up disk space needlessly. If you prefer to
- "empty the trash" less often than daily, be prepared to be pestered with
- the same question the first time you select that disk each day! (The D
- command always performs a "hard" delete in the CF_TRASH.CAN directory --
- this is the one exception.)
-
- This "soft" delete facility is NOT intended as a means of backing up
- files, but rather is built in SOLELY for the purpose of RELIABLE recovery
- from inadvertent file deletion.
-
- An additional delete option is available -- Ctrl-D, or "hard"
- delete. This operation performs the DOS delete always, regardless of the
- type disk selected. Use it when you KNOW you will not want to recover
- the deleted files.
-
- And if you are REALLY sure of yourself, you can turn D from soft
- delete to hard delete. There is a switch available for this purpose in
- the Shift-O user Options menu mentioned above.
-
- _____
-
- The Tagging Convention Expounded on. . .
-
- For all the above commands (copy, delete, move, back up), the
- operation is performed on ALL THE TAGGED FILES in the source panel, if
- ANY are tagged, and only on the file at the cursor if NONE are tagged.
- Some file managers offer different commands for "copy tagged" and "copy
- file at cursor", and so forth. I have always found this unnecessarily
- complicated. For the FEW occasions in which you have a bunch of files
- tagged to do one of these operations (say you want to copy them), and you
- discover just before you start that you really wanted to do some other
- operation on just one of them first (say you realize one of them is out-
- of-date and you want to delete it), you will have to either untag them
- all with A, do the operation on the one file, then retag and do the
- original operation; OR just postpone the one-file operation. For this
- example, it is easier just to toggle the tag on the one out-of-date file
- off with T, copy the other bunch, clear the tags, and delete the one. It
- becomes just a matter of a little thought about the order in which you do
- things.
-
- The "view" operation (discussed in Chapter 2) does NOT clear
- existing tags. So, suppose you are cleaning up a disk, tagging files
- that you recognize by name as no longer needed in preparation for a
- single, massive delete, and you come to one you aren't sure about. Put
- the cursor on it, press Enter (the "view" command), browse through it and
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-9
-
-
- decide if it's a keeper, and Esc from view mode. Note the previously
- placed tags are still there, and the cursor is still on the mystery file
- waiting for you to decide whether or not to tag it.
-
- _____
-
- Renaming a File OR a Directory. . .
-
- Since we'e already done this, I'll just briefly say that it works
- for directories, too. A word about the wild card character "*". In the
- earlier exercise, we used it in the first window to declare that we
- wanted to rename all the files with "CMFILER" as the name, and any
- extension, to "CF" with the same extension. You may use the "*" in the
- name field of the first window instead of the extension, but not in both.
- Used in the name field, it means "change this extension, wherever it
- appears, to this other extension". This option is less useful.
-
- If used in the first data window, the "*" MUST also be used in the
- second window in the same position. CF always senses the use of "*" in
- the first window, and seeds the second window with this character in the
- right position.
-
- The "*" may be used in the second window, even if not in the first,
- as a shorthand for "keep the same name (extension)". For example, if you
- wanted to rename just "CMFILER.DOC" to CF.DOC", put the cursor on
- "CMFILER DOC" in the source panel, press R, type "CF.*" in the lower
- window, and Enter. Saves some keystrokes. This is a wild card
- convention taken from DOS. (Sorry to you DOS heavies -- for simplicity I
- chose not to complicate things by including "?" in the wild card library
- for this facility!)
-
- _____
-
- Some Additional Tagging Options. . .
-
- In addition to T (which toggles the state of an individual file's
- "normal" Tag) and A (which clears or sets All tags), there are some more
- tagging operations. Alt-T applies an "append tag", discussed later.
- Alt-M tags all the files in the panel with the same naMe as the file
- under the cursor, Alt-E same Extension. Alt-D tags all files in the
- panel with the same Date as the file at the cursor, Alt-N tags all files
- Newer, and Alt-O Older. Alt-P tags in the oPposite panel all the files
- with the same names as files tagged in the source panel. (This is good
- for updating to a floppy only the files which were already on it.) And
- finally, Ctrl-A toggles the state of All tags in the panel.
-
- If, for example, you wanted to copy all .COM files, put the cursor
- on any .COM file, press Alt-E, and C. Or suppose that, at the end of the
- day, you wanted to copy/update all the files written or revised today.
- Just put the cursor on any file with today's date and press Alt-D and C.
- Then suppose you wanted to delete all the earlier files. Press A to clear
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-10
-
-
- the tags, Ctrl-O and D, and confirm the deletion as requested, after a
- final check of the screen.
-
- _____
-
- Copy with Rename. . .
-
- You may copy a file and rename it in one operation. Only one file
- at a time may be copied in this way. The command is Alt-R (copy with
- Rename). It operates only on the file at the cursor.
-
- _____
-
- The File "Freshener". . .
-
- Suppose you have a floppy disk with backups for some of the files in
- a hard disk directory, and you want to freshen them periodically. With
- either panel set up with the primary directory whose files you are
- backing up, put the backup floppy in a floppy drive, arrow across to the
- other panel and press N and the drive letter to bring up its root
- directory (now in the source panel), and then just press Shift-F (for
- Freshen). CF tags all the backup files in the source panel if none were
- already tagged, or leaves existing tags as-is if some were tagged; then
- tags all the files in the opposite panel with the same name as tagged
- files in the source but which are NEWER; then copies these to the source;
- and finally updates the source panel display, leaving the primary
- directory in the target panel display tagged to show you what was copied.
- Just four key strokes! No excuses ever again for not backing up files.
-
- _____
-
- Different Ways to Show the Files. . .
-
- Ctrl-O (for "Order") sets a screen which gives seven choices for
- file ordering, with the cursor blinking on the current selection. Press
- a number key 1 through 9. The files will now be reordered in the new
- scheme. The options for ordering by date/time are particularly useful in
- the visual sense when backing up just the files revised today, as in the
- example above.
-
- _____
-
- The Data Entry Window. . .
-
- The data entry window you encountered in the renaming exercise
- responds to most of the usual line-editing key presses:
-
- o Insert toggles the mode between Typeover and Insert. The mode
- stays set for each subsequent entry. In Typeover mode, any
- default entry is cleared if the first keystroke is an
- alphanumeric character.
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-11
-
-
- o Ctrl-Lf/Rt Arrow and Tab/Shift-Tab go right or left to the space
- following the next blank or punctuation mark.
-
- o Shift-Lf/Rt Arrow go to beginning or end of data field. Home
- goes to the beginning of the field.
-
- o Lf/Rt Arr, Bksp and Del perform the usual functions.
-
- o End goes to the blank after the last non-blank character.
-
- o Alt-Keypad permits entry of any ASCII code as a decimal number.
- Hold down the Alt--key while you type in a number from 1 to
- 255 on the numeric keypad. When you lift the Alt--key, the
- IBM symbol for that ASSCII code will appear in the window, and
- the cursor will advance a space.
-
- o Ctrl-D deletes to the end of the line.
-
- o Esc aborts the operation.
-
- o Down Arrow is equivalent to Enter. In some cases, Up Arrow moves
- up a line. (The rename facility in the main module and the
- "replace string" facility in the editor use this convention.)
-
- For entering file names and subdirectories, all letter keys are
- registered as upper case, regardless of Caps Lock or Shift-key positions,
- just for the sake of uniformity and ease of alphabetizing. For command
- lines parameters, which may be case-sensitive, both cases are enabled.
-
- _____
-
- Disk Space Occupied versus Actual File Size. . .
-
- Now take a look at the file listing. You see the name of the
- file, date, time and size in KB. As with the disk space information
- just below the file list display, size is in integer multiples of
- clusters occupied. If you want to see exactly how big a file is, in
- bytes, press "+" to expand the size field. (I had to give away the
- file time to do this and still keep the two panels readable.) Shift
- back to the "contracted" kilobyte form of file size with "-".
-
- _____
-
- File Attributes. . .
-
- Also in the file list, to the far right in each panel, you will
- probably see A's. This means that the DOS "Archive" attribute bit is
- set in the file attribute byte. DOS sets this bit everytime it
- operates on a file. CF lets you operate on this bit and the other
- bits in the DOS file attribute byte -- "Read-only", "Hidden", and
- "System". Before doing this exercise, look at the top line of the
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-12
-
-
- display. If you see "^Hide=N", that means that files with the DOS
- "Hidden" attribute set will be displayed anyway -- i. e., the CF "Hide
- switch" is off. Chances are you will see "Y" instead of "N", meaning
- that the Hide switch is on -- the default setting. In this setting,
- files will disappear from view as you set the DOS hidden attribute, so we
- need to toggle the hide switch to "N". Press Ctrl-H to toggle the hide
- switch off.
-
- Either tag one or more files, or position the cursor on the file
- whose attribute(s) you want to set, and press 1 to toggle the state of
- the Read Only attribute, 2 to toggle the Hidden attribute, 3 to toggle
- the System file attribute, 4 to toggle the Archive attribute, or 0 (zero)
- to clear all attributes. You may also toggle the hide attribute (with 2)
- of a subdirectory, but this must be done one subdirectory at a time.
- Note that "hiding" a file makes it invisible to CF only when the hide
- switch is set on, as shown in the top line. Toggle this hide mode off and
- on with the combination Ctrl-H (discussed further below). Decide for
- yourself which mode you prefer. Some people like to hide the "overhead"
- files and directories on their disks, and leave the hide switch on as the
- default setting to "clean up" the display.
-
- _____
-
- Changing the Date/Time Stamp of a File. . .
-
- You may change the date and/or time of a file by putting the cursor
- on it and pressing Alt-F. A data window opens for you to first enter the
- new date, using the current date in the file's date/time stamp as the
- default, and then the time. This operation is not permitted on Read-only
- files.
-
- _____
-
- "Alt-Tagging" and Appending. . .
-
- Suppose you have two files that you want to stick together as
- one, heel-to-toe. Tag them with "append" tags with the key combination
- Alt-T or Alt-Space in the order in which you want them to be
- concatenated, and press C. CF will offer you a filename for the new
- concatenated file consisting of the name of the first file Alt-Tagged
- plus the extension ".APF" (for APpended File). You may edit or accept
- that name as given. Then it creates this file in the target path and
- appends into this file each of the Alt-Tagged source files in order. You
- may concatenate up to 35 files at a time this way. The order in which
- the file was Alt-Tagged is shown in the character that appears to the
- left of the file name as it is tagged (1-9, then a-z). If you had
- pressed B instead of C after affixing the Alt-Tags, the concatenated file
- would have been written as a backup into the source path instead of the
- target.
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-13
-
-
- _____
-
- Printing a File. . .
-
- You can print a file to the parallel printer just by putting the
- cursor on the file and pressing L (print fiLe). The file will be put
- into a special print "queue" for printing to line printer 1 on the
- parallel port as a background process while you are doing other things,
- like editing another file, updating disks, etc. Up to five files may be
- put in the print queue, which may be viewed with Shift-L.
-
- At times the printer may halt momentarily during disk operations.
- CF gives preference to disk operations over printing, to avoid any
- conflict in time-critical operations. You may terminate printing with
- Ctrl-L. This actually clears the entire print queue. To force a form
- feed at the end of the file you have just queued, press Ctrl-F before you
- queue the next file. CF sets an internal flag to check that the last
- character sent to the printer from that file is a form feed. If it is
- not, then it sends one. (Ctrl-F is active when no file is printing,
- also, as a way of form-feeding the printer from the keyboard.)
-
- _____
-
- Making Some Notes About Your Files. . .
-
- If you are like me, you sometimes forget what a program with a
- strange name does, or what a particular data file is. CF lets you write
- notes to yourself about any file. Press Ctrl-N and a Notepad opens up in
- the opposite panel for editing. You can type a little narrative for each
- file or subdirectory in the directory. The editing keys work much the
- same as in the line editor, except that you are limited to 39 characters
- for each entry. Each time you call up the notepad, it appears as it did
- the last time you edited it. You may just browse with the up/down
- arrows, PgUp/Dn, Home/End, edit or add, etc. Leave the notepad with Esc
- or Ctrl-Enter. If you use Esc and did any editing, you will be asked if
- you want to save that edit of the notes.
-
- From the "edit Notes" screen you may also view or edit the file
- opposite the note without leaving the edit Notes environment, just by
- pressing Alt-V or Alt-E. You may also attach a normal tag to the file
- with Ctrl-T or Ctrl-Space ("T" and "Space" are not available, since the
- notes editor would take it to be text), or an append tag with Alt-T or
- Alt-Space.
-
- A "view Notes" command Shift-N simply replaces the target panel
- display with the notes for the source panel, but all the file and
- directory service commands, including the source-to-target commands such
- as Copy and Shift-C move, are still active.
-
- The notepad is contained in a hidden file call "NARATIVE.CF", and
- notes follow the file when it is copied or moved to another path or
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-14
-
-
- renamed. If you delete a file, its notes will be lost the next time you
- call up the notepad. You may make the NARATIVE.CF file unhidden with one
- of the user Options in the Shift-O menu.
-
- If you are a 4DOS/NDOS user and you already have notes written about
- your files and directories in this convention, you may convert the
- DESCRIPT.ION files to the CF note file format NARATIVE.CF using the
- program DESC2NAR.COM provided in the CMFiler file set. This program does
- not alter any DESCRIPT.ION files, and retains the notes already in any
- existing NARATIVE.CF files. Read the separate documentation in
- DESC2NAR.DOC file.
-
-
- _____
-
- Printing a Directory Listing. . .
-
- Press Alt-L to send a directory Listing to the line printer. If you
- do this from either of the Notes displays, you also get a listing of the
- notes, and the file size entries is either the abbreviated or full value,
- depending on the display mode set in the directory table (toggled with +
- and -).
-
- _____
-
- Comparison Mode. . .
-
- At the top of the screen you see a message "^Comp=Y". The "Y" means
- "yes", the compare "switch" is enabled, so that any file in the target
- panel whose name is the same as the file in the source panel will be
- shown and its date-time stamp highlighted for easy identification. If
- the files have different date-time, the newer version will be blinking.
- You may toggle this switch with the key combination Ctrl-C.
-
- In comparison mode there is a useful feature which enables you to
- get quickly to a file with the same name in the opposite panel. In
- arrowing back and forth between panels in comparison mode, with some
- files by the same name in each panel, you probably noticed that the
- target panel shifted as necessary to bring the duplicate name into view,
- but as soon as you shifted over to the target panel, it "remebered" and
- adjusted the display back to where the top line and cursor had been left,
- and you lost the duplicate file from view. But suppose you had seen a
- more recent file in the target panel, as evidenced by the blinking
- highlight, and you REALLY wanted immediately to arrow over to it and copy
- it into the source. The Shift-Left/Rt Arrow combination does this. It
- resets the target panel display parameters so the cursor goes right to
- the matched file name.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-15
-
-
- _____
-
- Hide Mode. . .
-
- Also at the top is the message "^Hide=Y". This means that hide mode
- is enabled -- the screen display will not show any "hidden" files --
- those with the hidden attribute set. This is handy for cleaning up your
- displays -- just hide the overhead! You may toggle the state of this
- switch with the key combination Ctrl-H. The current state of these two
- switches is set as the default any time you do a Shift-F10 edit,
- discussed in Chapter 4 on application launching.
-
- _____
-
- Mask Template. . .
-
- Also at the top is the message "^Mask=*.*". This is a mask that
- lets you sift out all but files with a certain characteristic. For
- example, if you want to see only the .EXE files, press Ctrl-M, Tab, type
- "EXE", and Enter. Tab and Shift-Tab position the cursor on the extension
- and name fields, respectively. The left and right panel masks are
- independent.
-
- _____
-
- Displaying System Date and Time. . .
-
- The display of system date and time may be toggled on or off with
- the "5" key (sorry, no mnemonic). Its state is saved in the
- configuration file with Shift-S.
-
- _____
-
- Changing or Adding a Volume Label. . .
-
- Press V and a data window opens at the bottom for you to enter a new
- volume name for your disk. The existing volume label is offered as a
- default for editing ease.
-
- _____
-
- Some Safeguards. . .
-
- As noted above, you can't remove a directory unless it is void of
- files. This is a built-in DOS safeguard that CF passes along to you,
- since it uses the DOS file handling services. In addition, CF asks you
- to verify any requested delete operation; any requested copy operation
- that would overwrite a file of the same name but newer date/time in the
- target path, a read-only file, or a hidden file with the hide switch on.
-
- In addition, if you attempt to copy or move any files out of the
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-16
-
-
- CF_TRASH.CAN directory, you will be asked to confirm that you REALLY want
- to do that. This precaution is taken because, when files are put in the
- "trash can" by a delete operation, their date/time stamp is changed to be
- the date and time they were DELETED. Therefore it is probable that files
- in the trash can will appear to be NEWER than identically named files in
- other parts of the disk. For this reason, files should only be moved or
- copied out of CF_TRASH.CAN with GREAT CAUTION, lest they overwrite files
- that are actually more up-to-date.
-
- _____
-
- Saving User Setup Options. . .
-
- You have already read about three cases in which features can be
- reset from their default (or "as-delivered") condition using a special
- user Option menu summoned by Shift-O. The "soft" delete can be redefined
- as a "hard" delete, the NARATIVE.CF notes file can be redefined as not
- hidden, and the identical-file overcopy switch may be set on or off.
- There are seven such features, total, available for setting to your
- specifications. When you visit this menu and then leave by pressing
- Enter, the configuration file CF.CFG is updated so that these switches
- settings are remembered the next time you run CF. The nature of these
- seven switches is such that you probably will not change them often.
- They represent your preferences as to a standard configuration of
- features.
-
- When you press Shift-O, you will see the following menu:
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
- Move cursor with Up/Dn Arrow. Type option desired.
-
-
- Define F1 as Help? N
- Define "D" as HARD Delete? N
- Clear I/O buffers if located? N
- Overcopy files with same date/time/size? N
- Refresh directory contents after Screen Saver? N
- Assign Hidden attr to NARATIVE.CF file? N
- Assign Read-Only attr to NARATIVE.CF file? N
- Turn Screen Saver off? N
- Monitor (C=Color, L=LCD, T=Tandy LCD, M=Mono) C
-
-
- Press Esc to cancel changes, Enter to accept.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
- These nine "switches" represent setup features that various users
- have asked for. The default settings are all N ("No"). Any setting may
- be toggled between Y and N by putting the cursor on it using the Up/Dn
- Arr keys, and pressing the spacebar. When you have reconfigured the way
- you wish, press Enter. Esc exits with no changes. Here is an
- explanation of each feature:
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-17
-
-
-
- 1. In keeping with the convention most often used, the F1 key
- is assigned as a "Help" call in the editor and tree modules, and can be
- so assigned in the main module by resetting this switch to Y. The
- sacrifice is loss of F1 as a user-defined application.
-
- 2. For those who do not wish to use the "soft" delete feature
- nor be bothered with the directory "CF_TRASH.CAN", the D key may be
- reconfigured to "HARD Delete", identical to Ctrl-D by resetting this
- switch to Y. (Discussed above.)
-
- 3. The I/O buffer clearing feature for data security during
- file writing operations runs into problems on some system configurations
- with DR DOS 6.0 as the operating system. It has been set to a default
- mode that does NOT clear buffers before writing. If you want to invoke
- this security feature, you have to reset this switch to Y. This feature
- appears to work satisfactorily in all versions of MS-DOS, but DO NOT
- invoke it under DR DOS.
-
- 4. In the default setting, CF does not waste time during file
- copy operations overcopying any file in the target path that are reported
- by DOS to be the same date/time and size as a file in the source path.
- However, sometimes you might want to mass-overwrite files on a backup
- directory or disk that are suspect, even though they may appear to be
- identical. Just set the Overwrite switch to Y.
-
- 5. For Windows users, if you run CF in a window, it does not
- have any way of knowing when it returns from the background to the
- foreground whether any other application has written to the directories
- that it is selected to. In the default setting, it does not refresh the
- file listing (reread the directory tables). Windows users may want to
- reset this switch to Y.
-
- 6. and 7. The NARATIVE.CF file, created in each directory as
- necessary to contain file and subdirectory notes, may be assigned the
- Hidden and/or Read-Only file attributes for neatness of directory display
- and/or protection from inadvertent deletion.
-
- 8. The automatic screen saver may be turned off if desired,
- to give the sole screen-saving function to your favorite resident screen
- saver.
-
- 9. Finally, the color attribute set may be changed by
- pressing C, L, T or M. If, for example, your system has a color card
- driving a green-screen monochrome monitor, you probably would be more
- satisfied with the monochrome color set invoked by M than the default
- color set C.
-
- There are other features of CF, particularly in the display options,
- which you may reset lots of times in process, but which don't need to be
- recorded permanently each time you change one. For example, I leave the
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-18
-
-
- file ordering scheme set at the default value of "1" (straight
- alphabetical), but sometimes I want to look at files in the order I last
- modified them. I will temporarily reorder using the Ctrl-O command, but
- I still want CF to come up with ordering scheme "1" next time I run it.
- Conversely, the default setting for the "Hide" switch is "Y" (since
- that's what most users wanted), but I prefer to see everything, so I want
- it permanently set to "N" (for No, don't hide files with the hidden
- attribute).
-
- These values are savable. The other in-process option features that
- are savable are the Compare mode switch, the resident Kernel size, and
- the date/time display on or off. They are saved 1) whenever the Shift-O
- setup Option menu is exited with Enter, 2) whenever the Shift-F10 user-
- defined application menu (discussed in Chapter 4) is exited with Ctrl-
- Enter, or 3) by pressing Shift-S (for Save options).
-
- _____
-
- Help. . .
-
- In addition to the two-line mini-help area at the bottom of the
- screen, a three-page summary may be summoned on-line at any time in the
- main module of CF by pressing H. PgUp and PgDn page through the help,
- and Esc exits back to the main screen.
-
- _____
-
- Command Line Parameters. . .
-
- CF supports optional command line parameters to specify the initial
- path for the left panel, right panel, file mask and color set, in the
- syntax:
-
- cf [pathspec1[\mask] [pathspec2]] [@color]
-
- where pathspec1 and pathspec2 are directory specifications to the initial
- directories to be displayed in the left and right panels, mask is any
- valid mask specification, and color is C, M, L or T for the CGA/EGA/VGA,
- monochrome, LCD or Tandy LCD color attribute sets. The mask may be
- attached to either pathspec or stand alone, but must be of the form
- "*.ext". The color specification may appear anywhere. Examples of valid
- command lines might be:
-
- cf c:\assembly\*.asm c:\pcw @c
- cmfiler c:dos @m
- CF UTILS WP51\*.DOC
- CMFILER @C *.EXE
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-19
-
-
- _____
-
- Quitting CF. . .
-
- There are two commands for exiting CF; Esc-other key and Alt-Q. The
- Esc-other key combination reestablishes the default drive and its current
- directory as CF found them. The Alt-Q combination leaves the default
- drive and its current directory as it appears in the source panel. In
- either case, if you were printing a file, you will be asked if you really
- want to quit, since the print spooler does not stay resident and quitting
- will terminate file printing. You may answer N.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 1 1-20
-
-
-
-
-
-
- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
- TUTORIAL -- Chapter 2: File Viewing and Editing:
-
- CF has a built-in line editor, which simplifies file viewing and
- editing -- even .COM and .EXE files. Since it is part of the package,
- there is no loading delay. It is ready when you are.
-
- _____
-
- Viewing a File. . .
-
- Want to see what's in a file? Put the cursor over a file -- any
- file will do; ASCII text, PC-Write, .COM, .EXE -- and press Enter. CF
- loads the selected file in memory for viewing.
-
- _____
-
- Record Delimiters. . .
-
- The default display mode for "record delimiters" [carriage return
- (CR), line feed (LF), and the combinations CR+LF and LF+CR] is to show
- their color values, which are cued in the legend at the bottom (blue=CR,
- green=LF, cyan=CR+LF, magenta=LF+CR). In addition , the end of the file
- is denoted with a red End-of-File (EOF) mark. Sometimes it is very useful
- to know exactly what delimiter combination your word processors use, so
- you can duplicate it when you edit with CF. You can toggle the colored
- delimiter symbols off and on with Alt-Minus or the gray minus key. (This
- is also covered in a help screen you can get by pressing Alt-H or F1.)
-
- _____
-
- Information Area. . .
-
- The name of the file being viewed is shown in the lower left prompt
- area. The lower right prompt area shows the ASCII value of the character
- at the cursor (decimal and hex), the position of that character in the
- file (starting with 1), the file record the cursor is in, and the
- position of the cursor within the record (called "Column", which for a
- long record is not necessarily the same as the screen column). This
- information display may be toggled off and on with Alt-Plus or the gray
- plus key.
-
-
-
- _____
-
- Line Wrapping. . .
-
- The default display mode is line wrapping, where any record longer
- than 80 characters is wrapped to the next screen line, so that all text
- is visible. This mode can be toggled (see the Wr/NW at upper right for
- current status) with Alt-W. In the NoWrap mode, each record longer than
- 80 characters simply extends off the screen to the right, but is
- accessible for viewing by putting the cursor on it and [Ctrl- or Shift-]
- Rt Arrow-ing (see below) to any place on the line.
-
- _____
-
- Cursor Movement. . .
-
- The arrow keys, either on the cursor keypad or numeric keypad, move
- the cursor one line up or down and one character left or right. Ctrl-
- Left/Rt Arrow move left or right one word at a time, and Shift-Left/Rt
- Arrow and Home/End move to the beginning or end of the line, as in
- PCWrite.
-
- PgDn/PgUp moves the display up or down 20 screen lines, and leaves
- the cursor on the same video line. Ctrl-PgUp/PgDn moves the display by
- 200 screen lines (10 video pages) for fast paging through a file. Shift-
- Up/Down Arrow moves to the top/bottom of the current page. Alt-B/E moves
- to the Beginning/End of the file contents in memory.
-
- For very LONG files, exceeding available memory, the editor loads
- only as much as fits. When you get to the end of that section (i.e., the
- current "file contents in memory" referred to above), the next operation
- that asks for another page or line causes the editor to load in the next
- section, remembering the file position of the start of the previous
- section so it can backtrack if you want. (It actually loads the next
- section with some overlap to the previous section, so that a little bit
- of backtracking does not result in reloading the whole previous section.)
- This "heel-and-toe" sequential loading is limited to 50 sections.
-
- _____
-
- Find a String. . .
-
- Want to look for a particular word or string of characters? The
- key combination Alt-F (for "Find") opens up a data window at the
- bottom for you to enter a short string. After you press Enter, CF
- will find the first appearance of the string from the current cusor
- position, and put the cursor on it. Alt-X (for "neXt") finds the
- next appearance, and can be used repeatedly until the string no longer
- appears, which is signalled at the bottom of the screen. The search
- process starts at the cursor location and goes, if necessary, to the end
- of the current file contents in memory.
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 2 2-2
-
-
- If the file is long and is being viewed by the editor module in
- sections as discussed above, only the CURRENT section is available to the
- Find operator. The search is case-insensitive.
-
- _____
-
- Leading and Trailing Blanks in the Data Window. . .
-
- The data entry routine truncates leading and trailing blanks, but
- blanks may be included as leading or trailing characters by enclosing the
- string at either or both ends with quotes ("). Suppose, for example, you
- wanted to find all of the appearances in a file of the word "mark", but
- not "remark". Press Alt-F and, in the data entry window enter:
- Find string: >" mark <. This works for the replace string
- as well.
-
- _____
-
- Editing a File. . .
-
- Exit view mode with either Esc or Enter. (Note that any tags in
- the source panel are still there.) Now you are ready to edit! Position
- the cursor over a file that you have an extra copy of somewhere, and
- press E (for Edit, obviously!). CF again loads the selected file, but
- this time with an internal "switch" set which tells the editor module to
- support editing. (Or, in View mode, press Alt-S, for "Switch to edit".)
-
- _____
-
- Edit Mode Limitations. . .
-
- CF permits edit mode only if the file fits all at once into
- available memory, has fewer than 16,380 records, and (in NoWrap mode) has
- no record longer than 8190 bytes. CF will revert to view mode if these
- conditions are not all satisfied. If you have a lot of memory tied up in
- resident programs or RAM disk/cache, then you may not be able to edit
- extremely large files. Chances are, however, that this will never be a
- practical limitation.
-
- _____
-
- Typeover vs Insert. . .
-
- Look at the small reverse video box in the upper right corner of the
- screen. "T/O" or "Ins", then CF is in edit mode. Toggle between
- typeover (T/O) and insert (Ins) modes with the Insert key. Typing action
- is just like any word processor. In typeover mode, the Bksp key does not
- pull the text left. This is to avoid unintentionally shortening the file
- when editing length-sensitive files, such as .COM and .EXE files.
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 2 2-3
-
-
- _____
-
- Editing a Line. . .
-
- You operate on a line at a time, and the "normal" editing keys work
- -- i.e. Bksp, Del, Tab, Shift-Tab, the unmodified and modified arrow keys
- discussed above, and any ASCII-code keys. To create a new line, just
- Shift-Arrow to the beginning or end of the current line, depending on
- whether you want the new line above or below the current one, and hit
- Enter. This inserts the default delimiter combination, CR+LF, into the
- text to set up a new line void of text, but ready for you to start
- typing. The combination Ctrl-Enter gives you a menu screen from which
- you may select a different record delimiter. Join two lines by deleting
- the record delimiter at the end of the first line to be joined. Delete a
- line with Ctrl-Y ("Yank"). Delete from the cursor to the end of the line
- with Ctrl-D. Delete a word and its associated whitespace with Ctrl-T.
-
- _____
-
- More on Record Delimiters. . .
-
- On CGA/EGA/VGA monitors, the record delimiter appears as a single
- colored "blank" character at the end of the line, whether it is actually
- two characters (eg., CR+LF) or one (eg., LF). It may be deleted to join
- two lines, but not over-struck -- it always pushes right, even when
- you are in typeover mode. The red "End-of-File" (EOF) marker is not
- actually part of your file, but rather is only a visual aid for you to
- see where the text ends. When the cursor is on the EOF marker, the
- "byte number" in the legend corresponds to the number of the next
- character, if you were to type one. The EOF marker also always pushes
- right, and cannot be deleted. The height of the cursor shows the
- status of the "Caps Lock" switch.
-
- _____
-
- Alt- Keypad and Alt-N. . .
-
- Any ASCII code from 1 through 255 can be entered from the numeric
- keypad using the Alt- key modifier. A special combination is provided
- for ASCII zero ("NULL"), since Alt-Zero is not recognized by any keyboard
- drivers I have seen. It is Alt-N (for "Null").
-
- _____
-
- Block Operations. . .or the REAL Power of CF's Editor. . .
-
- All the block operations -- there are six -- are keyed to Alt-key
- combinations, and they are all intuitive (sort of). They are:
- Alt-{ Mark, Yank (delete), moVe, Copy, Print and Output }.
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 2 2-4
-
-
- _____
-
- Marking a Block, and the Copy Buffer. . .
-
- You may also manipulate blocks of records. First mark a block by
- putting the cursor on the first (or last) record of the block you want
- to do something with, press Alt-M (for "Mark"), move down (or up) with
- arrows, PgDn/Up, etc., and mark the last (or first) record of the block,
- again with Alt-M. The marked text is written into a copy buffer for
- later use. If you made a mistake, a third press of Alt-M clears the
- marks, but leaves the copy buffer intact. The contents of this copy
- buffer REMAIN AVAILABLE FOR MULTIPLE USE UNTIL A NEW BLOCK IS MARKED.
- You may exit the editor back to the main module, and edit another file,
- and because the editor copy buffer is a dedicated chunk of RAM in the
- main and editor modules, the buffer is still intact. Just copy it into
- the next file with Alt-C.
-
- When you are marking a block, note that the information box at the
- bottom left of the screen expands to show you the attributes of the
- marked block -- the number of the first and last records marked, and the
- number of bytes in the painted area. There is an arbitrary 32 KB limit
- on the copy buffer. The upper right-hand information box shows "Blk"
- instead of "T/O" or "Ins", meaning that normal editing is not permitted
- while you have a block marked.
-
- _____
-
- Delete, Copy, Move. . .
-
- Delete the block with Alt-Y ("Yank"). Or put the cursor in an
- unpainted area of the file, and copy the block into that area, just ahead
- of the line where you put the cursor, by pressing Alt-C ("Copy"). Or
- move it with Alt-V ("moVe"). As noted above, the block previously
- "marked" into the copy buffer is available for multiple use. Just put
- the cursor where you want the block to be copied and hit Alt-C again.
-
- _____
-
- Restoring from Inadvertent Block Deletion. . .
-
- If you just deleted a block in error, put the cursor where you want
- to restore it, and press Alt-C to copy the buffer back into the file.
-
- _____
-
- Sending a Block of Text to the Line Printer. . .
-
- Print the copy buffer to line printer 1 (the parallel port) with
- Alt-P ("Print"). After printing, if you want a form feed, press Ctrl-F
- ("Form feed" -- note the use of Ctrl- vice Alt- as the modifier key,
- since Alt-F was already used for "Find").
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 2 2-5
-
-
- . . .or to a File. . .
-
- Finally, output the copy buffer to a file in the same path as the
- file being edited by pressing Alt-O (letter "O" for "Output"). A
- window opens at the bottom for typing the name of the file for CF to
- create (if it doesn't already exist) or append to if it does. (The file
- will be created or opened in the current directory on the default drive.
- Therefore the characters ":" and "\" will not be recognized.)
-
- _____
-
- Replace and Global replace. . .
-
- In addition to the Alt-F "find" feature, there is an Alt-R
- "replace" and an Alt-G "global replace" feature. Just press Alt-R or
- Alt-G and enter the find and replace strings when prompted. (If you see
- a mistake in the find string while you are typing the replace string,
- just arrow back up a line and reedit it.) For Alt-R, CF will find the
- first match and ask you to confirm the replacement. It continues finding
- and requesting confirmation until you press Q (for "quit replacing").
- Alt-X reactivates either the find or replace routine, whichever was used
- last. Alt-G replaces all appearances of the find string with no
- confirmation. It may be terminated with any key press. When global
- replace was thus terminated, Alt-X reactivates the confirmatory replace,
- not the global replace.
-
- _____
-
- Leaving Edit Mode. . .
-
- After editing is complete, press Esc. The first prompt you get asks
- whether you want to save this edit (y/n), or go back to the editor (Esc).
- (If you had hit the Esc key by mistake, hit it again to return to where
- you were.) In some cases you botched the file up so bad you don't want
- to save it, but most of the time you do. Press Y or Enter to accept the
- default offering, or N to not save the edit.
-
- The second prompt wants to know if you wish to reuse the original
- file's date/time stamp for the editied file. N (the default offering) or
- Enter results in the file's date/time stamp being updated to the current
- system values, Y preserves the original values.
-
- The final prompt wants to know if you want to save the original,
- pre-edit version of the file as "*.BKP" (an arbitrary extension
- designator I picked to show the file as a "BacKuP" from edit mode,
- different from the form of the backup extension assigned by the backup
- command B from the main module.) If you press N or Enter, the edited
- version will simply overwrite the original. If you press Y, then the
- previous backup file with the same name and extension ".BKP", if there is
- one, will be deleted, the "current" original file will be renamed with
- the ".BKP" extension, and the now-edited version will be saved under the
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 2 2-6
-
-
- original name. If CF runs out of file space, it will ask you to put a
- NEW disk into drive A to save the edited version.
-
- The defaults for these three exit questions (Y, N, and N) have been
- selected so that most users will be able to exit the editor with Esc and
- three strokes of the Enter key for most of the edits they will do.
-
- _____
-
- Backup File Protection. . .
-
- A small point of backup file protection. If, in the process of
- saving the original version of the edited file, CF encounters a file
- with the same name and the ".BKP" extension, it will simply overwrite
- it, UNLESS it is assigned the read-only attribute and the original to
- be renamed and saved is not. In this case CF will give you the option
- of saving the read-only file.
- _____
-
- Creating a New File with the Editor. . .
-
- A new file may be created from the main module by pressing the
- letter F ("new File") and entering a name for the new file in the data
- entry line. The new file will appear in the directory from which the F
- command was issued.
-
- _____
-
- Help. . .
-
- A one-page help screen may be summoned on-line at any time in the
- editor with the command F1 or Alt-H, and exited with any keystroke.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 2 2-7
-
-
-
-
-
-
- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
- TUTORIAL -- Chapter 3: The TREE Functions:
-
- CF lets you you view and operate on the subdirectory structure of
- your disk in the format of a "tree", so-called because that is what it
- looks like, with each subdirectory being a "limb" for the finer
- "branches" in its substructure. This feature is invoked with the command
- Shift-Tree. The command conventions in the tree module are the same as
- you have encountered in the main screen, except on a much smaller scale.
-
- The path(s) on entry are preserved from the main screen, and the
- selected subdirectory structure in the source panel is highlighted as a
- block. This source block may be copied, moved or (with GREAT CAUTION)
- deleted. A fast machine can wipe out a lot of files in a big hurry, and
- because of this I have added a second confirmation of any delete
- operation that involves file destruction.
-
- _____
-
- The Display. . .
-
- If you entered the tree feature with both panels open, you see that
- the source/target panel relationship is preserved, and the paths displayed
- at the top and indicated by the cursor highlights in the tree structure
- itself are as existed from the main screen. The structure under the
- cursor in the source panel, namely the selected directory and all its
- files and subdirectories and their files, is shown as a block with red
- background in color mode, while the current directory selected in the
- target path is shown by its name highlighted with a black background.
-
- If you entered the tree module with the right-hand panel closed,
- you may open it the same way as you would from the main screen -- right
- arrow, then press a drive letter at the prompt.
-
- Line 1 at the top of the screen gives the status of two display
- enhancement switches. The "hide" and "compare" switches are passed from
- the main module, and have the same function. When the hide switch is on
- (^Hide=Y), subdirectories with the hidden attribute set are masked (i.e.,
- not displayed). When the compare switch is on (^Comp=Y), any match in
- the target panel to the currently selected path in the source panel will
- be highlighted in high-intensity yellow, similar to the highlighting of
- file matches in the main screen. The hide and compare switches may be
- toggled using Ctrl-H and Ctrl-C (shown as ^H and ^C); their states are
- transmitted back to the main module on return.
-
-
-
- The "Goto" string also appears on the top line when the Goto file or
- Goto directory command is given (G or Alt-G). More on that later.
-
- Information about the selected structures is contained in lines 23
- and 24 at the bottom of the screen. In each panel, there are two pairs
- of numbers, one pair for the amount of DISK SPACE used by the files in
- the structure, a second pair for the NUMBER of files in the structure.
- The first number in each pair desribes the files in the IMMEDIATE
- directory that the cursor is on (think of this as the "root" of the
- structure), and the second number in each pair describes the grand total
- charactertics of the file ensemble in the ENTIRE structure.
-
- The structure in the source panel is highlighted differently
- because this is the structure you will be operating on.
-
- Cursor movement is much the same in the tree display as in the main
- screen. Left/right arrows switch panels, up/down arrows move one line
- up and down the tree, PgUp/Dn move to the top/bottom of the panel and
- then 20 lines, Home/End move to the very top or bottom of the tree,
- and P (for "Parent") moves the cursor up to the directory's parent. Two
- additional cursor moves are Shift-Up/Dn Arrow, which moves the cursor up
- or down one directory in the same level; and Shift-Lf/Rt Arrow, which
- moves the cursor directly across to the match if you are in compare mode
- and have a path in the target matching the path of the currently selected
- structure in the source (same feature as in main module).
-
- Changing disks or drives (N), refreshing the panel from the disk
- (Shift-R), renaming subdirectories (R), setting the hide attribute for a
- subdirectory (2), and toggling the hide switch (Ctrl-Hide) all work the
- same as from the main screen of CF, except that no wild cards are
- permitted in the rename function.
-
- _____
-
- Copying structures. . .
-
- If you, as I, never previously thought or visualized much about the
- structure of the data on your hard disk, and never thought in terms of
- moving around big blocks, the conventions about to be described will take
- a little getting used to. However, you will come to find these
- operations a great convenience.
-
- Select in the TARGET panel a path under which you want to replicate
- a substructure from the source panel. Pick a small structure in the
- source panel for starters. Now picture the source block highlighted in
- red (if you're in color -- in reverse video if monochrome) appearing
- UNDER the subdirectory in the black background in the target panel.
- Press C. The structure selected in the source panel is reproduced,
- subdirectory-by-subdirectory, file-by-file, under the target path. (One
- prohibition -- CF does not permit copying a structure onto itself. That
- is, if you have the same drive selected in both panels, a structure in
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-2
-
-
- the source and its HOST (the subdirectory it originates from) in the
- target, the command C will be ignored.)
-
- This copy operation is good for backing up major structures hard
- disk-to-hard disk or hard disk-to-floppy. Once a backup structure exists
- on another medium, you may KEEP it up to date the same way. Just
- remember to put the cursor in the target panel to the HOST directory
- of the structure you are backing up. Updating is possible because the
- file copying and protection convention used in the tree module is the
- same as that employed in the main program of CF. Namely:
-
- o Files encountered in the target path with the same date/time
- stamp are presumed identical, and not rewritten, unless the "file
- overcopy" switch is on. As in the main module, it is toggled by the
- command Shift-O, and its current state is displayed on the bottom line of
- the screen whenever you press the Shift- key (either "Overcopy=N" or
- "...=Y".) As with the "hide" and "compare" switches, the current state
- of the "overcopy" switch is passed between the main and tree modules.
-
- o Files of the same name encountered in the target that are newer
- than the source, or that are read-only and the source is not, require
- confirmation to be overwritten.
-
- o Files of zero length in the source path are not allowed to
- overwrite files in the target, newer OR older, without confirmation.
-
- Copying in progress may be terminated using Esc. Any errors
- during file copying automatically cause immediate termination of the tree
- copy operation, with a caution note to check over the files in the new
- structure. Check the file whose copying was in process first.
-
- The copy function tries to anticipate the disk space required in the
- target for the structure being copied, and will proceed without delay if
- it finds there is enough free space on the target disk to assure the
- completeness of the copy. It does not attempt to check the target path
- for possible file duplications with the source block and take for credit
- as "available space" the space occupied by files which will be
- overwritten. If it senses not enough space to CLEANLY copy the whole
- structure, it will alert you to the possibility of an incomplete copy,
- and ask for confirmation to proceed anyway. Then, as the copy operation
- proceeds, it checks disk free space before EACH file is copied. If there
- is insufficient space for THAT file, it tells you so, and asks whether
- you want to try the next file. The answer "n" terminates the operation.
-
- When backing up structures on your hard disk using the tree
- structure copy function, if the backup floppy is at all tightly packed,
- you will get this advisory message. If you know there is a lot of file
- duplication between the source structure and the backup floppy, you may
- proceed with the copy operation with confidence that all the files will
- be properly updated.
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-3
-
-
- A final word on the copy function, and the move function discussed
- below. The original cursor position in the TARGET panel, which specified
- the target path for the operation, is reset after the copy or move
- operation to show the TOP LINE of the new structure just created or
- moved, so that you can see that the copy or move actually took place and
- check using the information at the bottom of the screen that all the
- files were reproduced or moved. However, on the next keystroke, the
- target cursor is reset again to its ORIGINAL position.
-
- _____
-
- The "Copy Into" Function. . .
-
- As seen above, the copy function replicates, as a structure UNDER
- the target directory, the source block. The structure has the same
- "name" in both cases, meaning that the top line of the block in the
- source panel is the same as the top line of the replicated structure in
- the target panel. Another way to view this is that the subdirectory
- which serves as the "root" of both structures has the same name.
-
- While this seems a convenient way to copy structures between two
- large mass storage devices, as it forces a uniform convention on the
- naming and construction of the structures themselves, it may not always
- be the most convenient way to backup structures from a large mass storage
- device to a smaller one. This sounds very cryptic, so let me try an
- example. Suppose one of the major structures in your hard disk is a
- directory under the root, containing all your files pertaining to your
- word processor. Let's call this directory WORDS. In it are all the
- program support files (the editor, the printer, the configuration files,
- etc.), and two subdirectories, NOTES and LETTERS. If you were to copy
- the structure with WORDS as its "root" to a virgin floppy, the screen
- would end up looking like this:
-
- C:\ A:\
- |---ANYOLD.DIR ( +---WORDS
- |---WORDS ) . . . . ( |---LETTERS
- | |---LETTERS ). . . ( +---NOTES
- | +---NOTES )
- +---ZLAST.DIR
-
- But suppose you plan to dedicate this floppy exclusively to the
- backing up of the files in the WORDS structure, and so you really wanted
- to put the word processor program and its support files INTO the root
- directory of the disk in A:, and have the LETTERS and NOTES be
- directories of the ROOT, not of a directory WORD. That is, you want not
- to create the unnecessary layer of a directory called WORDS, but you want
- the A: disk tree to look like this:
-
- A:\ <Where the programs and support are here in the root>
- |---LETTERS
- +---NOTES
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-4
-
-
- This is where the command "Copy Into" does the job. Just press the
- letter I instead of C, and the contents of the structure in the source
- panel block are copied INTO the target directory, instead of being
- replicated as a new, complete substructure.
-
- _____
-
- Moving structures. . .
-
- In much the same way, structures may be moved within the same disk
- with the commands Shift-C (which replicates the structure entirely,
- similar to Copy) and Shift-I (which moves the structure INTO the target,
- like Copy Into). The condition for moving is that the same disk is
- selected in both panels, and the target path is not currently the host of
- the structure selected in the source panel. Since these operations use
- the DOS rename service, no copying of any file data itself is performed,
- just modifications to the directory tables, and so this is a QUICK way of
- doing major reoganizations of your hard disk.
-
- "Move" (Shift-C) and "move into" (Shift-I) default to straight
- "copy" and "copy into" if different disks are selected in the source and
- target panels. Moving may be terminated with Esc.
-
- _____
-
- Copying Just the Files. . .
-
- The command J (for Just files) works somewhat like the Into command,
- but copies just the files in the source subdirectory into the target
- path, and not the subdirectories and their files and subdirectories, etc.
-
- _____
-
- Copying Just the Directory Array. . .
-
- The command Alt-C is similar to C, but copies just the skeleton of
- the structure, the directory array and no files, under the target path.
- Alt-I, similar to I, copies just the directory structure INTO the target
- path.
-
- _____
-
- Deleting Structures. . .
-
- This is the scariest of all the tree functions, because a couple of
- false keys and a fast hard disk and you're destroying files REAL fast.
- For this reason, I have added a second confirmation step which warns you
- how many files are about to be destroyed before it starts, and, for hard
- disks, have used the same "soft" delete convention for the operator D as
- discussed in Chapter 1 on the delete function in the main module. (If
- the structure selected consists entirely of empty subdirectories, CF
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-5
-
-
- doesn't bother asking for the second confirmation, since directories are
- a whole lot easier to re-create than files.) Thus, when file destruction
- is involved, three keystrokes are required to delete a structure -- D, Y,
- and Y -- and, for a hard disk, the files deleted will reappear in the
- CF_TRASH.CAN directory. As in the main module, the alternative "hard"
- delete function is Ctrl-D.
-
- Esc terminates tree deletion in progress. CF deletes ALL the
- files in each subdirectory shown in the tree structure -- hidden and
- read-only, as well as normal.
-
- The move and delete operations use a routine to remove the (assumed
- empty) tree structure in the cursor block in the source panel after all
- the files have been moved or deleted. If there is a hidden subdirectory
- in this structure, and the hide switch is set to "Yes", however, it will
- not be seen by the file moving or file deleting routines, as well as the
- directory removal routine, and a strange-looking error message will be
- returned, namely "Access denied" during directory removal. This is
- classic DOSese, at least most of the time, for "there is something still
- in there." Toggle the hide switch with Ctrl-H and reexamine the remnants
- of the structure you tried to delete.
-
- To save you time, CF does not reread the tree from the disk after a
- piece has been deleted, but rather marks the image it made in memory of
- the tree structure to note the part has been deleted and should not be
- used in drawing the tree. As a consequence, the statistics -- files and
- KB used by the directories above the deleted portion, will not be
- accurate. After several deletes, you can refresh the tree from disk with
- Shift-R (Refresh).
-
- _____
-
- Delete Just the Files. . .
-
- The companion delete operation to the "copy Just files" command is
- Alt-D -- delete just the files in the source subdirectory. This is a
- "hard" delete.
-
- _____
-
- Show the File List. . .
-
- The command S, for "Show files", is the way to get a look at the
- file names in a subdirectory without leaving the tree environment. This
- command opens a window in the target panel showing the first 16 files in
- the directory at the cursor in the source panel. You may continue to
- scroll up are down through the source panel as before, but now the file
- window changes as you do to show the contents of the current directory.
- You may do any other operations that involve only the source window, such
- as toggle the hide mode, make a new directory, delete a portion of the
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-6
-
-
- tree, even get a new drive. Two-panel operations such as copy and move
- are blocked in this mode by the presence of the "Show files" window.
-
- To see more than the first 16 files, arrow across with the left or
- right arrow to the file window and scroll up and down using the up/down
- arrows, PgUp/PgDn, Home and End. View or edit the file with Enter or E,
- as in the main module. Move between the tree and its file list with the
- right or left arrow keys. To return to the main module and perform an
- operation on a file in the file list, press Shift-Enter with the cursor
- on that filename. CF immediately returns to the main module, to the
- directory selected, and places the cursor on that file, ready for you to
- edit, view, execute, copy, etc. Leave the "Show files" mode with Esc or
- S from either panel.
-
- _____
-
- Find (Goto) a File. . .
-
- One of the most powerful functions in the tree arsenal is the
- filename finder. There are lots of file-finding utilities around, but
- most of them tell you where a file is by giving you its path which you
- have to type into a DOS "change directory" command. Cumbersome.
-
- CMFiler offers a file finder which gives you an instant visual cue
- to the directory(ies) containing the file you are looking for. Simply
- press G (for "Goto file", just as in the main module). A data window
- opens at the bottom for you to type the name of the file to search on.
- It supports the "?" and "*" wildcards. When you type the first letter,
- the "Show files" list opens in the opposite panel, and both the tree
- display and file list dynamically adjust to show current matches. Keep
- typing until the matches have been narrowed down as far as you need to
- go, and press Enter or Esc.
-
- Assuming there is at least one file that fits that specification,
- note that several things have happened:
-
- o At least one directory name in the tree is highlighted;
-
- o The cursor has automatically repositioned to the topmost
- highlighted directory; and
-
- o All the file matches are listed in alphabetical order at the top
- of the window, and are also highlighted.
-
- If you have a long tree structure with subdirectories out of view
- off the bottom of the panel, you may not see all of the highlighted
- subdirectories containing file matches. If there are some subdirectories
- in the tree containing matches but which are off the screen above of
- below, a flashing "More" will appear at the top or bottom in the tree
- display. The cursor movement in the "Goto file" mode that lets you
- quickly position up or down to the next directory containing a file match
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-7
-
-
- is Shift-Up/Down Arrow. Use Shift-Up/Down Arrow to see all the
- directories with a match. Otherwise navigation and services are the same
- as Show files mode.
-
- If there are match files out of view above or below the file window,
- a flashing "More" will appear at the top or bottom of the file window
- frame. Quit "Goto file" mode with Esc, G or Alt-G.
-
- _____
-
- Goto a Directory. . .
-
- There is also a quick way to navigate to a subdirectory anywhere in
- the tree that, like the "Goto file" command, mimics a command in the main
- module. It is Alt-G, and it behaves similarly to G above, except that
- the file list is not opened in the other panel, and the tree display is
- changed dynamically to highlight the directory name matches and position
- on the topmost match. Type the name of the directory you are looking
- for, and when it has been singled out to your satisfaction, type Enter or
- Esc. Matches are highlighted in the target tree, if one is shown.
- Shift-Up/Down Arrow to the next match up or down; otherwise navigation
- and services are normal. Quit "Goto directory" mode with Esc, G or
- Alt-G.
-
- _____
-
- Find Text. . .
-
- Another powerful operation in CMFiler's tree services, to complement
- the filename finder, is a file text finder. Press Shift-F (Find text).
- Enter the text to be found (the search is case-insensitive), and then
- enter up to eight filenames describing the types of files you want
- included in the search, separated by + signs. The pipe symbol (|, ASCII
- 124) placed in front of a filename means "do not include this type". So,
- for example, the entry:
-
- CMFILER.*+|*.COM+|*.OVY+*.TXT
-
- would result in a search of all files with the name CMFILER except
- CMFILER.COM and CMFILER.OVY, plus all files with the extension .TXT.
-
- CF's guess at this point on what part of the disk to search is that
- you wanted to look only in the selected portion of the tree -- the
- structure at and below the cursor. Just to be sure, it asks for
- confirmation, and will allow you to extend the search to the whole disk
- if you wish.
-
- An option for the text search string is the character "*", which
- means "accept any text". This is useful, for example, if you wanted to
- see all the files of several different descriptions in the tree, but
- didn't want to do each at a time using the filename finder (which only
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-8
-
-
- supports one entry), and didn't care what they contained. Suppose you
- want to see all the executable files on your disk. Just press Shift-F,
- enter * as the text, and *.COM+*.EXE+*.BAT as the names to search on.
-
- _____
-
- Viewing or Editing Files. . .
-
- The editor is accessible directly from the tree module. In either
- the Show files or Goto file mode, with the cursor in the file list window
- on a file name, press Enter to view or E to Edit the file.
-
- _____
-
- Deleting Files from the File List. . .
-
- Another feature in the Show files and Goto file modes that speeds
- disk cleanup is individual file deletion while the cursor is in the file
- list. The following commands are available, which mimic commands in the
- main file services module: Tag (or spacebar), which toggles the tag on
- an individual file; tagAll, which clears or sets all tags; soft Delete
- file(s) to CF_TRASH.CAN; and Ctrl-D hard delete file(s) off the disk.
- This feature gives you a more macroscopic view of your disk while you are
- cleaning it up.
-
- _____
-
- Print a Hard Copy of the Tree or Found Files. . .
-
- Except in the Goto file and Find text modes, the command Alt-L (same
- syntax as in the main module) prints a copy of the tree structure to the
- printer. In Goto file or Find text mode, however, Alt-L prints an
- alphabetical listing, organized by directory, of all the files identified
- by the preceding search. The date, time, disk volume and search
- parameters are all printed at the top of listing.
-
- _____
-
- Precaution Regarding CF_TRASH.CAN. . .
-
- The directory CF_TRASH.CAN is not permitted as the source for a copy
- or move operation. Since this directory contains files whose date/time
- stamps were reset to the current date and time when they were "soft
- deleted", they will generally APPEAR to be newer than more current files
- of the same name elsewhere on the disk. Thus indiscrimant copying or
- moving of them may overwrite later files. Files in this directory may
- ONLY be moved/copied from the main module, and only after confirmation.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-9
-
-
- _____
-
- Help. . .
-
- A one-page help summary may be summoned on-line at any time within
- the tree module with the command F1 or H.
-
- _____
-
- Leaving the Tree Functions. . .
-
- There are three ways to leave the tree display. Enter goes back to
- the main program display, with the path(s) for the left (and right, if
- open) panel(s) as selected on the respective trees. Esc goes back to
- the main program with the path(s) set as they were on entry. And
- finally, Alt-Q has the same convention as in the main program -- quit CF
- altogether, with default drive and current directory as selected in the
- tree source panel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 3 3-10
-
-
-
-
-
-
- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
- TUTORIAL -- Chapter 4: Launching User Applications:
-
-
- So far, you have seen the features that make CF useful for file and
- directory management -- neatness of file display, flexibility in
- manipulating directories and files, transparency of operation, and even
- the ability to edit files without leaving the environment of CF. What
- really makes CF useful as an OPERATING environment, though, is its
- ability to execute user applications with an economy of keystrokes.
-
- Running programs in the DOS environment is one of the more
- cumbersome and confusing aspects of this operating system, and therefore,
- by its nature, this chapter is not terribly straightforward. I will make
- it as simple as I know how.
-
- _____
-
- Terminology: User Application as "Child" Program. . .
-
- A "user application" is nothing more than a "child" program,
- executed by the DOS operating system under the command of the "parent"
- program, which stays resident and waits for the "child" program to
- finish. When you ran CF from the DOS system prompt, it was as a "child"
- of the DOS COMMAND.COM command processor. Some word processors permit you
- to "shell" to DOS, leaving the word processor program code resident in
- memory. What the word processor program is actually doing is running the
- DOS COMMAND.COM command processor as a child. From this DOS "shell", you
- could run yet another program as a child. The more layers of child
- programs you have at any time, the more RAM you eat up for the currently
- running program with the resident code of generations of parents waiting
- to take back over.
-
- _____
-
- Resident Footprint of CF. . .
-
- If you use your computer for more than just one task, therefore,
- you may find CF useful as an "inner shell" of your operating environment.
- You may let all 99 KB stay resident (the CF.COM kernel plus the CF.OVY
- overlay) while the child is running, or if you are memory-limited you may
- force CF to give back to DOS for allocation to the child all but 19 KB
- for the CF.COM kernel. This option is exercised by pressing K (for
- "Kernel"), and then pressing either L or S at the prompt (for "Large" or
- "Small"). "Large" is the default in a virgin copy of CF.COM. The
-
-
- default setting embedded in the CF.COM file on disk gets updated to the
- current value anytime you update the user-defined F1-F9 applications
- table with the command Shift-F10 - Ctrl-Enter.
-
- There is a tradeoff here. The large kernel option ties up more RAM
- that could be used by the child if it is a humongous program, but the
- return to the CF environment after it finishes is instantaneous. The
- small kernel option is good for freeing the maximum amount of RAM for the
- child, but there is a delay in returning to CF while the resident kernel
- reloads the overlay. You be the judge. The best thing is that you can
- decide before each launch, if you want, at the cost of only two
- keystrokes!
-
- _____
-
- "Shelling" to DOS. . .
-
- You may "shell" to DOS -- that is, execute the DOS command processor
- -- any time you want from the main screen just by pressing S. A prompt
- will tell you to return to CF when you are done by entering the DOS
- "exit" command. This is the most elemental child program provided for in
- CF.
-
- _____
-
- Review of DOS Command Line Structure. . .
-
- Before talking about how CF launches applications, let's review how
- it's done from the DOS command processor. Say you are in the root of the
- C drive, and you want to start your PCWrite word processor, which is
- named ED.EXE and is in a directory called PCW off the root. Further,
- let's say you want ED.EXE to edit a file called USER.LST in a
- subdirectory of PCW called DATA. At the C:\> prompt you could type:
-
- C:\>PCW\ED.EXE C:\PCW\DATA\USER.LST
-
- What this command tells DOS is: 1)leaving C as the default drive and
- the root \ as the current directory, go to directory \PCW, find and
- execute ED.EXE, and pass the string "C:\PCW\DATA\USER.LST" along to it as
- a "command tail", so it knows what you want it to do. (The "command
- tail" is nothing more than everything in the DOS command line after the
- program specification (in this case PCW\ED.EXE).)
-
- C:\>PCW\ED.EXE C:\PCW\DATA\USER.LST
- |<-prog->| |<----command----->|
- | spec | | tail |
-
- If you have typed a lot of DOS command lines, you know how tedious
- they can become, particularly if there is more than one parameter in the
- command tail after the program specification. But you know that most of
- the time, the one or more parameters in the command tail are filenames or
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-2
-
-
- file specifications (with full path specifications in front of them), and
- sometimes there are parameters the program will use to configure what it
- does -- command line options.
-
- The ensuing discussion may be simpler if you think about each step
- in launching an application from CF as having to do with constructing
- either the program specification (the first argument in the command line,
- telling what program you want to launch), or the command tail (everything
- else, which the launched program needs to know to do its thing).
-
-
- _____
-
- Launching a Program from the Main Screen. . .
-
- You can run any "executable" (.COM, .EXE or .BAT) file from CF,
- as a child program, anytime you want, from the main screen. There are
- several ways to do it:
-
- _____
-
- Immediate Execution. . .
-
- This is the quickest way. Just position the cursor on an executable
- file entry on the screen and press Q (for "Quick execute"). This is
- ideal if the program is located in the same directory as any files it
- might look for, and it does not need a command tail to tell it what files
- to operate on or what optional switches to set. This is just like typing
- in the name of the program at the DOS command line, once you are selected
- to the directory containing the program.
-
- _____
-
- Execution with Command Tail. . .
-
- However, as discussed above many programs expect data in the command
- tail, such as the name of a file to operate on, and CF has provided
- several ways of constructing the DOS command line.
-
- The simplest is this: First, position the cursor on the file you
- want to execute and press X (for "eXecute"). This constructs the "program
- specification" for the DOS command line. A prompt message will tell you
- this file is ready for execution, its path and name put into a special
- buffer in RAM, lined up and waiting for the launch command from you to
- commence execution as soon as you select the drive and directory the
- program will want as its default path to the files it will operate on.
- Select the default path the program will want in either panel, and leave
- that panel set as the source panel, and then press Alt-X. A data entry
- window opens at the bottom, in which you may enter a command tail for the
- program's use. Enter the command tail data your application expects, and
- hit Enter to run.
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-3
-
-
- _____
-
- Execution with a Single File Name in the Command Tail. . .
-
- The simplest case of the command tail is a single file name. CF
- offers a shorthand way of running a program with a one-filename argument
- as the command tail. Put the cursor on the name of the program file you
- want to run and press X as before. The program is ready to run. Now
- find the directory containing the file you want this program to operate
- on, put the cursor on the filename, and press Ctrl-X. It's off and
- running, editing (or whatever other operation it's doing on) that file.
- Two keystrokes. Ctrl-X means "add the name of the file at the cursor to
- the command tail and execute immediately."
-
- It is a good idea to have the program file and its supporting files
- in the same directory as the "operand" files when you use this method of
- execution, unless the program is smart enough to locate its supporting
- files in another directory in the DOS path environment.
-
- _____
-
- "Seeding" the Command Tail. . .
-
- In many cases, the above quick way to specify a one-filename command
- tail is not enough. You may find a need to put into the command tail the
- names of several files from what will be the default path when the
- program is executed, or the full specifications of several files not in
- that path on execution.
-
- In CF, there are shorthand ways of "seeding" the command tail window
- with file specifications and filenames. These may be used either before
- or after readying the program file for eXecution with X.
-
- o To seed the command tail with the FULL specification (path PLUS
- name) of a file on which you want the program to operate, put the cursor
- on the filename and press Alt-C (the C in this case is a mnemonic for
- "build Command tail"). The information window at the bottom will show
- you the command tail in its current state. This procedure may be repeated
- to build a command tail as long as there is room in the command tail
- buffer. The command tail is limited to 125 characters.
-
- o Just before pressing Alt-X to show the command tail window for
- final pre-launch editing, you may Alt-Tag one of more files in the
- directory you have set up as the program's default path. These file
- names, WITHOUT paths specifications, will all appear in the command tail
- in the order they were Alt-Tagged.
-
- Now press Alt-X to open the data window with the seeded command
- tail. Once you have edited the command tail the way you want it, hit
- Enter, and the program is off and running. After the launched program
- finishes and returns control to CF, its file specification stays in the
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-4
-
-
- "execute" buffer until you ready another executable file with X, so you
- may perform multiple operations of the same program just by seeding the
- command tail again as above, and pressing Alt-X again. As a further
- time-saving feature, you may recall the last command tail by pressing the
- up arrow or PgUp while in the command tail entry field.
-
- Once you get used to the above conventions, you will find that in
- many situations you don't need to edit the seeded command tail, and the
- key sequence Alt-X-Enter seems cumbersome. For those cases I have
- included the option Shift-X. Use it after you have seeded the command
- tail using Alt-C and/or Alt-T, and avoid the extra Enter stroke. Its
- effect is to commence execution of the program with the as-seeded command
- tail, with no edit.
-
- _____
-
- Changing the Command Tail "Seed" Delimiter. . .
-
- You probably noticed that there was always a space between multiple
- entries in the seeded command tails created using the Alt-C and Alt-T
- seeding operators by the procedures above. But what if your application
- looks for commas as the field delimiters for data in the command tail,
- instead of blanks? Just press Ctrl-Enter from the main screen to pick
- from three choices for default command tail field delimiters -- space,
- comma, and semicolon.
-
- _____
-
- Customizing Your User Application File Specifications. . .
-
- Got a few pet applications that you run more than most? Save the
- aggravation of hunting them down and pressing Q or one of the X key
- sequences each time you run them. You can call them with just a touch of
- one of the function keys F1 through F9! To set this up, press Shift-F10.
- You will see a data entry screen that lets you specify up to nine
- executable file names in the entries "F1 = ", "F2 = ", etc., and an
- optional default command tail offering for each, labelled
- "F1 Comm Tail = ", etc. Further down the page, you will see places for
- similar entries for ZIP and UNZIP, and a bottom entry labelled
- "Password = ". (You may use this last entry to specify a password which
- must be entered to get back to the main screen from the screen-saver mode
- -- a handy way of blocking undesired access to your files.)
-
- In any "Fn = " data window, just type in the filename, including
- extension, of an executable file you use frequently, and, optionally, any
- frequently used command tail that you would like to show up as a default
- offering when you ready the file for execution. You do NOT need to
- include the path in the file specification if the file is on one of the
- paths listed in the DOS path environment (via a previous "path" command
- from the DOS system level) -- CF will hunt it down and update its
- internal record of where that file is, so it doesn't have to hunt the
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-5
-
-
- next time you call it. However, if you DO include a path specification,
- be sure it is complete (e.g., "C:\LETTERS\ED.EXE").
-
- Once you have made all the entries you wish, press Ctrl-Enter to
- record the new entries and leave the F-key data entry screen. (Esc will
- abort the edit.) CF will then find and update the CF.CFG configuration
- data file to add the customized F-key information. (A caveat for DOS v2
- users -- CF will find CF.CFG PROVIDED it is on a path in the DOS path
- environment, and you have kept it named the same as the kernel and
- overlay files).
-
- There are three ways to now use these F-key options: (This seems
- awfully confusing, but stay with me -- these features are what will
- really make CF useful to you!)
-
- o Press the F-key corresponding to an application you specified
- with the Shift-F10 operation. (This may be done from either the main
- screen OR the F-key information screen shown by pressing just F10.) You
- will get the message at the bottom that that executable file is readied
- for execution, just as though you had hunted it down and pressed X. Seed
- the command tail and set up the path desired in the source panel as
- before, and press Alt-X to get the command tail entry window, also as
- before. This time, though, if you had specified a default command tail
- offering for this F-key, it would appear in the command tail window, IN
- FRONT OF the seeded entries, if any. Edit the command tail if desired,
- and press Enter to start execution.
-
- o OR, if you know the command tail will be the way you want it,
- and you are bugged by the extra Enter keystroke to accept the seeded
- command tail, seed the command tail with Alt-C if you want, set up the
- source panel to the directory you want, Alt-Tag any files from this
- directory you want to appear in the command tail, and hit Shift-F-key.
- The application will run immediately with the seeded command tail, with
- the default F-key command tail offering between the Alt-C seeds and the
- Alt-T seeds.
-
- o OR, if you are just operating on one file, put the cursor on the
- name of that file and press a Ctrl-F-key for instant one-key execution.
- In this case, the F-key default command tail offering will appear in the
- command tail preceeding the name of the file the cursor was on. (This is
- the feature I use most.)
-
- (There is, in fact, a rule as to where the F-key default command
- tail offering gets placed during the construction of the command tail. It
- is inserted at the point that the F-key itself (or F-key modified by
- Shift- or Ctrl-) is pressed. The file names Alt-Tagged in the current
- directory always appear last. In an exotic case, for example, you could:
- (1) Alt-C a file spec, (2) press F1, (3) Alt-T a file name, and press
- Shift-X to execute with no edit of the command tail. The program
- assigned to the F1 key would run, with a command tail consisting of the
- file spec Alt-C'd in (1), the F1 default command tail offering, and the
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-6
-
-
- file name Alt-T'd in (3), all separated by the command tail delimiter
- character last selected from the main screen with Ctrl-Enter.
-
- The business above may seem cumbersome, but if you spend a lot of
- time typing the same old things in at the DOS command processor
- prompt, you will find it is worth the investment of time to figure out
- and use.
-
- _____
-
- A Further Execution Option -- Instant ZIPping/UNZIPping. . .
-
- Phil Katz' PKZIP.EXE and PKUNZIP.EXE (c) have become the dominant
- file compression and decompression programs in the shareware market,
- so much so that I wrote a special explicit feature to employ them with
- just a few keystrokes. The commands which invoke these programs from the
- main menu are Z and U, respectively. CF can find these programs as long
- as you have not renamed them from PKZIP.EXE and PKUNZIP.EXE, and they are
- on one of the paths that you specified in a DOS path environment. If for
- some reason you want to rename them or put them on a path not listed in
- the DOS path environment, you may specify them explicitly via the Shift-
- F10 data screen.
-
- _____
-
- ZIP a File. . .
-
- 1. Decide where you want the compressed file to go, and select
- that path in one of the panels. If you are updating an existing .ZIP
- file, Tag or Alt-Tag it while you are there.
-
- 2. Now switch to the other panel, and select the path to the files
- you want to compress. Tag them, Alt-Tag them in the order in which you
- want PKZIP to compress them if order is important to you.
-
- 3. Now then press Z. CF will show you a command tail at the bottom
- of the screen, in the PKZIP syntax (options first, then .ZIP file first,
- then list of files to be ZIPped.) Since the files to be ZIPped are in
- the current source path as set up by CF when you Alt-Tagged them, no
- explicit path is included for them. You may edit the command tail. Once
- you are satisfied with the command tail, press Enter.
-
- [In step 2 above, if you do not Tag or Alt-Tag any files for
- compression in the source path, CF assumes you want to ZIP them all, and
- places "*.*" in the file list argument of the PKZIP command tail.]
-
- [In step 1 above, if you do not Tag or Alt-Tag a target .ZIP file,
- CF assigns a default .ZIP file name for PKZIP to create, which is either:
-
- (1) the first Tagged or Alt-Tagged file in the source path from
- step 2, or
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-7
-
-
- (2) if no source files are Tagged or Alt-Tagged in step 2, the
- name of the file the cursor is on. (PKZIP attaches the
- default .ZIP extension).]
-
- [In step 3 above, if you know you don't have to edit the command
- tail, you can bypass the extra Enter keystroke to enter the command tail
- by pressing Shift-Z instead of Z.]
-
- _____
-
- Now UNZIP a File. . .
-
- 1. Set up one panel with the target path for the UNZIPped files.
-
- 2. Switch to the other panel, select the path with the .ZIP file
- to be UNZIPped, and put the cursor on it.
-
- 3. Press U, edit the command tail if necessary, and press Enter.
- As with ZIPping above, if you know you don't have to edit the command
- tail, press Shift-U instead.
-
- The PKZIP/UNZIP utilities are available from most bulletin
- boards, or may be had for a $47 registration fee from PKWARE, Inc.,
- 9025 N. Deerwood Drive, Brown Deer, WI 53223 (BBS 414-354-8670).
-
- _____
-
- Tailoring CF for custom ZIP/UNZIP spec. . .
-
- If for some reason you want to specify an explicit path to
- PKZIP/PKUNZIP, you may include an explicit file specification using the
- Shift-F10 feature. Just follow the procedure and precautions under
- "Customizing Your Executable File Specifications" above, and operate on
- the "Compress = " and " Extract = " fields.
-
- If you are familiar with Phil Katz' option switch syntax and find
- yourself using one or more switches most of the time, you may enter
- standard options in the indicated fields ("Compress Options =" and
- " Extract Options = ") while you are at it.
-
- Once you are comfortable using the ZIP/UNZIP feature of CF, and you
- find you are not having to edit the ZIP/UNZIP command tail most times,
- you may start getting bugged about having to always hit Enter when you
- see the command tail displayed. There is an alternative! Just like with
- the tailored F-keys, hit Shift-Z/U for instant ZIPping/UNZIPping.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-8
-
-
- _____
-
- Using Other Compression Utilities. . .
-
- As it happens, some other compression utilities use the same command
- line construction as the PKWare utilities. Specifically, the ARJ utility
- by Jung and the LHA utility by Yoshizaki use command lines of the form:
-
- archiver options archivefile file1[,file2[,file3[,...]]]
-
- where archiver is the program spec, options is the collection of commands
- and switches to accomplish the desired operation, archivefile is the spec
- to the file which will contain the compressed data, and file1, file2,
- etc., are the specs to files to be compressed.
-
- The CF ZIP/UNZIP facility may be used to accomplish compression and
- extraction with either ARJ or LHA, and perhaps others as well. Here is
- how to do it with LHA as an example:
-
- o Make sure the file LHA.EXE is on one of the paths specified in
- your DOS environment, so that CF can find it.
-
- o In CF, press Shift-F10 to bring up the user-defined
- applications screen for editing, and down-arrow to the line
- "Compress = ". Type in LHA.EXE. Do the same for the line
- " Extract = ", since for this utility, unlike the PKWare set,
- the same program does both tasks.
-
- o For the most rudimentary compression and extraction options
- with LHA, the only parameter required for the "Compress Options
- = " line is the letter a, and for the " Extract Options ="
- line, the letter x. These parameters tell LHA whether to add
- (a) or extract (x). Type them in, and press Ctrl-Enter to save
- the new data.
-
- Compressing and extracting now work just the same as previously
- described for the PKWare utilities. To compress, optionally Tag ot Alt-
- Tag the archive file in one panel, go to the other panel, find the
- directory with the files to be compressed (the same path is permitted)
- and Tag or Alt-Tag them, press Z, edit the command tail if necessary and
- press Enter. To extract, set up one panel with the destination path for
- the extracted files (may be the same as the source), arrow across too the
- other panel, put the cursor on the file to be extracted and press U.
- Edit the command tail and press Enter.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-9
-
-
- _____
-
- Specifying a Password for Access from Screen Saver. . .
-
- At the very bottom of the Shift-F10 screen you see a data line for
- password. You may enter any combination of alphanumeric characters up to
- six letters. This password must be given to restore access to CF from
- screen saver mode. The password routine is case insensitive.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
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-
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-
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-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Chapter 4 4-10
-
-
-
-
- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
- REFERENCE -- Description by Operation:
- _________________________
-
- DISK/DIRECTORY OPERATIONS:
-
- N -- New disk -- Select a new disk drive for the source panel, the one
- with the cursor. Must be used to announce disk media changes. In
- right-hand panel, Enter after N closes the panel.
-
- Enter -- Display subdirectory in source panel -- With the cursor on a
- subdirectory or the "<Parent>" line, changes to that subdirectory or
- parent in the source panel.
-
- Shift-Enter -- Display subdirectory in target panel -- Displays the
- subdirectory under the cursor in the target panel, and changes to
- it.
-
- P -- Display Parent directory in source panel -- Quick way of returning
- to the parent directory with the cursor positioned anywhere in the
- listing of a subdirectory. The same thing can be done with two
- strokes -- Home (to get to top line of the subdirectory listing,
- which is always "<PARENT>"), then Enter.
-
- Shift-P -- Display source directory's Parent directory in target panel --
- Quick way of showing the parent of the current directory in the
- target panel and switching to it.
-
- \ -- Display root directory in source panel.
-
- Shift-\ -- Display root directory of source disk in target panel.
-
- Shift-* -- Display source directory in target panel.
-
- Alt-G, followed by a typed string -- Move cursor to ("Go to...") the
- directory described by that string.
-
- M -- Make subdirectory (Mkdir) -- With the cursor anywhere in the
- listing, pressing M opens a data window at the bottom of the screen
- for entering the name of a new subdirectory you want to make. CF
- checks the entry for validity; if invalid, the window simply clears
- and waits for another entry. A valid entry appears in the proper
- alphabetic position on the screen.
-
- D -- Delete -- With the cursor on a subdirectory and no files tagged,
- removes that subdirectory if it is empty ("void"). IF THE CURSOR IS
- ON A SUBDIRECTORY AND FILES ARE TAGGED, DELETES THE FILES.
-
-
- Alt-L -- Print directory Listing -- Prints a listing of the current
- directory if cursor in directory panel, and includes notes if cursor
- in one of the Notes modes (Shift-N or Ctrl-N).
-
- Shift-T -- Transfers control to the TREE module. Displays the disk(s)
- selected in the panels in their directory tree structures, and puts
- the cursor(s) on the structure(s) pointed to by the current path(s).
-
- __________________________
-
- FILE OPERATIONS:
-
- G, followed by a typed string -- Move cursor to ("Go to...") file
- described by that string.
-
- Shift-Lf/Rt Arr -- Jump across to identical file name in opposite panel
- when highlighted in comparison mode.
-
- T or Space -- Tag file -- Applies or clears a "normal" tag to the file
- under the cursor (i.e., toggles the state of the tag). Window at
- bottom of screen shows number of files tagged.
-
- Alt-T or Alt-Space -- Alternate-Tag file -- Applies or clears an
- "alternate" (sometimes referred to as "append" because of its
- principal function) tag to a file. "Alt tags" are numbered (1-9,
- a-z) to show the order of application, for the order-critical
- operation of file concatenation, discussed below, and are white on
- red.
-
- A -- Tag All files -- Applies or clears normal tags to all files.
-
- Ctrl-A -- Toggle the state of All normal tags.
-
- Alt-M/E -- Tag all files with same naMe/Extension as file at cursor; does
- not reset tags already present.
-
- Alt-N -- Tag all files Newer than file at cursor.
-
- Alt-O -- Tag all files Older than file at cursor.
-
- Alt-D -- Tag all files same Date as file at cursor.
-
- Alt-P -- Tag same files in oPposite panel as tagged in source.
-
- (NOTE ON TAGS: Tags are aids for quickly performing multiple
- file operations, but are "volatile", and generally go away with
- any operation that changes or updates a panel. Tags are NOT
- applied in any way to the magnetic media.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-2
-
- C -- Copy -- Copies tagged files from source to target, or the one file
- at the cursor if none tagged. Does not bother overwrite identical
- files, asks for verification before overwriting newer files or read-
- only or hidden files, and protects against some cases of overwriting
- good files with files created in error.
-
- With files "Alt-Tagged", creates "concatenated" file in target
- with same name as first "Alt-Tagged" file, but extension ".APF".
- If insufficient room on target path, does not perform operation,
- and signals the user.
-
- Shift-C -- move -- Moves files from one subdirectory to another on the
- same disk. If conditions are not satisfied for moving (i.e., same
- disk, different directories), shifts back to copy mode.
-
- B -- Back up -- Copies tagged files (or file at cursor if none tagged)
- from source to source, assigning to each new file the extension ".~"
- (tilde) plus the first two letters of the original file's extension.
- This results in backup files with unique names unless two files
- differ only in the third letter of the extension (eg, ".BAK" and
- ".BAS" would both back-up to ".~BA"). With files "Alt-Tagged",
- creates file in source with the "backup" form of the "append"
- extension (ie, ".~AP"), and concatenates. If insufficient room on
- source path, does not perform operation, and signals user.
-
- D -- Delete -- Deletes all tagged files on source path. If no files are
- tagged, deletes only the file under the cursor. Treats normal tags
- and "Alt-Tags" the same. Requests confirmation before file
- destruction. On hard disks, this operation is a "soft" delete, in
- which files are redated to current date/time and moved to directory
- \CF_TRASH.CAN (created by CF). Thus good files inadvertently
- deleted are readily recoverable. On floppy drives, this operation
- is a "hard" delete, using the DOS delete file function.
- "Undeleting" is not available in the CF environment, but other
- utilities contain "undelete" facilities, but these are not always
- reliable.
-
- Ctrl-D -- "hard" Delete -- Uses DOS delete function regardless of disk
- type.
-
- Shift-F -- Freshen files -- "Freshens" the files in the source panel from
- the target. Useful in updating backup disks. If no files tagged in
- source, tags all in source, then tags in target all NEWER versions
- of same-named tagged source files and copies them to source. If any
- files were tagged in source, only these files are looked for in
- target, vice all files in source.
-
- R -- Rename file or directory -- Prints name of file at cursor, and opens
- window below it for new name, offering the current name as the
- "seed". Type/edit new name and press Enter. Or first arrow up and
- edit the current name field, for example to use the "*" wildcard.
- One use of "*" is permitted (either the name or extension). If used
- in the current name field, it must be followed in the new name
- field. Names are checked for legality before renaming is attempted.
-
-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-3
-
- Alt-R -- copy with Rename -- Copies the one file at the cursor in the
- source panel to the target, after entry of new name in data window.
-
- Enter -- Display file -- With the cursor on a file, views that file.
-
- F -- make new File -- With the cursor anywhere in the listing, pressing F
- opens a data window at the bottom of the screen for entering the
- name of a new file to be created. Entry is checked for validity.
- If valid, control is transferred to the line editor for file
- creation and editing.
-
- 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 -- Toggle File Attribute -- Pressing the number 0 clears
- all attributes for any files tagged, or for the file under the
- cursor if none are tagged. 1 toggles the read-only attribute, 2 the
- hidden attribute, 3 the system attribute, and 4 the archive
- attribute. (Only the number keys at the top of the keyboard are
- active for setting file attributes. The numbers on the keypad are
- mapped to their corresponding cursor movement functions, even when
- the NUM LOCK is set. (The command syntax can be remembered as
- "1234=RHSA".)
-
- L -- print fiLe -- Put the file under the cursor into the queue for
- printing as a background process while in CF or any child of CF.
- (Printing is suspended during any DOS functions, such as disk
- read/write.) Up to five files may be thus queued. Shift-L displays
- the print queue. Ctrl-L clears the print queue. Ctrl-F while files
- are printing from the print queue sets an internal flag which causes
- a form feed to the printer at the end of the file most recently
- added to the print queue if the file itself does not have a form
- feed as its last character. (At times when the printer is not in
- use by CF, Ctrl-F sends a form feed immediately.)
-
- V -- Volume label -- Permits entry of a new volume label for the disk
-
- Shift-O -- set user Option switches -- Permits the resetting of six user-
- specified Yes/No option switches for 1) redefining the F1 key as
- Help, 2) redefining "D" as "hard" delete, 3) clearing the I/O buffer
- structure if found before write (eliminating inadvertent copying of
- stray data into sector slack space), 4) overcopying identical-
- appearing files during copy operations, 5) refreshing directory list
- on return from screen saver, 6) un-hiding the NARATIVE.CF notes
- file, and 7) selecting monitor type.
-
- Alt-F -- Change file date/time stamp.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-4
-
- _________________________
-
- FILE EDITING/VIEWING:
-
- Enter -- View a file -- When the cursor is placed over a file, Enter lets
- you view the file on the screen. In this mode, the lower right
- screen display gives information about the byte the cursor is on.
- Alt-H displays help screen. Alt-Plus and Alt-Minus toggle the
- bottom information display and the color-enhanced display of record
- delimiters (CR, LF, CR+LF, LF+CR). Esc or Enter exits View mode.
-
- E -- Edit a file -- When the cursor is placed on a file as above, E lets
- you edit the file. Cursor positioning is the same. Additional
- control keys are Bksp, Delete Tab/Shift-Tab; Insert (toggles mode
- between Push Right and Overstrike); Enter (inserts the record
- delimiter previously selected with Ctrl-Enter; default is CR+LF).
- Ctrl-Y deletes line; Ctrl-D deletes to end of line. F1 or Alt-H
- provides a one-page help screen. Block operations are performed with
- Alt- {M (mark), Y (delete), V (move), C (copy), O (output to file),
- and P (print)}. Ctrl-F form-feeds the printer. Enter any ASCII code
- through Alt-Keypad numerical combinations, except NULL, which is
- entered by Alt-N.
-
- Esc exits Edit mode, and CF asks you if you want to save the edit.
- In most cases you will probably answer yes. Then it asks if you
- want to reuse the original, prior-to-edit file's date/time stamp on
- the revised file, and if you want to rename the original file as
- *.BKP. (When you do, CF deletes any previously saved file with the
- name *.BKP, even if it had a read-only attribute.) If it encounters
- problems with disk size or errors, it will give you further
- instructions. For example, if after saving the original file as
- *.BKP, it finds insufficient room on the source path to write the
- edited version of the file, it will instruct you to put a new disk
- in drive A, just so it can capture the edit for you.
-
-
-
-
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- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-5
-
- _________________________
-
- TREE OPERATIONS:
-
- Cursor Movement -- Up/Down Arrow moves one screen line at a time.
- PgUp/PgDn moves to top or bottom of screen, then moves screen 19
- lines, or to very top/bottom of tree. Home/End moves to very
- top/bottom of tree. Shift-Up/Down Arrow moves up/down one
- directory at same level (to next subdirectory up or down in parent
- directory), or, in "Goto file", "Goto directory" and "Find text"
- modes, to next directory with a match to the find string. P moves
- up to parent. Left/Right Arrow changes panels, making the other
- panel the source. Shift-Left/Right Arrow moves across to the path
- match in comapre mode.
-
- N -- New disk -- Allows changing drives or disks, as in main module.
-
- M -- Makes directory under path at cursor.
-
- 2 -- Toggle directory's hide attribute.
-
- Alt-L -- Prints a hard copy of the tree Listing shown on the source panel
- side of the screen in straight tree mode. Prints a listing of all
- the file matches while in Find file or Find text mode.
-
- D -- Delete structure -- deletes the entire structure highlighted in the
- cursor block in the source panel. This is a "soft" delete on hard
- disks, in which the deleted files are redated and collected in
- \CF_TRASH.CAN.
-
- Ctrl- D -- "hard" Delete structure. Uses the DOS file delete function
- regardless of disk type.
-
- Alt-D -- Delete just the file in the source directory. This is a "hard"
- delete.
-
- C -- Copy structure under target path -- Replicates the structure in the
- source panel's cursor block UNDER the directory selected in the
- target panel.
-
- Shift-C -- Move structure under target path -- If both panels selected to
- the same disk, moves the structure in the source panel's cursor
- block UNDER the directory selected in the target panel. If
- different disks selected, defaults to Copy.
-
- Alt-C -- Copy just the directory array under target directory, no files
- copied.
-
- I -- Copy structure Into target path -- Similar to copy, but does not
- replicate the highest level subdirectory in the source block, but
- rather puts its files directly INTO (vice UNDER) the target
- subdirectory, and replicates its substructure into the target path.
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-6
-
- Shift-I -- Move structure Into target path -- If both panels selected to
- same disk, moves the source structure INTO (vice UNDER) the target
- subdirectory, as with I.
-
- J -- Copy Just the files in source directory to target directory.
-
- Shift-J -- Move Just the files from the source subdirectory to target.
-
- S -- Show files in opposite panel. Arrow across to file list if desired,
- then up/down with normal cursor moves. In file list, Enter returns
- to main module, to directory and file selected. Arrow back to tree.
- Esc or S cancels "Show files". From file list, V or E to view or
- edit a file.
-
- G -- Goto file -- Type filename for search. Wildcards are supported.
- Positions to first match; directories with matches and matching
- files are highlighted. Shift-Up/Down Arrow seeks next directory up
- or down with match. Arrow across to file list as in "Show files",
- move up or down, arrow back to tree, or Enter to file in main module
- for file operation. Esc, G or Alt-G to cancel "Goto file" mode.
- From file list, Enter or E to view or edit a file.
-
- Alt-G -- Goto directory -- Type directory name for search. Navigation
- within tree and exit are same as G.
-
- Shift-F -- Find text -- Specify text to search for, and up to eight
- filenames with wildcards. Directories and files with matches are
- highlighted.
-
- Shift-O -- Toggle "file Overcopy" switch. With switch off (=N), files
- already extant in target with same date/time and size as in source
- are not overwritten. With switch on (=Y), they are.
-
- Ctrl-H -- Toggle the Hide switch and redisplays trees. With switch on
- (=Y), directories with hidden attribute are not displayed. With
- switch off (=N), hidden directories are displayed, and are denoted
- with a highlighted "*H"
-
- Ctrl-C -- Toggle the Compare switch. With switch on (=Y), target disk is
- searched for any path that matches that currently selected in
- source, and, if one is found, adjusts screen if needed so it is
- visible, and highlights it in high-intensity yellow.
-
- Enter -- From tree structure, returns to main module with currently
- selected path(s), and cursor positioned to top of listing. From
- file list in "Show files" or "Goto file" mode, views file. Shift-
- Enter from file list returns to main module with cursor on file.
-
- Esc -- Returns to main module with path(s) as set on entry.
-
- Alt-Q -- Quits CF altogether; default path as selected in source.
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-7
-
- _________________________
-
- APPLICATION LAUNCHING (CHILD PROCESSES):
-
- S -- Shell to DOS -- Set up a DOS shell and do any DOS operations. Exit
- DOS with the "exit" command when finished. CF then looks for and
- tries to reestablish the current directories as they appeared in the
- panels at shell execution.
-
- Q -- Quick execute -- Immediately executes file under cursor, if
- extension is .COM, .EXE or .BAT. Paths are as selected, ie, default
- drive/current subdirectory is same as the executable file is in, and
- the current subdirectory for any other drive is as last set by you
- through a CF panel display.
-
- X -- prepare to eXecute with command line -- Readies file at cursor for
- execution. File remains ready awaiting execution, initiated by one
- of the followup key combinations Alt-X, Shift-X or Ctrl-X after
- paths are set and command line seeded as desired.
-
- Alt-X -- edit command line and initiate eXecution -- Opens a window for
- editing the command line containing any "seeds" placed by Alt-C
- and/or T or Alt-T. Execution of the readied application starts by
- pressing Enter. The previously used command line may be summoned
- by pressing the Up Arrow or PgUp.
-
- Shift-X -- initiate eXecution, no editing of command line. Same as Alt-
- X, except file executes command line as-seeded, with no editing.
- Tagged files in active panel are added to command line.
-
- Ctrl-X -- initiate eXecution, no editing of command line, and ONLY the
- file name under cursor is added as last entry in seeded command
- line. Tagged files in active panel are ignored.
-
- Alt-C -- seed Command line with file specification. Adds the full
- specification, including path, of the file under the cursor to the
- command line buffer, and shows status of command line being built.
- Command line may be added to using this feature before or after
- executable file is readied with X.
-
- T or Alt-T -- Tag the file names in order for addition to the command
- line. Tagged files are added to the seeded command line as the
- final step after Alt-X or Shift-X is pressed.
-
- Ctrl-Enter -- select delimiter for use by the "seeding" operations Alt-C
- and T or Alt-T between entries of command line. Choices are blank,
- comma, semicolon.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-8
-
-
- Shift-F10 -- specify a user-defined executable file specification and
- optional default command line offering for up to 9 applications,
- assigned to F1-F9. Also specify ZIP/UNZIP command line default
- switches, and an access password. Ctrl-Enter to record selections
- in current copy of configuration file. Or Esc to cancel edit.
- Ctrl-Enter also records as default values for the next execution of
- CF.COM the current states of the Hide and Compare switches, and the
- current settings for file ordering mode, resident kernel size
- option, command line delimiter.
-
- F10 -- Display current entries F1-F9, Compress/Extract options, password.
- The commands F1-F9, Shift-F1-F9, and Ctrl-F1-F9 may all be issued
- from this display.
-
- F1-F9 -- ready a user-defined executable file spec -- Effect is same as
- locating the file with the cursor and hitting X. F-key default
- command line offering is added to command line, which may already
- have seeded entries.
-
- Shift-F1-F9 -- ready user-defined executable, add its default command
- line offering to the command line being built, add any Tagged files
- in current directory (active panel), and execute immediately.
-
- Ctrl-F1-F9 -- ready user-defined executable, add its default command line
- to the command line being built, add ONLY the file name under the
- cursor, and execute immediately. Tagged files in active panel are
- NOT added to the command line before execution.
-
- Z -- PKZIP (c) compression -- Be sure PKZIP.EXE is on one of the paths
- in your DOS path command, or specify the complete path spec to it
- using Shift-F10.
-
- To ZIP, select on one panel a target path for the compressed .ZIP
- file, and optionally Tag or Alt-Tag an existing .ZIP file. Then
- switch to the other panel and select a source path, optionally Tag
- or Alt-Tag files to compress in order of desired appearance on
- command line, press Z, edit command line if necessary, and press
- Enter. To avoid this extra Enter keystroke, hit Shift-Z instead.
-
- U -- PKUNZIP (c) extraction -- As above, be sure PKUNZIP.EXE is on a path
- set in your DOS path command, or specify the complete path spec to
- PKUNZIP.EXE with Shift-F10.
-
- To UNZIP, select on one panel a target path for the extracted
- files, switch panels, select the directory with the .ZIP file to be
- extracted, place the cursor on it, and press U. Edit command line,
- if necessary, and press Enter. Alternatively, for instant
- UNZIPping, use Shift-U.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-9
-
- _________________________
-
- DISPLAY ENHANCEMENT FEATURES:
-
- "+" and "-" -- Shift the file size display to expanded and contracted
- mode. Expanded mode shows explicit size, but uses the file time
- field. Contracted mode is in KB or MB.
-
- H -- Help -- Shows a three-page help screen with abbreviated explanation
- of the most-used operations.
-
- Ctrl-N -- edit Notes -- Displays the directory notepad in the opposite
- panel for viewing/entering/editing narrative comments about files.
- All the editing and cursor control key combinations work. Notes
- follow the files around when copied. CF updates the file on exit
- (Ctrl-Enter or Esc). Files may be viewed/editied from the Notes
- screen with Alt-V/Alt-E, tagged with Ctrl-T or Alt-T for subsequent
- mass action after exit from edit Notes.
-
- Shift-N -- view Notes -- Displays Notes in opposite panel, but leaves
- full access to all directory and file services in the source panel,
- including operations like Copy which operate to the target path.
-
- Ctrl-O -- select file Ordering mode -- Permits selection of one of seven
- modes of file ordering. Cursor shows current selection.
-
- Ctrl-H -- toggle Hide switch -- Changes the state of the hide-enable
- switch, shown at the top of the screen. With the switch on ("Y" for
- Yes), CF does not display files whose hide attribute is set. With
- the switch off ("N" for No), all files are shown.
-
- Ctrl-C -- toggle Compare switch -- Changes the state of the compare-
- enable switch. In compare mode ("Y"), any file in the target path
- whose name is the same as the file in the source path under the
- cursor will be shown and highlighted.
-
- Ctrl-M -- Mask -- Allows editing the Mask template for the panel, whose
- initial value is *.* Tab moves cursor to the extension field,
- Shift-Tab to the name field. Press Enter to enter the template
- modification and redisplay the panel.
-
- 5 -- Toggles date/time display on main screen.
-
- Ctrl-P -- color Pallette selection -- Allows user to change color scheme
- to any of four sets on color monitors.
-
- Ctrl-E -- alphabetic casE selection -- Offers a choice of four case
- conventions: Dirs and files all caps; Dirs in caps, files in lower;
- all in lower; and "modified-Tauck", where the first letter of the
- file and each letter following a non-alphabetic character is
- capitalized.
-
-
-
-
-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-10
-
- _________________________
-
- MISCELLANEOUS:
-
- Alt-Q or Esc-other key -- Quit CF -- Terminate to DOS. Esc-other key
- reestablishes the default drive/directory CF encountered on
- execution; Alt-Q leaves as currently set in source panel.
-
- Password Protection -- Bottom entry in Shift-F10 screen is a password
- entry window. If a password is entered, it must be given to return
- to main screen from the screen-saver mode.
-
- Ctrl-S -- Forces main screen into Screen-saver mode immediately, rather
- than waiting 1-1/2 minutes. Good for instantly invoking password
- protection.
-
- Shift-S -- Save display options. Saves current values of Hide and
- Compare switches, file Ordering scheme, resident Kernel size
- selection and Date/Time display on/off.
-
- Ctrl-F -- Form feeds the line printer.
-
-
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-
- CMFiler -- Operation Reference OpRef-11
-
-
-
-
- *******************************
- * *
- * CMFiler -- Version 5.35 *
- * *
- *******************************
-
- MEMORY MAPS:
-
- 1. CMFiler running:
-
- ---
- |--- 19 KB Kernel
- ---
- |--- 82 KB Overlay
- ---
- |--- 16,32, or 64 KB for directory lists
- ---
- |--- 32 KB reserved for editor copy buffer
- ---
- |--- All remaining allocatable RAM (48 KB min) -- File copy buffer
- ---
-
- 2. Editor module of CMFiler running:
-
- ---
- |--- 19 KB Kernel
- ---
- |--- 82 KB Overlay
- ---
- |--- 16,32, or 64 KB for directory lists
- ---
- |--- 32 KB for editor copy buffer
- ---
- |--- All remaining allocatable RAM (48 KB min) -- Line pointers,
- | file area and line buffer
- ---
-
- 3. Application Launched under CMFiler:
-
- ---
- |--- 19 KB Kernel
- ( --- )
- ( |--- 82 KB Overlay (Left intact if "Large" kernel option in force )
- ( --- )
- |--- All remaining allocatable RAM -- For Application's use
- ---
-