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- AE -- Another Editor
- Version 1.4
-
- Manual
-
-
-
-
- Why Another Editor?
- -------------------
-
- There are already so many editors for MS-DOS, why take the
- trouble to invent the wheel once more? Well, I couldn't find
- an editor that suited my needs. I wanted one that:
-
- - could do simple ASCII editing, for writing programs and
- small texts.
-
- - had user-definable keyboard macros, in case I had some
- repetitive editing to do.
-
- - was small, so that it could be run from floppy.
-
- - was efficient: the most important options, like cursor
- movement and cutting/pasting must be done with a single
- keystroke.
-
- The result is AE. If you are an unexperienced PC user, then
- read on. I hope that this manual will explain enough to let
- you use AE effectively. If you are already familiar with other
- editors like the Norton editor or Borland's Turbo editors, you
- should have little trouble getting started with AE. You can
- get a list of AE's commands by pressing the F1 key. However,
- some of the details may not be immediately clear. Below, you
- will find a point-by point discussion of these.
-
-
- 1. Entrance and exit
- --------------------
-
- The editor is started by typing "AE" on the DOS command line.
- (If you hadn't guessed!) Alternatively, you can start editing
- an existing file by giving the filename as an argument (see
- also the section "Loading and saving files" below).
-
- At any point during editing, when you are giving a command but
- have changed your mind, you can press the Escape key to exit.
- The command will not be executed, and AE will return to its
- normal state. Escape will not terminate the program. To do
- this, you must use the exit command Alt-X.
-
-
- 2. Loading and saving files
- ---------------------------
-
- You can load a file into AE either by typing it as an argument
- on the command line when starting (e.g. 'AE MYFILE.TXT'), or
- by pressing F3 once AE is running.
-
- AE can handle filenames with wildcards. If the filename you
- enter contains a '?' (for any single character) or a '*' (for
- any series of characters), then you will get on your screen a
- list with the names of all files that match the wildcard
- pattern. So, if you want to choose from all files in the
- current directory, try to load '*.*'. In the list, you can
- move a selection bar with the 'up' and 'down' keys, or PgUp
- and PgDn. You can also select a file from the file list by
- pressing the first letter of its name. So if for instance you
- press the "A" key repeatedly, the selection bar will step
- through all the file names beginning with an A. When you have
- selected the file you want, press Return to load it.
-
- On the bottom of the file list you will find the directories
- that the current directory is connected to. Directory names
- are indicated by a preceding "ยป". If you press Enter with the
- selection bar on a directory, AE will scan that directory and
- show you a new file list. In this way you can search the whole
- disk for the file you want.
-
- It is also possible to read the contents of another file and
- add them to the current one. This is the 'INSERT FILE'
- option. You can use it by pressing Shift-F3.
-
- Saving a file can be done by pressing F2. If the file does not
- have a name yet, AE will ask you to give it one. The name of
- the file you are editing can be seen on the statusline. If you
- want to store your file with a different name, then you should
- use Shift-F2. You will then be asked to enter the new filename.
-
- AE will notice if you have changed a file. You can also see
- this by the asterisk beside the filename on the statusline. If
- you have made changes and try to load another file without
- saving the old one first, AE will notify you and ask if the
- old file should be saved first. The same goes if you try to
- quit the program without having saved your file.
-
-
- 3. Cursor movement
- ------------------
-
- The keys to move the cursor are the same as just about every
- other editor for MS-DOS:
-
- up, down, left, right: move one position in that direction
- Ctrl-left, Ctrl-right: go to start of previous/next word
- Home, End: go to begin/end of the current line
- Ctrl-Home, Ctrl-End: go to first/last line on the screen
- PgUp,PgDn: move one screenful up/down
- Ctrl-PgUp, Ctrl-PgDn: go to begin/end of file
-
-
- 4. Typing characters and deleting them
- --------------------------------------
-
- This is, again, very much like other editors. When you type in
- a character, it will either be inserted into the text, or it
- will replace the character under the cursor. This depends on
- the mode, which is either 'Insert' or 'Overwrite'. You can
- switch between these modes by pressing the Ins key. The
- current mode is shown on the statusline .
-
- For some commands you will be asked to enter some text (like a
- filename for loading a file). The text will appear on the
- bottom line of the screen, temporarily erasing the statusline.
- Keys that work here usually have the same effect as in normal
- typing: left, right, Home, End, Delete and Backspace.
- Overwrite mode does not exist in these cases; characters are
- always inserted. Another peculiarity is that if the first key
- you press is a character key, the text that was present will
- be erased. If you start with any other key, you will modify
- the existing text. When you have finished your input, you can
- press Enter to proceed.
-
- To remove a character you can either use the Backspace or the
- Delete key. The latter will remove the character under the
- cursor, the former removes the one directly left to it. There
- also are commands to remove more than one character at a time:
- Delete line (Alt-L) deletes the current line, delete word
- forward (Alt-W) deletes text from the cursor to the beginning
- of the next word. (Words can be separated by spaces or any of
- the characters : ; , or.)
-
-
- 5. Cutting and pasting
- ----------------------
-
- The keys mentioned so far may be fine to add and remove a
- couple of characters, but to handle larger pieces of text you
- need to cut and paste. The first step for this is to move the
- cursor to one end of the piece of text, and then place a mark
- with the F5 key. The mark itself is not shown, but when you
- move the cursor away from the mark, you will see a highlighted
- piece between the mark and the cursor. This is called the
- block. Now you can delete the block (with Shift-F6), copy it
- to the paste buffer (with F7), or cut it (with F6). The
- difference between cut and copy is that cutting the block
- removes it from your text, while copy makes no changes in the
- text. Unless you have chosen to delete, the contents of the
- block are now stored in the paste buffer. You can insert the
- contents of the paste buffer into a different part of the
- text, or into the text in a different window. Move the cursor
- to the position where you want to insert it, then press F8.
- Pasting does not change the paste buffer, so pressing F8 more
- than once will insert multiple copies of the block.
-
- If you don't want to do anything with the block you can remove
- the mark with Shift-F5.
-
- The last option I want to mention is comparing the block to
- the paste buffer. This can be handy if you want to check
- whether two pieces of text are completely equal or not. After
- cutting or copying the first piece, select the second piece,
- then press Shift-F7. The result will be shown on the
- statusline.
-
-
- 6. Searching and replacing text
- -------------------------------
-
- You can search for a sequence of characters in the text and,
- optionally, replace it by another. These commands are started
- with F4 and Shift-F4 respectively. You will first be asked to
- enter the text to look for, the text to replace it with (if
- you have pressed Shift-F4), and the search options.
-
- Possible search options are R, I and N. The R option means
- reverse search. Normally the search will be from the cursor
- position forward. The I option tells AE to ignore the case of
- the characters, so that an uppercase "A" will be equal to a
- lowercase "a", etc. The N option is only valid for replacing,
- and stands for "no query". If you leave out the N option, AE
- will move the cursor to the next occurrence of the search
- text, show it and ask you if it should be replaced. You can
- then press Y or N, or Escape to stop. Unqueried replace will
- automatically scan the whole text from the cursor onwards, and
- replace every occurrence of the search text.
-
- Pressing Alt-R will repeat the last search/replace operation.
-
- There is another way to enter the sequence that must be
- searched for: select a block so that it contains the text you
- want to find, then press F4 or Shift-F4. You will see that the
- search text has already been filled in. In this way you can
- look for other occurrences of, say, a word.
-
- One more thing: if you want to search for a "new line"
- character, press Ctrl-Enter. (Just the Enter key won't do,
- because this is used to end your input.)
-
-
- 7. Multiple files
- -----------------
-
- In AE you can edit several files at the same time. You can
- view them in 'windows'. There are three windows, indicated by
- the letter A, B or C on the left of the statusline. Mind you,
- you can only view one window at a time; it takes up the whole
- screen. Switching between windows is done with F9 or Shift-F9
- (the latter switches in reverse direction).
-
-
- 8. Keyboard macros
- ------------------
-
- You can define 10 keyboard macros. To define a macro, press
- Alt-D. You will be asked for the number of the macro you want
- to define. After that, AE will record every key you press.
- Definition is ended by pressing Alt-D once more. (The
- definition mode is indicated by 'Def' on the statusline.) Now
- you can replay macro number 1 with Alt-1, number 2 with Alt-2,
- and so on to number 10 with Alt-0. AE will act just as if you
- had typed the whole series of keystrokes again. You can replay
- a macro while defining another one, so you can make it a
- powerful tool for repetitive tasks.
-
- As a small example, the following sequence of keys will define
- a macro that deletes all text from the cursor to the end of
- the current line:
-
- <Alt-D> <1> <Return> <F5> <End> <Shift-F6> <Alt-D>
-
- Note: The occurrence of errors (like searching for a string
- that doesn't exist) will terminate macro execution. Macro
- execution does not work when you are entering DOS commands.
-
-
- 9. Setup
- --------
-
- You can set several preferences for working with AE. These
- preferences can be set by pressing Shift-F1. On the statusline
- you will then see a menu containing the options you can set.
- They are listed below:
-
- Display : Controls for the appearance of text on the
- screen.
- Colors : Sets the color of normal text, block and
- statusline. Selecting this option
- will cycle through several predefined
- colour combinations. (Note: on
- monochrome monitors there are only
- two combinations. )
- cursorType : Sets the shape of the cursor.
- Dots-for-spaces : If this switch is on, spaces in the
- text will be displayed as small dots.
-
- Environment : Miscellaneous options.
- Keyclick : If on, produces an audible click when
- a key is pressed.
- Bell : Normally, when AE reports an error,
- you will hear a beep. This can be
- switched off.
- Wordwrap : See the section "Formatting text".
- Tabs : See the section "Tabs".
- Autoindent : See the section "Formatting text".
- Insert : Toggles between insert and overwrite
- mode (see also the section "Typing
- characters and deleting them")
-
- File : Several options to control the saving of files.
- Exit-auto-save : If this switch is on, AE will
- automatically save a changed file on
- exiting the program.
- Interval-auto-save : AE can periodically save your file.
- With this option you can set the
- interval. (When 0, the option is off.)
- Backup-files : When on, AE will rename the old copy
- of your file before saving the new
- version. The backup will have thew
- extension "BAK".
-
- Printer : Options to control the printing of your text.
- See the section "Printing text".
-
- Save-setup : Save the setup to a file (explained below).
-
- To select an option in the setup, press the capital letter in
- its name. So, to change the display colors, press Shift-F1
- followed by "D" and "C", to set the tab spacing Shift-F1 plus
- "E" and "T", and so on.
-
- When you set a switch option (one that can be on or off), you
- will see a question on the screen followed by "Yes" or "No".
- You can change the setting in two ways: by pressing the "Y" or
- "N" key directly, or by pressing the spacebar until it is set
- as you want it and then pressing Return.
-
- Every option that can be set with Shift-F1 is included in the
- setup. You can save this setup. AE will store it as 'AE.CFG'
- in the current directory. When AE is started, it searches for
- AE.CFG in the current directory. If it doesn't find the setup
- file there, it looks for the setup file in the directory where
- the program itself is. If this directory doesn't contain one
- either, it will use a default setup. This gives you the
- possibility to store several setup files in different
- directories. For example, you can store a setup for typing in
- programs in C:\PROGS, and store a different setup for writing
- letters in C:\TEXT. If you have stored AE.EXE in C:\UTIL then
- you can put a general purpose setup in that directory.
-
- The keyboard macros are also included in the setup file.
-
-
- 10. Printing text
- -----------------
-
- AE offers the possibility to print the text you are editing.
- You can either print the whole text (with Alt-P) or just the
- selected block (with Shift-F8).
-
- A couple of options are provided to get your text on the right
- spot on the paper. They are accessible by Shift-F1 P. If you
- set the page length to, say, 60, then AE will send a form feed
- to the printer after every 60 lines of text. Page numbers can
- be added. The top margin is the number of blank lines that is
- inserted at the beginning of every new page. The left margin
- is the number of spaces on the left of each printed line.
-
- Page breaks can be inserted by typing Ctrl-L (a.k.a. form
- feed character). This will appear in the text, but when
- printed it will cause the printer to advance the paper to the
- top of the next page.
-
- One last option is the "eject printer page" command. If you
- press Alt-E, AE will send a form feed to the printer, so that
- it will feed the paper to the next page.
-
-
- 11. MS-DOS commands
- -------------------
-
- You can interrupt editing to give a couple of DOS commands by
- pressing F10. AE will then start a DOS shell. To return to AE
- afterwards, type the command "exit" on the DOS command line.
-
- During these commands, AE will remain in memory, so there will
- be only about 200 to 300 kilobytes left, which is not enough
- to run large programs.
-
- Note: To start a DOS shell, AE reads the environment variable
- COMSPEC. This variable indicates the directory and name of the
- command interpreter that must be started to process your
- commands. If COMSPEC is not set, you will get an error message
- (COMMAND.COM not found). As a remedy, type the DOS command
-
- "SET COMSPEC=C:\COMMAND.COM"
-
- (or something similar, depending on where you have stored
- COMMAND.COM), before you start AE.
-
-
- 12. Formatting text
- -------------------
-
- With AE you can create a text with left and right margins like
- the one you are now reading, by using autoindent and word
- wrap. If autoindent is on and you press Enter, AE will insert
- not only a new line, but also the same number of spaces that
- the previous line starts with. You can switch autoindent on
- and off in the setup (Shift-F1 E A).
-
- If word wrap is on, AE will truncate the lines you type when
- they have reached a certain length, and proceed on a new line.
- In this way, your text will be formatted as you type. However,
- if you insert text in the middle of a line, its length may
- exceed the wrap length. To reformat, press Alt-F. Note that
- this command reformats the whole paragraph, i.e. it goes on
- until it encounters the next blank line. You can set the line
- length for word wrap in the setup (Shift-F1 E W). A line
- length of 0 means word wrap is off. On the statusline you can
- see if autoindent and word wrap are switched on.
-
- There are two more commands to format text: Alt-C will center
- the current line (e.g. for titles) and Alt-J will justify it
- to the right margin. These, too, only work if word wrap is on.
-
-
- 13. Saving positions
- --------------------
-
- AE can store the current cursor position, to restore it later.
- This can be handy especially if you are programming a keyboard
- macro, or jumping to and fro in a text. The positions are
- saved last-in-first-out, meaning that the position that is
- restored is the one that was last saved. Saving a position is
- done with Alt-S, restoring a saved position with Alt-G.
-
-
- 14. Tabs
- --------
-
- Pressing the Tab key will move the cursor to the next tab
- stop, and Shift-Tab will move to the previous one. AE knows
- two ways to position tab stops: fixed-distance and aligned. If
- the tabs are aligned, AE will look on the line above for the
- next (or previous) beginning of a word. In that way you can
- get your text lined up neatly. With fixed-distance tab stops,
- the cursor will move to a certain column number. If you have
- set the tab spacing to, e.g. 8, then the tab stops will be on
- column 1, 9, 17, 25 and so on.
-
- You can set the tab spacing in the setup. A tab spacing of 0
- means aligned tabs.
-
-
- 15. Special characters
- ----------------------
-
- Special characters are those that are not present as normal
- keys on the keyboard. There are control characters, characters
- for foreign languages and graphical characters to make frames
- and the like. AE offers a couple of ways to insert them into
- your text.
-
- The ASCII table command (Alt-I) displays a table with the full
- IBM character set. You can choose from this table by moving
- the cursor to the desired character and pressing Enter. If
- you know the ASCII value of the character you want, you can
- also enter it by typing its number on the numerical keypad
- while holding down the Alt key.
-
- Control characters are the characters with ASCII value between
- 0 and 31. You can enter control characters directly from the
- keyboard as Ctrl-A, Ctrl-B, etc. All control characters will
- be visible in your text, except for Ctrl-M, which is the line
- separator.
-
- Warning: Be careful with the Ctrl-Z character (ASCII value
- 26). In MS-DOS, it serves as the end-of-file character. If you
- save a file containing this character, you will lose all text
- following it.
-
-
- 16. Miscellaneous
- -----------------
-
- Below you will find a list with the commands that have not
- been mentioned so far.
-
- * Match brackets (Alt-M). If the cursor is placed at a bracket
- and Alt-M is pressed, AE will search for the corresponding
- bracket. The search is forward when started at a left
- (opening) bracket, and backward when at a right bracket.
-
- * New (Alt-N). Clears the file buffer, i.e. it deletes the
- text that is loaded, so you can start working on a new file.
- If the old text has been changed, you will be asked if you
- want to save it first.
-
- * Toggle case (Alt-T). Reverses the case of the characters in
- the currently selected block.
-
- * Show version number (Alt-Z). Shows on the statusline the
- version number and date of the copy of AE that you are using.
-
-
- 17. The SPLIT and MERGE utilities
- ---------------------------------
-
- AE can only handle files that are smaller than 64 kilobytes
- (65536 bytes). In most cases this will be enough. However, if
- you have a large file to edit, there is a way to get around
- this restriction. You can first split your file in several
- parts, edit the parts, and then glue them together again. The
- SPLIT and MERGE utilities are provided for this. They can be
- called from the DOS command line as follows:
-
- SPLIT <filename> [<chunksize>]
-
- Splits the file <filename> into smaller chunks. You can give
- the size of the chunks in bytes or in kilobytes (respectively
- as a number, or a number followed by "k"). If you don't enter
- a chunksize, a default of 60 kilobytes will be taken.
-
- MERGE <part-1> [<part-2> ... <part-n>] <filename>
-
- Will read the files <part-1>, <part-2> and so on to <part-n>
- and put their contents in a big file <filename>. The names of
- the parts can contain wildcards ("?" or "*"). The files whose
- names satisfy the wildcard pattern are read in the same order
- as they appear in a directory listing.
-
- As an example, suppose you have a large file MYFILE.TXT of 150
- kilobytes. The command
-
- SPLIT MYFILE.TXT 50k
-
- will generate three smaller files MYFILE.000, MYFILE.001 and
- MYFILE.002 of 50 kilobytes each, which you can edit with AE.
- When you have finished editing, you enter the command
-
- MERGE MYFILE.000 MYFILE.001 NEWFILE.TXT
-
- or
-
- MERGE MYFILE.00? NEWFILE.TXT
-
- and you will get a new file NEWFILE.TXT containing the edited
- contents of the parts.
-