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- Text File _elem.rem
-
-
-
- Here's a short list of journal articles and other references to get you
- started.
-
- A two-part tutorial on Batch Files appears in the "System Notebook" column of
- SOFTALK magazine, October and November, 1982. In general, back issues of
- SOFTALK are an excellent source of information for the neophyte PC user.
-
- A very interesting application of the DOS 2.0 Batch File capabilities can be
- found in Tom Sheldon's "One from Column A, One from Column B", PC WORLD
- magazine, Vol. 1, Number 5.
-
- Of course, the definitive source of information remains the DOS 2.0 Manual
- itself, pp. 6-28 to 6-49.
-
-
-
-
-
- For those of you who are anxious to write your first Batch Files and who don't
- have access to the above references, here is a "micro-tutorial".
-
- We'll assume that you are familiar with the idea of the DOS prompt "A>" being a
- request from the DOS command processor for the name of an executable file to
- load and run, such as DOS's FORMAT, DISKCOPY, BASICA, or any other executable
- file such as a word processor, spread sheet program, and the like; or for the
- name of an internal command, such as TIME, DATE, DIR, COPY, PATH, etc, that the
- command processor itself executes. Every time you see the A> prompt (or B>,
- etc), DOS is quietly listening to the keyboard for the next command to be
- entered. When you enter a command line in answer to this prompt, DOS then
- either executes the command directly or else loads and runs a program. In
- either case, when the "process" that the command evokes has run to completion,
- DOS regains control of the PC and displays its prompt and quietly waits for
- another command from you.
-
- Some users hardly ever talk directly to DOS, spending most of their time in the
- execution of applications programs. Other users may have extensive dialogues
- with DOS, using commands whose syntax is often difficult to remember and
- in which a misspelled name or misplaced character can spell disaster.
-
- When your use of the PC involves command dialogues with DOS (copying disks,
- copying files, looking at directories, calling a series of language processors
- for program development, etc), then after a while you'll notice that you are
- using some sequences of commands over and over again, perhaps with just a
- change of a filename or other parameters. Wouldn't it be nice to type that
- sequence of DOS command lines just one more time, put a label on it, and then
- magically execute the entire sequence by simply typing its label, perhaps even
- dubbing a filename into some of the commands so that you could run the same
- sequence of commands with different files. That is exactly what a Batch File
- does for you, plus a lot more.
-
- Here are the mechanics of creating this labeled sequence of commands that we
- call a Batch File. First, ask DOS to run your favorite text editor that
- produces "DOS-compatible ascii text files" without a lot of fancy control
- characters imbedded in the text. Examples of text editors that create such
- files are DOS's own EDLIN (a limited but adequate line editor), Volkswriter
- with "programmer's margins", WORDSTAR in "non-document" mode, VEDIT, The
- Personal Editor, and a host of public domain editors. An example of a "text
- editor" (word processors are just glorified text editors) that DOES NOT
- directly create clean text files is Easy Writer II.
-
- When you have mastered a text editor well enough to correctly enter and edit a
- few lines of text, then type the sequence of DOS commands that you wish to
- "automate", line by line, just as you would if you were entering them in
- response to the DOS ">" prompt. Finally, tell the text editor to store these
- lines in a file with a filename that has a ".BAT" extension, such as FOO.BAT.
-
- Now, the fun starts. Remember that whenever you see the DOS ">" prompt, you
- can give DOS the name of any executable file and DOS will run it for you. The
- filenames that DOS recognizes as executable are those ending with .COM, .EXE,
- and, you guessed it, .BAT . So answer the DOS prompt with FOO (you don't type
- the .BAT, just as you don't type the .COM when you ask for the FORMAT
- command).
-
- As DOS begins to execute your Batch File, it displays the familiar ">" prompt
- on the screen. But now, instead of waiting patiently by the keyboard for your
- response, DOS reads the first line of text from your FOO.BAT file, displays it
- on the screen, and immediately executes it, just as if you had typed it
- (lightning quick) as a response to the ">". DOS has, in effect, replaced the
- keyboard with the FOO.BAT file as the place it goes to get a response to its
- ">" prompt. Any programs that are run by your command lines in the FOO.BAT file
- are free to use the keyboard, but DOS itself gets its commands from the FOO.BAT
- file until the list of command lines is exhausted.
-
- This appears to be a pretty good way to enter some long command line sequences,
- or command lines that tax the most accurate typist. But there is much more to
- Batch Files than saving keystrokes. When you create the Batch File FOO.BAT,
- you can insert "place-holders" (or formal parameters) in the command lines for
- information that will be known only at the time that the Batch File is run.
- For example, if you want a command line in a Batch File to always copy a file
- with the basic extension .BAS from drive A: to drive B: and change its
- extension to .SAV at the same time, you could use the following Batch File
- command line:
-
- copy a:%1.bas b:%1.sav
-
- The "%1" is a place-holder for a string of characters that will be substituted
- into the command line later when the Batch File is executed. If this line were
- created and saved in the file called SAVIT.BAT, then in order to perform the
- above operation on the Basic file MYFILE.BAS, you would type the command:
-
- A> savit myfile
-
- DOS will now run the SAVIT.BAT file, and, whenever it arrives at a place-holder
- "%1", it will substitute the first parameter found on the SAVIT command line,
- namely MYFILE in this example. The command line that will therefore be executed
- from the Batch File is the following:
-
- copy a:myfile.bas b:myfile.sav
-
- SAVIT.BAT now becomes a general tool for doing this particular file operation.
- This is a simple operation, but you can see that there is a powerful capability
- to save you time, keystrokes, and damage from mistakes, by putting repetitive
- sequences of DOS commands into Batch Files.
-
- With the release of DOS 2.0, Batch Files have been given looping, testing, and
- branching (GOTO) subcommands to program the flow of control through the command
- lines. Now a Batch File is no longer limited to a "linear" list of command
- lines that is executed one time only. You can create arbitrarily complex
- "command line programs" that make decisions during the Batch File execution
- based upon intermediate results. In fact, the purpose of the utilities on this
- disk is to expand the scope of the information that an executing Batch File can
- obtain in order to make branching decisions. But more on that later.
-
- One special Batch File worth noting is called the AUTOEXEC.BAT file. This is a
- "reserved filename", meaning that this file, if it exists, gets special
- treatment from DOS. Whenever DOS is "booted" (that is, whenever you turn on
- the PC or start over again by typing CTRL-ALT-DEL), DOS will go look on the A:
- drive for a file with this name and, if found, will execute all of the commands
- in this special Batch File before turning control over to you with the ">"
- prompt. The AUTOEXEC.BAT file is a convenient means to do initializing tasks
- automatically, such as reading the time and date from a hardware
- clock-calendar, or creating a RAM disk. Some applications programs, such as
- Volkswriter, supply an AUTOEXEC.BAT file that immediately calls the application
- program, obviating your need to talk to DOS at all. You turn on the computer,
- and it jumps into the word processor.
-
- The best way to learn how to create and execute Batch File is ... to create
- some and execute them. We encourage you to stop the tutorial at this point and
- try your hand at it. Write and execute a few Batch Files until you get the
- hang of it, then restart this tutorial. If you're unfamiliar with any text
- editors or word processors that operate in "programming" mode, then EDLIN would
- be a good one to master, since it comes with DOS and is adequate for creating
- small files.
-
- If, however, you have a pretty good grasp of the mechanics of creating and
- executing a Batch File (or you're just plain impatient to see what else is on
- this disk), that's ok, too. But you might skim over the DOS 2.0 Manual's
- pages 6-28 to 6-49, to get yourself oriented for the ensuing discussion.
-
- So ...
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