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-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- > 12.0 PHOENIX MENU SYSTEM PLUS (tm)
- The Phoenix menu system is by far the most powerful
- menu system available to sysops anywhere. A proper
- understanding of this menu system will allow you to
- make your board have its own personality. You may
- virtually call any command from any menu and have
- as many menus as your memory will allow, up to 25!
- You may create your own commands and make them do
- almost whatever you want: send any text file to the
- user's screen, run online programs, create questionnaires
- and "voting booths", place message and files commands
- anywhere, create a special new user menu that
- will not allow him to enter the regular bbs,
- and have user level sensitive bulletins.
- At the end of this file is a Quick Reference Chart
- listing every Phoenix Menu command and what it means.
- In ADVANCED USES AND OPTIONS, we will tell you how to
- have your menus look anyway you wish them to and how
- to mix ansi color menus and special text menus in with
- your Phoenix command menus. Please read
- and understand the menu tutorial, and create some menus
- to see how they work first, before going on to the
- more artistic menus.
-
- 12.1 A MENU EXAMPLE
- Main Menu,main.hlp,n
- M,[M]ESSAGE SECTION,1,4,z
- F,[F]ILES SECTION,2,4,z
- B,[B]ulletins,,4,R
- C,[C]omments to the sysop,,4,S
- #,[#] List active users,,4,Y
- L,[L]ocate a User,,4,T
- I,[I]initial welcome message,welcome1,4,d
- Q,[Q]uestionnaire,newuser,4,q
- S,[S]tatistics,,4,W
- N,[N]ews about Phoenix,news,4,d
- P,[P]age the Sysop,,4,U
- G,[G]oodbye and logoff,,4,G
- X,[X]pert toggle,,4,X
- !,[!] Change User Status,,4,Z
- U,[U]tilities for the Sysop,3,25,z
- ?,[?] HELP WITH COMMANDS,,4,?
-
- Above is the MENU0.MNU which we supply. An explanation
- of what each type of command does is in the quick
- reference. We will cover only the Menu "Syntax",
- certain "classes" of menu calls, and the necessary
- items to make your Phoenix system the best you can
- make it. If you noticed, you actually have up to
- 26 menus available to you, but only 25 (1 thru 25) are
- optional. MENU0.MNU MUST exist or Phoenix will refuse
- to run, giving you a message that the menu is missing.
- Name your menus like this:
- MENUxx.MNU where xx is a menu number from
- 1 to 25. Do not put leading zeros in the
- menu name!
- You may define menus that are not in sequential order.
- Example: In your system you might want to have
- menu0.mnu, menu1.mnu, menu10.mnu, menu15.mnu and
- menu21.mnu. You may do so, Phoenix will know what
- to do with them.
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- 12.2 SPECIAL MENUS
-
- Phoenix Menu System Plus allows you to create
- special menus like Questionnaire menus,
- or User level sensitive bulletin menus, or
- just about anything. We will give some one line
- examples below, but the detailed explanation of
- what each menu command field means will be given
- in the menu tutorial (see 12.3).
-
- V,[V]oting Booth,10,5,z
- this line will call menu10.mnu which, in this
- example is dedicated to questionnaires.
-
- Menu10 might contain something like this:
- S,[S]urprise questionnaire,surprise,5,q
- B,[B]eta tester application,Beta,5,q
- M,[M]ovie votes,movies,5,q
-
- Each one of those selections calls a different
- questionnaire.
-
-
- B,[B]eta bulletin,beta.txt,17,d
- N,[N]ewuser bulletin,new.txt,3,d
- C,[C]lub bulletin,club,20,d
- R,[R]egular users bulletins,22,10,z
-
- In the first 3 lines, we have a mini level-sensitive
- bulletin menu. These will follow the DUMPFILE CLASS
- of identifiers which is explained below. The fourth
- line calls a regular users bulletin menu (also level
- sensitive).
-
-
- 12.3 A MENU TUTORIAL
-
- MENU TITLES:
- The top line of each menu tells Phoenix what the
- name of that menu is, what its associated help file is,
- and the MENU ACTIVITY IDENTIFIER which tells Phoenix
- how to behave within that menu. This line MUST exist.
-
- In the discussion below, we will expand the menu lines
- for clarity, but in real life you MUST NOT PUT SPACES IN.
-
- menu title menu help file activity identifier
- ---------- -------------- -------------------
- Main Menu , main.hlp , n
-
- The menu title is the name of the menu that Phoenix will
- send to the user along with a line known as a "command line".
- You may name this anything you wish, like "Voting Booth",
- "Games", "Messages", etc (with or without the quotes). You
- should pick a title that is descriptive with what commands
- the menu has in it. In this case, Main Menu, or Menu0.mnu
- is the menu that Phoenix will look for to send the user
- right after login is completed. Only menu0 will be looked
- for after login. To get to another menu from this one
- you must call it. More on that later.
-
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- The menu help file is a text file that lists the
- commands in that menu and what they do. We supply help
- files for the menus that you received in the distribution
- archive. You may create your own help file and place
- the name of the file in the MENU HELP FILE field and
- wherever help is requested, that file will be dumped
- to the user's screen.
-
- The activity identifier tells Phoenix whether this menu
- will display the user's current message board selection and
- check for his mail, or what his current files area is,
- or both or neither.
-
- ONLY the following identifiers are allowed here:
-
- m : Check for user's mail and display his current
- message board selection when entering this menu.
- Also, when entering a "message class" menu with
- this ID, a file called MSGMSG.* (.bbs/.clr) will
- be looked for and if present sent to the user
- only once per login.
-
- f : Display the user's current files area selection
- while in this menu. Display the file FILEMSG.*.
- This file follows the same rules as msgmsg.* above.
-
- b : Behave as in BOTH above and display both message
- board and files area selections while in this
- menu.
-
- n : Do not display EITHER of the message or files
- area selections while in this menu.
-
- You may, of course place any message or files command
- in any menu with, or without, displaying the current
- message base or files area. These are recommended wherever
- you place message or files commands simply for the
- user's convenience. Otherwise, he will not know what
- his current area is.
-
- You may have the following maximum characters per field:
-
- menu title menu help file activity identifier
- 20 , 12 , 1
-
- Don't forget to count any spaces you may have in the
- menu title! The menu help file must follow DOS file
- naming conventions which are a maximum of 8 characters
- for the first name, a period "." and a maximum of 3
- characters for the extension. The 12 character field
- allows for a complete dos filename like:
- 12345678.123 or Phoenix1.bbs
-
- Only ONE character is allowed as the identifier and
- may ONLY BE ONE of "m,f,b,n". NO other identifiers
- will be allowed.
-
- There must only be ONE comma separating the fields, so
- again, your menu top line should look something like this:
- Special Menu,special.hlp,n
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- The menu help file is optional, so if you do not want a
- help file, do this:
- Special Menu,,n
-
- This tells Phoenix that the help file field is blank.
- In this case, do NOT place a space in the help file field!
- The MENU TITLE AND ACTIVITY ID ARE NOT OPTIONAL and
- must exist!
-
- If, after running Phoenix, you want to change a menu,
- you MUST quit Phoenix with the F10 key after logging off
- and bring Phoenix back up in order for the new menu change
- to be loaded into memory.
-
-
- GOLDEN RULE:
- Each Phoenix command menu (.mnu file) may have any number of
- command lines. However, remember that Phoenix formats
- these commandlines two per line when in use. Full screen
- mode has 23 lines, and Window mode has 18 lines available
- per screen, so being practical, you should limit yourself
- to 40 commands per menu (20 lines) if in full screen mode
- and 30 commands per menu (15 lines) if in window mode.
- This will allow for any message or files area messages
- plus the commandline.
-
- If more than this number of commands are used, the
- top commands will scroll off the screen. Simplicity is
- usually the best way, so you are better off using more
- menus and less commands per menu, but, you may place
- every Phoenix command into menu0.mnu and have a
- Pc-Board style menu if you wish. To fit more than 40
- commands per menu on one screen, see advanced uses and
- options.
-
-
- THE COMMAND LINES consist of the following fields.
-
- FOR MENU CALLS:
- user command,description,menu number,security level,cci
-
- FOR COMMAND CALLS:
- user command,description,runfile,security level,cci
-
- Note that the only place the fields differ is in the
- runfile / menu number field.
-
- Before we discuss command calls, we should tell you
- how to call another menu. The command line for
- menu calls is very clear.
-
- user command,description,menu number,security level,cci
-
- USER COMMAND field is the one character entry that
- the user must press to activate the command.
-
- DESCRIPTION tells the user what the command will do.
- You have up to 35 characters to tell him.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- MENU NUMBER is the menu number of the menu you are calling.
- In this example we will call menu 6. Simply
- place a 6 in the menu number field, and create
- a menu called menu6.mnu.
-
- SECURITY LEVEL is the minimum user level a user must have
- in order to even see this command line!
- In this example the security level is 10.
-
- CCI Is the command identifier used within Phoenix.
- This tells Phoenix what to do when the
- user command key is pressed.
- It means Constant Command Identifier.
- These are constants within Phoenix,
- and all command identifiers are
- listed in the quick reference. To call another
- menu, you must use a lower case "z". Upper and
- lower case letters are unique and
- mean different things to Phoenix.
-
- Lets build the command line to call a menu.
-
- user command,description,menu number,security level,cci
- O,[O]nline Programs,6,10,z
-
- The user with a minimum security level 10 will see:
- [O]nline Programs
-
- Pressing the O will tell Phoenix to activate menu # 6.
-
- IMPORTANT to note here is that the quit to calling menu
- command is a menu call! So, if the online example above
- was in menu0.mnu, the following should be in menu6.mnu
- or else the user will not be able to get back to menu0!
- You may create 'dead end' menus if you wish, but........
- The quit command in menu 6 should look like this:
-
- Q,[Q]uit to Main Menu,0,4,z
- or
- M,[M]ain Menu,0,4,z
-
- Again, the maximum number of characters allowed are:
- user command,description,menu number,security level,cci
- 1 35 2 4 1
-
- Remember that security level maximum is 9999 and menu
- number maximum is 25.
-
-
- COMMAND CALLS
- user command,description,runfile,security level,cci
-
- Each field follows the rules described in Menu Calls,
- with the exception of the RUNFILE field (menu number field
- in the above discussion).
-
- In command call class, the runfile field may have up to
- 35 characters and may contain a path as well. As the
- name suggests, you place the name of a file there for
- Phoenix to act on. What Phoenix does with this file will
- depend on what CCI is in the cci field.
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- DUMPFILE CLASS:
- This will be the most used command class.
- You may place as many dumpfile class commands into
- the menu system as you wish. It displays
- the contents of a text file to the user. The intelligence
- for .BBS/.CLR extension decisions is in this routine that
- a LOWER CASE "d" activates. There are many examples of
- dumpfile class calls in the 4 menus we supply. Please
- study them. One very familiar command is:
-
- I,[I]nitial Welcome message,WELCOME1,5,d
-
- The maximum number of characters allowed per field are:
-
- user command,description,runfile,security level,cci
- 1 35 35 4 1
-
- If your display file will follow the .bbs/.clr rules
- (.bbs for regular text, .clr for ansi) place only
- the FIRST NAME of the file in the runfile area.
- Phoenix will determine which file to look for and send.
- If the .clr file should be sent and it does not exist,
- then the .bbs file will be sent.
-
- You may place an extension on the filename, but that
- will bypass the .bbs/.clr logic inside Phoenix and the
- file will be treated as a text file only and only an
- exact match to the specified filename will be displayed.
- If you wish to display a file that has no extension, you
- simply place a period "." after the filename. Example:
- I,[I]nstructions,GAMEDOC.,4,d
-
- This will display the file GAMEDOC (with no extension).
- Note that we used all caps only for clarity. You may
- use lower case for the filename. Again, to follow the
- .bbs/.clr rules for your file, place the name of the
- file in the runfile area with no extension or period,
- and be sure your file has at least the .bbs extension
- on the disk.
-
- Only the user command must be different within any
- menu, ALL commands to send a file to the user must be
- of dumpfile class with a lower case "d".
-
- The exception to
- this rule is when you wish to send the help file associated
- with the menu listed on the top line. In that case, the
- CCI will be a "?". Phoenix will know what to do once the
- "?" cci is activated. For a help command that sends the
- menu help file, use NO filename within the command line,
- so:
-
- H,[H]elp,,4,?
-
- will send the menu help file when the "H" command is
- pressed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- QUESTIONNAIRE CLASS:
- You may create as many questionnaires within the
- Phoenix Menu System Plus as you wish. The CCI to
- activate the questionnaire routine is lower case "q".
- Place the first name only of your questionnaire into
- the runfile field with NO period ".". Example:
- N,[N]ewuser questionnaire,NEWUSER,4,q
-
- This will activate the questionnaire command file
- on your disk called NEWUSER.QST. Notice that Phoenix
- will add the .QST extension whenever a "q" cci
- is activated. The corresponding answers file will be
- the first name plus .ANS, so, in this case, the
- answers file will be NEWUSER.ANS. Phoenix will create
- or append the file as necessary. There will NEVER be
- a mix-up between newuser.bbs and newuser.qst because
- different CCI's activate different routines which will
- look for different file extensions. "d" will look for
- .bbs/.clr, or the exact filename, while "q" will
- ALWAYS look for a .qst extension.
-
- SHELL CLASS:
- Shell programs or Online programs may be run
- directly from Phoenix using this class. The CCI is
- a lower case "s". Please see the chapter ONLINE
- PROGRAMS EXPLAINED for a complete tutorial on how
- to use executable programs within the Phoenix
- environment. This is a very informative tutorial
- written by Jim Hood. We feel that Jim's knowledge
- of shelled programs qualifies him as one of the
- nation's leading experts on running programs
- remotely. When shelling a program be sure to use
- the ENTIRE filename (go.bat, adventure.exe, chkdsk.com).
-
-
- SPECIAL BULLETINS CLASS:
- User level sensitive bulletins are possible by simply
- calling a menu designated as a bulletin menu, and
- using the dumpfile class cci. However, Phoenix takes
- this one step further. You may tell Phoenix (in CONFIG)
- that you wish to dump one of these special bulletin
- menus during the login process instead of the regular
- bulletin system. Some special CCI's become activated
- when this is declared and are active only while the
- special bulletin system is invoked. As soon as the user
- quits to the main menu, these special CCI's are
- no longer active. They are:
-
- description cci
-
- Standard Bulletin menu *
- Exit bulletin menu and
- continue with login e LOWER CASE ONLY
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- When a menu is used in this manner as a special
- bulletin menu dumped at login, the user`s EXPERT
- level will be saved and changed to 0 (novice)
- so he will see the menu selections,
- until the user quits this menu and continues
- with the login sequence. Also note
- that you may call any of the other menus from this one
- so you may have almost unlimited number of level sensitive
- bulletins. Be sure to allow for a list menu command
- and a quit to main menu command.
-
- ONLY the below cci's will be active in ANY menu
- called from the special bulletin menu
- until the login sequence is completed and menu0 is
- active.
-
- REFERENCE for bulletins only:
- TYPE OF CALL MADE (class) CCI
- ---------------- ---
- DUMPFILES d LOWER CASE ONLY
- QUESTIONNAIRES q LOWER CASE ONLY
- GoodBye G UPPER CASE ONLY
- Quit to calling menu z CALL ANOTHER MENU
- List z call the same menu
- = Standard Bulletin menu *
- = Exit bulletin menu and
- continue with login e LOWER CASE ONLY
-
-
- THESE ARE THE ONLY CCI'S ACTIVE WITHIN THE SPECIAL BULLETIN MENU system!
- NONE of the others listed in the quick reference will work here,
- and to continue, you must use the "e" CCI. Calling menu0 will do no good
- since only dumpfiles, questionnaires, goodbye and call another menu
- will be valid until a "bulletin menu" activates the "e" CCI.
-
- note that the = marked classes can only be active when the menu is
- called in place of the standard bulletins on login. They are
- inactive after the user hits the main menu by the "e" cci.
-
- The "*" will allow you to call the standard BULLETIN.*
- bulletin system. The "Enter to continue" prompt in the
- standard system will return you to the calling bulletin
- menu only and will not continue with the login when
- CONFIG is told to use special bulletin menus. This changes
- to another cci when used within the regular Phoenix menu
- system.
-
- There is an interesting side-effect to using this
- special bulletin menu system. Remember that
- you may have a restriction level system which
- will put the user into comments, questionnaire, or
- nothing and will log him off immediately after, without
- entering him into the user log. You may also create
- a very restricting menu system which will not allow
- the new user to enter the bbs, but will allow
- him to do whatever you let him within the confines
- of the special bulletin system. After he logs off,
- he will be placed into the user log, so the next
- time he calls, after you upgrade his security level,
- he will have access to the main system. A skeleton
- menu system which will allow this is shown below.
-
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- sample special bulletin menu7:
-
- N,[N]ew user menu,9,3,z
- B,[B]ulletins,8,10,z
- S,[S]tandard bulletins,,10,*
- Q,[Q]uit to main menu,,10,e
-
- assume regular user level of 10 and new user of 3.
- Notice that the only command the new user will
- see is the new user menu command! He will have no
- choice besides disconnecting. Regular users will see
- all the commands listed above and may select a special
- user level sensitive bulletin menu or the standard
- bulletins, or quit to continue login. We will deal only
- with new user level here. He selects "N" which is his
- only choice. This calls menu9 which could have in it:
-
- Q,[Q]uestionnaire,NEWUSER,3,q
- G,[G]oodbye,,3,G
- N,[N]ew user information,INFO,3,d
- 1,[1] Quit to previous menu,7,10,z
- 2,[2] Continue with login,,10,e
-
- Now the new user has 3 selections he sees. He must
- answer a questionnaire, read new user info, or
- log off. The other two commands should be placed
- there so if a regular level user gets curious, he
- can get out without saying goodbye.
-
- This type of restricted system differs in that
- it will allow the new user to read bulletins
- if you wish, answer a questionnaire and log off
- and Phoenix will enter him into the users log.
-
- With the standard restriction levels of 1,2,3
- defined in CONFIG, the user will automatically
- get logged off without getting any bulletin
- menu, may be allowed a questionnaire or comment
- depending on system restriction level, and
- will not be placed into the users log. If you
- wish to enter a new user into the system with
- one of these restriction levels, you must take
- Phoenix down with the F10 key, and bring it back
- up with a 0 command line parameter like:
-
- phoenix 0
-
- and this will remove the restrictions so you
- may enter the new users. Be sure when you do this
- that you re-run Phoenix without the 0 or else
- you will have a public system!
-
- The above described special menu suggestion is
- a convenient alternative to the restricted system
- as defined in CONFIG. The new user cannot enter
- the main bbs if set up in this way. However, only
- the restriction level 3 will not allow the new user
- any time on the system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- DESCRIPTIONS OF CONSTANT COMMAND IDENTIFIERS
- Remember that upper and lower case are different and call
- different routines within Phoenix even if the letter is
- the same.
-
- 'A': Change Message Board
- This is the 'C' command in the message menu we supply
- which will allow the user to list available boards
- and change into those areas. Included in this selection
- is the 'all messages' selection.
- 'B': Enter a Message
- Just what it implies, This cci allows you to enter
- a message and save it into the message system.
- 'C': Text Search in Messages
- This will look for a word or string of words for a match
- in the subject or to:/from: fields.
- 'D': Kill a Message
- You may delete a message by specifying a message number
- without actually looking at the message. Another kill command
- is offered in the commandline under the message when you
- read it.
- 'E': List Your Mail
- This will check all of your mail from message #1 to the end
- of the messages and tell you what ones are for you and what
- ones you left.
- 'F': Fast Scan Messages
- This does a short listing of the subject field of all
- messages in the system that the user has access to.
- 'H': Read Messages
- Just what it implies, it allows you to read the messages
- in the message system.
- 'I': Scan Messages
- This does a long scan, and lists the complete message
- header with date, to, from, subject for every message
- in the system that the user is allowed to see. In special
- areas which do not show names, this will also not show
- the names.
-
- 'J': Download Files
- This activates the download system and allows a user to
- download files.
- 'K': Upload Files
- This activates the upload files system.
- 'L': List Files
- Will list the current area files.bbs or files.clr.
- 'M': Change Files Area
- This will list the available files areas to the user and
- allow him to change areas.
- 'N': File Statistics
- Displays user's upload and download statistics and shows
- the amount of free space on the current upload drive.
- 'O': New Files
- Will search the files system for any new files added to
- the system since the user's last login or from a certain
- date the user enters. A complete listing can be generated
- simply by entering 01-01-80 as a date.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- 'P': Search for a File
- This will search the files system for a match of a name or
- part of a name. It only looks in the files.* and not to the
- actual disk directory, and like any other listing or search
- command, will show the user only areas he has access to.
- 'V': View Contents of an Archive file
- Allows you to view the contents (arc directory) of an
- .ARC file.
- 'R': Standard Bulletins
- Activates the standard bulletin system using BULLETIN.* as
- the menu listing.
- 'S': Leave a Comment
- Will allow a user to leave a message automatically saved to
- area #1 as a special private message to you. It will be
- 'tagged' with a COMMENT flag. NO ONE but you and those you
- give specific permission, will be able to read it.
- 'T': Locate a User
- Will search for a user by name and if found, will tell
- the user that this name is a valid user and display the
- last time he was on the system.
- 'U': Page the Sysop
- If the page flag is on, this will allow a user to page you.
- If the bell flag is on, it will also signal you with a series
- of tones.
- 'W': System Statistics
- Gives caller the start date and number of users on the system.
- 'Z': Change Your User Stats
- Allows the user to change some of his entries in the
- user record - Password, lines per page, etc. and will display
- other information about him that he may not change.
- '?': Help
- Displays the menu top line MENU HELP FILENAME. If it is not
- present,it will return 'Sorry help is not available'.
- 'q': Questionnaires
- Executes a questionnaire script file.
- 'd': Dump a text file
- Displays any text file or ansi file. Example is welcome1.*
- 's': Shell a program
- Allows running another program from within Phoenix. Also
- called ONLINE programs.
- 'G': GoodBye
- Activates the goodbye.* file and logs user off the system.
- 'X': Xpert Toggle
- Changes his expert mode which affects the menu prompt.
- 'z': Call another Menu
- Will allow you to call another menu within the system.
- 'e': exit to system menu
- (special bulletin menu call only)
- Will allow a continuation of the login process after bulletins
- are dumped when a special bulletin menu is used. This is NOT
- active after entering the main menu.
- '*': Read Standard Bulletins
- (special bulletin menu call only)
- Activates the standard bulletin system using bulletin.* only
- from within special bulletin menus. Not active after entering
- main menu.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- 'a': List Active Events (sysop stuff)
- Will display your event entries.
- 'b': Change Events
- Allows you to create events.
- 'c': Update Events
- Allows you to enable a disabled event, disable an event
- or remove an event permanently.
- 'f': Modify Users Log
- This will enter the users log, display all the users info
- to you and allow you to change many things within his record.
- 'g': Dump Callers Log
- Displays the callers.log in 'last-first' order. This is
- a special command. The callers.log should never be used
- in a dumpfile class command (d) as the file is not a text file.
- 'h': Users Pack
- Removes deleted records from users.bbs and allows you to
- make decisions about automatically deleting users who
- are below a certain user level, or users who have not
- called within a certain time period. Removing records tightens
- up the file and makes it smaller.
- 'i': message pack
- Removes deleted messages and tightens up the file. Also it
- tracks all users' last message read number and adjusts it
- to the new message number after packing.
- 'j': Update Files System
- This utility lets you create, modify or delete files
- areas. You may also password protect areas. It contains a
- remove area utility and packing command to keep the
- file small.
- 'k': Erase callers log
- Will delete callers.log and create a new one.
- 'l': Print Users Log
- Print users log to printer. Select one or all to print.
- 'm': Remote Drop To DOS
- Allows remote sysop level users to drop to dos and have
- full access to your disk system. Unless you have a driver
- like IBMAUX installed, you will not see what the user is
- doing until he returns to Phoenix.
- 'u': Update Message System
- Offers much of the same as update files system but is for
- message system. Passwords do not apply in messages.
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- PHOENIX REMOTE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM DECEMBER 4, 1987
-
- QUICK REFERENCE
- EVERY collie command cci is listed below. Please note that upper and lower
- case are VERY DIFFERENT and are NOT interchangable!
-
- CCI WHAT IT DOES
-
- 'A': Change Message Board (message stuff)
- 'B': Enter a Message
- 'C': Text Search in Messages
- 'D': Kill a Message
- 'E': List Your Mail
- 'F': Fast Scan Messages
- 'H': Read Messages
- 'I': Scan Messages
- (files stuff)
- 'J': Download Files
- 'K': Upload Files
- 'L': List Files (list current area files.bbs or files.clr)
- 'M': Change Files Area
- 'N': File Statistics
- 'O': New Files
- 'P': Search for a File (match a filename)
- 'V': View Contents of an Archive file
- (main menu stuff)
- 'R': Standard Bulletins (as called from main menu)
- 'S': Leave a Comment
- 'T': Locate a User
- 'U': Page the Sysop
- 'W': System Statistics
- 'Z': Change Your User Stats ('!' command in main menu)
- '?': Help (display menu top line help file)
- = 'q': Questionnaires (executes a questionnaire file)
- = 'd': Dump a text file (display a file)
- 's': Shell a program (online program)
- = 'G': GoodBye
- 'X': Xpert Toggle
- = 'z': Call another Menu
- => 'e': exit to system menu (special bulletin menu call only)
- => '*': Read Standard Bulletins (special bulletin menu call only)
- 'a': List Active Events (sysop stuff)
- 'b': Change Events
- 'c': Update Events
- 'f': Modify Users Log
- 'g': Dump Callers Log
- 'h': Users Pack
- 'i': message pack
- 'j': Update Files System (sysop '6' command)
- 'k': Erase callers log
- 'l': Print Users Log
- 'm': Remote Drop To DOS (sysop 'D' command)
- 'u': Update Message System (sysop '4' command)
- ANY cci is usable in any menu with the exception of any menus
- defined to be used in the special bulletin system. Then ONLY
- the cci's marked with a "=" are active. Those marked with "=>"
- are special bulletin menu calls and are inactive within the normal
- Phoenix menu system. An "R" is used to
- call standard bulletins from within the regular menu system.
- Study this tutorial carefully, and create some experimental menus
- to learn first hand what Phoenix is capable of. When you are
- confident that you know how to create menus, then read the
- advanced options section to discover how to create your own
- unique look text menus and ansi color menus.
-