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- .IF DSK1.C3
-
-
-
- SO YOU HAVE THIS POWERFUL INSTRUMENT: THE T.I.WRITER. NOW WHAT
- DO YOU DO WITH IT? (ANSWER: ANYTHING!)
-
- by Jack Sughrue
-
-
-
- BUT FIRST YOU HAVE TO GET STARTED...
-
-
-
- You're excited! At last you have a word processor. You open
- the package and see a cartridge, a disk, a very large notebook.
- All of a sudden the whole thing seems rather overwhelming. "I'll
- never be able to learn all this stuff. I thought it was going to
- be like a typewriter. You just plug it in and type."
- If you felt that way when you opened the package, join the
- club. I felt that way and, with the exception of a few techies
- who thrive on that sort of thing, so did most people.
- Computer word processors for most people tend to be rather
- overwhelming when first encountered.
- No sweat.
- The T.I. Writer, besides having all the marvelous features
- contained in processors costing as much as five times its price,
- is a relatively easy and very powerful tool (or toy, depending
- upon your perspective).
-
- Let's skip the manual for a while. Instead, let's dip write
- in and print something we've typed (the purpose of a word
- processor, after all).
-
- Turn on your P-Box. Turn on your monitor. Insert the
- T.I.Writer cartridge into the computer. Turn on the computer.
- Turn on your printer. Place the T.I.Writer disk into your drive.
- Press enter to move from the logo screen. Press <2> for
- T.I.Writer. Press <2> again for the English version. And we're
- all set!
-
- Now, we're going to do a couple things without explanation
- just to get you started. Once you see HOW to do these things,
- we'll come back to explain these choices to you.
-
- First, type <T>. This is for TABS. You'll see a line of
- numbers beginning with L. L is the Left Margin. Leave it. Move
- your cursor with the FCTN/S-combination to the first letter T.
- When you get there, change it to an I. This is an automatic
- Indentation. Then continue with your cursor beyond the Number 2
- and beyond the Number 3 until you reach the 8 after the Number 3.
- Type an R. This, obviously, will be your (temporary) Right
- Margin. This will let you view all of your text right on the
- screen. We can quickly and very easily (in the same way you just
- made these changes) change the margins before we print.
- We will not use the Formatter for our first few print jobs. No
- need.
-
-
- Press <Enter>.
-
- You are in the Edit mode. This is the mode on all word
- processors where you do the typing.
- On the left you'll see Line Numbers. Let's get rid of them by
- pressing the FCTN/Zero combo.
- At this point, if you haven't substituted your T.I.Writer Strip
- for the regular Command Strip above the number keys, do so.
- That's better.
- Now we can see the processes we'll need to use now and then.
- (The process we just did, for example, is defined as "LINE #'s"
- on the strip. To get them back just press FCTN/Zero again. Many
- of the commands go in and out like that. It's called Toggling.)
- When you look at the strip you can see that some of the
- functions are exactly the same for BASIC (1-Delete Character;
- 2-Insert Character; 3-Delete Line; etc.), but most are new.
- We also finally get to use that Control Key, which usually sits
- doing nothing in BASIC. The Red Dot Strip on the top row is a
- Control Command Strip. The Grey Dot Strip on the bottom row is
- the Function Command Strip.
-
- Forget all that for now.
-
- Press the enter key a few times. This will jump down a few
- lines, indenting along the way.
- Still, you'll see the annoying "End of File Version 1.0" at the
- bottom. That's just there to let you know where your text ends.
- After a while you'll forget it's there. But I wish T.I. had used
- asterisks instead.
- Ah, well.
-
- Take the Alpha Lock Key off. Use the Shift Key to make
- caps, just as you would on a typewriter, and begin typing.
- If you can't think of anything to write, type what you had for
- breakfast or lunch. JUST KEEP TYPING. DO NOT PRESS ENTER AS YOU
- WOULD IF YOU WERE ENTERING LINES IN BASIC. [The T.I.Writer
- word-wraps automatically.]
- Type and type and type until you have 10 or 20 lines. And
- stop.
-
- See the command on the Grey Dot Strip above #9 Key? THIS IS
- THE BIGGIE! The Command/Escape Key on all word processors is the
- most important. It gets you back to the Command Menu.
- Press FCTN/9.
-
- Now we're back up to where we started with the cursor
- blinking under the Tabs statement.
- This time type PF for Print File. And press <Enter>.
- When it asks for Device, type <PIO> [or RS232, if you're not
- using a Parallel printer]. Press <Enter>.
- What you've typed will print out immediately in the narrow screen
- width you've Tabbed.
- Fast, eh?
- Easy, too.
-
- But you don't want that width, and you do want to learn how
- to do some of the neat things this processor has to offer.
-
- My Old Pappy used to say, "Patience is a virtue that never
- can hirtue."
-
- And you are back to exactly where you left off. With the
- cursor exactly where you ended. All commands when completed
- return you right to the exact location you finished. This is a
- powerful feature, as you'll soon learn.
-
- Let's do one more thing before we get out of this Get You
- Started On Your Processor activity.
-
- Press FCTN/9 again.
- Then type T.
-
- Where the I is change it to an L. Change the next T to an
- I. Then run the cursor through all the "Windows" until you get
- to the very end. Then back up to the 7 and type R and press
- <Enter> . When you get back to your text, run the cursor up to
- the first word in your text by using the FCTN/(arrow keys). Then
- press CTRL/2. This will Reformat your text into the new width.
- It'll do it right on the screen, creating those weird but
- marvelous "windows," and will do the same for your printer.
- Let's try it.
- FCTN/9 (the Command/Escape).
- Type PF.
- Now the PIO will appear with the cursor. Just press <Enter>
- and the printing will start immediately.
-
- If you never learn another thing about your T.I.Writer, you
- can at least use it as a typewriter (and making those easy
- corrections word processors are most famous for).
-
- You'll find, now that you are typing and printing with ease,
- that the manual will begin to make some sense. But the important
- thing is You have started!
-
- For now, let's get out of the processor. FCTN/9 again.
- Type Q for Quit. Type E for Exit. YOUR MASTERPIECE WILL BE
- LOST FROM THE COMPUTER MEMORY, but you have a printed copy of it
- in two forms, anyway.
- If you had wanted to save the file to disk, you would simply
- go back to the Command Mode with FCTN/9, type SF (for Save File).
- Then you would type DSK1.FILENAME (FILENAME being whatever YOU
- name it in 10 letters or less without spaces, commas, or
- periods). The next time you load T.I.WRITER you could type LF
- (for Load File) if you wanted this file again. Then type
- DSK1.FILENAME and your file will load back up automatically.
- CAUTION: Each file name SAVEd on a disk must have a DIFFERENT
- filename. You will overwrite any file of the same name on the
- same disk.
- Anyway, experiment a bit. Once you've used the T.I.WRITER
- for a while, you'll probably want to graduate to enhanced and
- more user-friendly versions. Some are commercial, some public
- domain. Some Fairware (You pay a modest sum if you decide to use
- it.) Examples of the last: BA WRITER (from Italy), TK WRITER
- from America, and FUNLWRITER (and the further updated FUNLPLUS!)
- from Australia (and Canada and America). They are all excellent
- and are superior to their excellent grandfather discussed in this
- article.
- Check with your user group for these disks. I use
- exclusively the FUNLPLUS! update of FUNLWRITER, but any of the
- above would greatly increase the power of an already-powerful
- word processor. [AUTHOR'S NOTE: This article was originally
- published a few years ago. Today I use the new FUNNELWEB and
- PLUS!, both extremely expanded and powerful versions of these
- earlier Fairware programs.]
-
- A great part of the fun with a processor is discovering what
- it can do for you. Stay with it. Put in a half-hour a day for a
- month. After that, you will be changed for life. Never will you
- use a dinosaur (I mean, typewriter) again.
-
- [Jack Sughrue, Box 459, E.Douglas, MA 01516]
-
- ********
-
- If any newsletter editor prints these articles, please put
- me on your mailing list. Thanks - JS
-
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