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Gregorian Programmers Guild -- INSTALL.TXT --
Installation and Upgrade Instructions for the dwm package
Copyright (C) 1994, Gregorian Programmers Guild, all rights reserved.
Published by Gregorian Programmers Guild,
4112 Hotel de Ville
Montreal, Quebec,
H2W 2H1
Canada
(514) 281-6425
***********************************************************
dwm (tm) Copyright (c) 1994, Gregorian Programmers Guild
dobs (tm) Copyright (c) 1994, Gregorian Programmers Guild
vern (tm) Copyright (c) 1994, Gregorian Programmers Guild
blanch (tm) Copyright (c) 1994, Gregorian Programmers Guild
***********************************************************
Installation
Installation must be done from within the Windows environment. The
user must have an installation distribution of the software, that includes
the two executable programs SETUP.EXE and PART2.EXE, as well as a
number of files that have an underscore (_) as the third character.
In Program Manager go to the File menu and select Run. Type in
a:\setup.exe (or wherever the distribution files happen to be). Enter the
path for the destination directory, by default it will be c:\dwm; you can
change this to wherever you want the files installed. Click on the install
button, wait several seconds.
If you are installing over a previous version of dwm the setup program
will ask to restart once you have finished the installation. You can
install the program directly onto the older version (see the following
section on upgrading for more details).
The setup program first verifies that all the necessary system files are
installed. It may copy the special dynamic link library file ctl3dv2.dll
into your Windows system directory (usually c:\windows\system).
This library is used to create 3-dimensional looking dialog boxes and
controls, and must be present in the system directory if dwm is to work
properly. The second step of the installation is performed by the program
part2.exe, which is run automatically by setup.exe during the setup
process. During this step, several files (executables, libraries, help and
text files, and special dwm startup files) are copied to the destination
directory and the PATH in the autoexec.bat file is modified to include
the dwm directory. When this is finished you can create a program
manager group and/or read the README.TXT file, by clicking on the
appropriate button in the setup dialog box (these buttons become active
after the installation is complete).
Gregorian Programmers Guild INSTALL.TXT Page 1
After you have finished the installation, go the the dwm group in the
program manager and double click on the dwm icon. This will launch dwm
(which appears on the desktop as a small dark grey desktop object with
several concentric squares (similar to an icon) as well as Vern (the light
grey virtual desktop control). If you right click on the dwm button a
dialog box will open. To make dwm the default shell (normally the shell
is Program Manager whose primary function is the launching of
applications), open the dialog box as above and click the checkbox
labelled 'Make dwm the default shell' ON. Click on the 'Accept' button
and close Program Manager to exit Windows. You might want to check
the autoexec.bat file to verify that the PATH statement has indeed been
updated to include the dwm directory (c:\dwm by default). This is required
only if you use dwm as the default Windows shell, which is recommended.
Now reboot your computer (Ctrl-Alt-Del) or hit the reset button so the
computer will recognize the updated PATH (or do whatever you normally
do to update the PATH environment variable).
After the computer has rebooted run Windows. You should see a nice
clean desktop with the small dwm button and vern (the virtual desktop).
If you see the error message 'Cannot find About.dll' and 'Cannot find
dwmhook.dll' you have not properly updated your PATH statement. Make
sure that the dwm directory is in the PATH (type 'PATH' at the DOS
prompt to view your path).
If all is well (that is Windows has started and dwm is running as the
shell) now would be a good time to click on the desktop (this is any
area of the screen which is NOT covered by any other program).
If you click the left mouse button on the background (i.e: desktop) you
should see a pop-up menu. This is a user configurable menu which
contains some stock Windows applications, along with some native dwm
functions. If you click the right mouse button (we'll refer to these clicks as
left- clicks and right-clicks from now on) you should see the Program
Manager menu. This menu contains a series of flyout menus, each of
which represents a different program manager group. Clicking on one of
the group menus displays a list of items in the group.
Click on the dwm group of the pop up program manager menu, and then
click on the dobs entry. Dobs will start, and a small button that looks
like a stylized hard disk will be stuck to the cursor. Move the cursor to
where you want the dob button, and left click with the mouse to stick the
dob button onto the desktop.
Now click on the desktop to pop up the Program Manager menu and select
a group that contains programs you use frequently. A flyout menu will
appear listing the items in that group, click on an application -- if you
release the mouse button right away that application will be launched, if
you hold down the mouse button and drag the file onto the desktop, you
can drop it to blanch your application. Make blanches for your favorite
applications. Your dwm Windows environment is now basically configured,
and you can use all the dwm applications (dwm, dobs, vern and blanch).
All the applications have extensive online help that can be accessed
through the Windows help system.
Gregorian Programmers Guild INSTALL.TXT Page 2
*Note* that making dwm the default shell changes the SHELL= line in the
system.ini file so that Windows loads dwm.exe rather than progman.exe
when Windows is started. If you have problems,
- load c:\windows\system.ini using an ASCII text editor
- (like the DOS EDIT program)
- change the line shell=c:\dwm\dwm.exe to shell=c:\windows\progman.exe
the above instructions assume that you have installed dwm.exe in the
directory c:\dwm and that Windows is located in c:\windows.
*****************************************************
Files: The way your software is packaged depends somewhat on the
way in which it was obtained. Your shareware package must be an
installation distribution, containing the 2 executable programs
SETUP.EXE and PART2.EXE, as well as a number of files which have
an underscore (_) as the third character of the file extension.
setup.exe - installation program
part2.exe - private executable, used by setup.exe
After installation, the following files will be present:
dwm.exe - dob window manager
dwm.mnu - dwm main menu file
vern.exe - virtual desktop environment
dobs.exe - file manager
blanch.exe - button launcher
reswatch.exe - resource graph
gpglogo.exe - commercial for us
dwmhook.dll - mouse/keyboard hooks for vern and dwm
about.dll - general purpose about box dll
ctrl3dv2.dll - dll for 3-D look in dialog boxes
dwmhep.hlp - help for dwm
dobshep.hlp - help for dobs
vernhep.hlp - help for vern
blanchep.hlp - help for blanch
register.hlp - help for registering your shareware package
readme.txt - info on dwm package and product support
install.txt - this file
license.txt - shareware license agreement
order.txt - info for registering dwm
vendor.txt - info for shareware vendors and distributors
bbs.txt - info for BBS administrators
order.frm - cheque/money order order form
ccorder.frm - credit card order form
After you run dwm the following files will also be created,
progman.mnu - program manager menu file (dwm directory)
dwm.dsk - dwm desktop file (dwm directory)
dwm.ini - dwm initialisation file (Windows directory)
blanch.ini - blanch initialisation file (Windows directory)
The aggregate size of the installed package is about 900 Kbytes.
With the exception of the files ctrl3dv2.dll and dwm.ini, all files will
be copied into the destination directory specified during the installation.
Gregorian Programmers Guild INSTALL.TXT Page 3
Upgrading
Registered users will be contacted whenever there are changes or
improvements made to any of the dwm applications. Upgrades can be
obtained directly from GPG for a modest handling charge, or downloaded
electronically from a number of different locations. Registration codes
provided by GPG are good for any version of similar generation as the
original registration (1.xx, for example); major upgrades will require
new codes that registered users can purchase for a small upgrade fee.
To upgrade your software to a more recent version, simply run the SETUP
program of your new distribution disk (you can run SETUP out of dobs,
or a dwm Run... dialog box). Setup will install the upgrade over the old
distribution. After the installation is complete you should restart
Windows or you may have trouble. The user is given the following cautions
for performing upgrades:
Do not click on the Create Program Group button. Creating a program
group during an upgrade will duplicate icons in the group (i.e. two copies
of each icon for each of the executable, help and text files). The
duplication of icons, if accidentally performed, is not fatal, but
annoying as the user will have to run the Program Manager to delete the
unnecessary items.
Your old dwm.mnu file will be preserved in the course of upgrading, if
one already exists. The default menu file installed during the setup
will be renamed as dwm.new.
Gregorian Programmers Guild INSTALL.TXT Page 4