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OS/2 Help File
|
1995-05-25
|
70KB
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1,958 lines
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1. Introduction ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
File Commander/2 is a 32 bit OS/2 text mode file manager and shell that allows
you to locate, copy, move, delete, view, edit and execute your files in a
quick, convenient and customisable manner.
It's main display provides dual directory view panels that may serve as source
and destination of a copy or move operation or just two different views of your
files. A panel may also be used to view a directory tree, drive statistics or
may be turned off altogether.
A command line is also provided and operates in conjuction with the directory
panels to make it much more powerful than a regular CLI including pasting file
names from the panel, a command history recall window and command completion
from history.
Please remember that File Commander/2 is Shareware. If you like and use it,
please support the shareware concept by Registering.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2. Features ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The following are some of the major features of File Commander/2:
o Mouse support.
o Full HPFS long file name support.
o Online help.
o Many configuration options.
o Built in file viewer with hex view mode.
o Built in editor with cut/copy/paste ability using the OS/2 clipboard.
o Screen saver.
o Tree views for quick and easy directory changes.
o Ability to start OS/2 text mode, PM, DOS and Windows applications.
o User definable menu.
o Easy creation of WPS objects.
o Enhanced wildcard handling.
o Flexible file name filtering.
o Support for 4DOS/4OS2 descriptions
o 132 column mode support.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 3. Shareware ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
File Commander/2 is copyrighted software. However, you are encouraged to copy
and share the software with others according to the following requirements:
File Commander/2 may be freely copied and shared with others, so long as no
charge is made for the software, and it is unmodified and copied in its
entirety, including program documentation. It may be distributed by electronic
means (modem, ftp etc), provided that all files are transmitted (archived)
together.
Notice that shareware is copyrighted software. It is not "Public Domain"
software, nor is it "free" software. If you continue to use this program beyond
a reasonable "trial period", not to exceed 30 days, you must pay for it by
registering. See Registering for how to register.
o Your registration fee makes it possible for me to continue to improve the
program and increases the likelihood that I will provide useful, cheap
software in the future.
o IF YOU USE THE PROGRAM FOR COMMERCIAL PURPOSES, YOU MUST REGISTER.
o Your registration fee buys you the right to use the program beyond the trial
period of 30 days. Your registration covers ALL VERSIONS of File Commander/2,
past, present AND future. ie You'll only ever have to register File
Commander/2 once.
You may NOT charge anyone for a copy of this software other than a small
copying fee. You may NOT include this software with any commercial software
without the consent of the author.
This software is supplied WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
In no event shall the author be liable to you for any consequential, special
incidental or indirect damages of any kind arising out of the performance or
use of the software, even if the author has been advised of the possibility of
such damages. By using the software, you agree to these terms.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 4. Registering ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The registration fee for File Commander/2 is $29 Australian. If you are not an
Australian resident you can pay by one of the following means:
1. Register using your Credit card (Mastercard or Visa). Note that if you pay
by this method the entry on your credit card statement will list "Greater
Chicago Online! BBS"
2. An international draft made out for $29 Australian (Beware, some banks
charge huge fees for these, check first).
3. A cheque made out in your local currency for the equivalent of $35
Australian (It costs me to cash foreign currency cheques at this end).
Please don't try making out "Eurocheques" in Australian dollars. They are
only valid if made out in a European currency.
4. If you trust the postal service you can send cash in your local currency to
the value of $29 Australian (example US$20 note). Registered mail
recommended.
Send payments to the address given in Contacting the Author. Please make
cheques payable to 'Brian Havard' (and please spell it correctly when writing
the cheque to keep my bank manager happy).
Please include a Registration form (or note containing same information).
Once you have registered, you will be sent a serial number that, with your
name, will allow you to 'register' the copy of the program you have. Once you
have done this your name will appear in the 'Info' panel and you will not see
any shareware reminders. This serial number will be good for all future
versions of FC/2 so you'll only ever have to pay once.
If you have an email address (Internet or Compuserve), include it on the
registration form for fastest response. The next best alternative is a fax
number.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 4.1. Registration Form ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
File Commander/2 Registration Form
----------------------------------
Name:...................................................
Address:...................................
...................................
...................................
...................................
Fax: .................................
Email: .................................
I would like to register [ ] copy/copies of File Commander/2
at $29 Australian per copy.
Total A$ : _______________
Comments:
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 4.2. Credit Card Registrations ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
You can register File Commander/2 using your credit card (Mastercard or Visa)
in one of three ways. The cost of registration is US$23.95.
1. Call the Greater Chicago Online BBS directly on (708) 895-4042 in the USA
and register while online.
2. Send an electronic mail message to fc2reg@gco.com containing a filled out
Credit Card registration form.
3. Fill in and print a Credit Card registration form and mail it to me at the
address given in Contacting the Author.
GCO's Sysop will pass your details on to me and I'll get back to you with your
registration serial number.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 4.2.1. Credit Card Registration Form ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
File Commander/2 Registration Form
----------------------------------
Name: ______________________________ (as it appears on your credit card)
Address: ________________________________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
Fax: _________________________________
Email: _________________________________
Credit Card Number: ____-____-____-____ Expiration: _______
MasterCard [ ] Visa [ ]
Product Name: File Commander/2
Qty [ ] X US$23.95 = Total Price: __________
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 4.3. Site Licences ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
If you want a company site licence for File Commander/2, the following pricing
applies:
ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
ΓöéUsers Γöé5 Γöé10 Γöé25 Γöé50 Γöé100 ΓöéUnlimited Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéPrice Γöé$120 Γöé$200 Γöé$500 Γöé$800 Γöé$1200 Γöé$2000 Γöé
ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
All prices are in Australian dollars.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 5. Where to find FC/2 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
To find the latest version of FC/2, try the following places:
o If you have access to internet ftp, try one of the following sites:
1. ftp.cdrom.com:/pub/os2/32bit/diskutil/fc2_xxx.zip
2. ftp.luth.se
3. ftp.informatik.tu-muenchen.de
4. archive.latrobe.edu.au
o If you have access to internet electronic mail you can make use of an ftpmail
server to retrieve FC/2 from one of the above ftp sites. Mail a message to
ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com containing just the word "help" for more information
or see the ftpmail example.
o Compuserve in the OS2USER forum section 4 (Applications).
o The Software Works BBS, Melbourne, Australia (login as FC2) +61-3-9589-1638
(V.FC) Fidonet: 3:632/998 FREQ FC2
o The Hobbes OS/2 CD-ROM from Walnut Creek.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 5.1. FTP Mail example ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
You can use an ftpmail server to retrieve FC/2 (or any other file on an ftp
archive site) as an electronic mail message. Mail the following message to
ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com and you should receive in reply a series of mail
messages that contain FC/2 in uuencoded form. To extract the ZIP file you need
to remove the headers and footers from the mail messages, join them together
and run a uudecode program on the resulting file.
reply <your email address>
connect ftp.cdrom.com
binary
uuencode
chdir pub/os2/32bit/diskutil
get fc2_131.zip
quit
Change the file name in the 'get' command to the name of the latest version.
If you do not know what that is, you can change the 'get' command to a 'dir'
command and you will be sent a list of the files available.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 6. Online Help ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
FC/2 has an online help facility that may be called up using the F1 key. For
it to work, you must have the file fc.hlp in the same directory as fc.exe. The
text called up will depend on what state FC/2 is in when F1 is pressed. There
are separate help texts for the following:
o The main FC/2 screen
o Each of the 5 Menus
o The Configuration window
o The Confirmations window
o The internal viewer
o The internal editor
o The history window
o The help window
When there is more text than will fit in the window, you can use the Up / Down
arrow, Page Up, Page Down, Home and End keys to move around or you can click
the mouse in the top or bottom thirds of the window to scroll it (like in the
Internal Viewer).
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7. The File Panels ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The file panels are central to most operations in FC/2. They allow you to
browse through the files on your drives, copy, move, rename and delete files
you select from them as well as view, edit or execute any file.
Normally, one panel will be active and the other will be inactive. The active
panel is indicated by having its title highlighted. To change the active panel,
press the TAB key or click the mouse on the panel you wish to become active.
At any time, either or both panels can be hidden, allowing you to view the
screen behind which will contain the output of any programs you've run. Press
Ctrl-O to hide / re-display all visible panels or Ctrl-F1/F2 to switch the
Left/Right panel on or off.
If you feel that the information in a panel is no longer up to date, you can
press Ctrl-R to re-read the information displayed in the panel. Note that this
may take some time for Tree view panels if you have a large number of
directories on your drive.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.1. Panel View Modes ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The panels can display a list of files in several different ways. To change
the style of view, select it via the Menu (Left or Right, depending on which
panel you wish to change). You have the choice of:
Brief Displays three columns of file names with no details. The status line
at the bottom of the panel displays the details as in Full view for
the current file.
Full Displays file names with their size and the date and time of last
modification. The status line is devoted entirely to displaying as
much of the file name as possible allowing you to see more of a long
file name than in the main section of the panel.
Wide Displays file names with their size, providing much more space for
the file name. This mode is most useful when viewing HPFS directories
with many long file names.
Tree Views the overall directory structure of the current drive of the
opposite panel. Unlike in the above modes, when a panel is in tree
mode, it is linked to the opposite panel in that selecting a
directory on the tree and pressing ENTER causes the opposite panel to
view that directory.
Info The Info panel displays drive summary information for the current
drive of the opposite panel. Details listed include total space, free
space, label, file system and serial number. You can quickly activate
an Info panel using Ctrl-L.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.2. Moving Around the Current Directory ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
When you have a list of files showing (which is most of the time) you can move
around the list using the following keys:
Up Arrow Move up one file name.
Down Arrow Move down one file name.
Page Up Move up one screenful of file names.
Page Down Move down one screenful of files names.
Home Move to the first file name
End Move to the last file name.
Alt-[printable char] Move to the first file starting with [printable char]. If
you continue to type printable characters, FC/2 will look
for a file starting with the string you've typed. Your
typing is displayed in the status line of the current
panel.
Alt-Up Move to the previous file name matching the partial name
entered using the above.
Alt-Down As above but moves to next match.
When the current panel is in Brief mode, The left and right arrow keys move
across one column.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.3. Navigating around your drives ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
When moving to a particular directory, the first step is get the correct drive
showing. Press Alt-F1 for the left panel or Alt-F2 for the right panel to
display a simple dialog box showing the currently available drives. Select the
drive you want by pressing the appropriate letter, using the left / right
arrows to move the highligt and press ENTER or clicking on the letter with the
mouse. You can also change drives by entering a command in the form "d:" on the
command line.
Once you have the right drive, you can move around your directories by moving
the cursor to a directory you want to change into and pressing ENTER. Selecting
".." moves to the parent of the current directory. Moving the cursor around the
list of files in the current directory is achieved using the Up / Down arrows,
Page Up, Page Down, Home and End. Double clicking the mouse on a directory name
has will also change into that directory. The full path of the current
directory is always shown on the top line of the panel.
Other useful keys for navigating around your drive are:
Ctrl-\ Move to the root directory of the current drive.
Ctrl '-' Move back to the previously viewed directory.
Ctrl-Page Up Move to the parent of the current directory (same as
selecting "..").
Ctrl-Page Down Move into the currently highlighted directory (same as
pressing ENTER except that the contents of the command line
is ignored).
A number of other methods can be used to find the directory you want,
including:
o Change directory tree
o File Find
o Recall stored path
o Tree view panel
o Command Line CD
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.3.1. Change Directory Tree ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The Change Directory Tree can be used to quickly locate and display the
directory you're looking for. To activate it, press Alt-F10 or select it from
the Commands Menu. You can then either browse through the tree structure using
the same keys as used to browse through a file panel, or you can start typing
the name of the directory you are looking for.
As you type, the view will jump to the first directory name matching what you
have typed so far. You can either keep typing until the directory you're
looking for is located or you can use Ctrl-Enter to find the next match of what
you've typed.
When you've found the directory you want, press ENTER to make it the current
directory of the current panel. You can exit the Change Directory Tree at any
time by pressing ESC.
If you have not previously viewed the tree of the current drive it must be
read and this may take some time on a large drive. Once it has been read, the
tree structure for the drive is saved to a file for future reference. Normally
this file (fc2tree.dat) is written to the root directory of the drive the file
describes. If you don't like this or if it's not possible (eg CD-ROM drives)
you can make FC/2 store all tree data files in one directory of your choice. To
do this, change the treedir setting in Options/Configuration to specify the
directory where you want the data files.
If at any time you believe the tree being shown is not correct, you can
re-read the tree structure by pressing Ctrl-R.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.3.2. File Find ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The File Find function can be used to search for a particular file. To
activate it, press Alt-F7 or select it from the Commands Menu.
There are three controls on the File Find dialog that you can use to narrow
the search. These are:
File(s) to Find The name of the file you're looking for. The name can
contain any of the wildcard characters described in
Tagging.
Containing A text string that a file must contain in order to be
considered a match.
Start at Root If this option is checked (default) the file search will
search the entire current drive. If not, only the current
directory and its subdirectories will be searched.
Press ENTER to begin the search. As matches are found, they are listed with
their full path in the File Find window. You can stop the search at any time by
pressing ESC. You can do this to save time if the file you're looking for has
been located but much of the drive has yet to be searched.
Once the search is over, the list of matches is displayed from which you can
choose one using the Up / Down arrows, Page Up/Down, Home/End or clicking with
the mouse. Pressing ENTER or double clicking the mouse on a file name will
return to the file panel with its current directory changed to that of the
selected file and with the selected file highlighted.
You can also view or edit a file from the list using F3 or F4 respectively. If
you used the Containing field and you use FC/2's internal viewer or editor, the
starting position will be that of the first match.
If you do not want to see any of the files found you can press ESC to exit
File Find (or click Cancel) or press 'n' (or click New) to start another
search.
Whichever way you exit the File Find dialog, you can recall the list of files
found by the last search by pressing Shift-Alt-F7. This can be very handy if
you wish to examine each matched file in turn.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.3.3. Storing and retrieving Paths ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
To make directory navigation easier, you can store the current directory path
in one of ten 'slots'. At a later point in time you may recall the directory
which causes the current panel to instantly move to the stored directory.
o To store the current directory, hold down Ctrl and Shift then press one of
keys 0-9 on the numeric keypad.
o To retrieve a directory, hold down Ctrl then press one of keys 0-9 on the
numeric keypad.
If you forget which directories you've assigned to which keys, you can view
the contents of the slots using Alt-F5. This lists all ten stored paths from
which you can select one to change to using the Up / Down arrow keys and ENTER,
clicking on one with the mouse or pressing a number from 0-9.
If you do a 'Save Setup' before exiting FC/2, the directories you've stored
will be remembered the next time you start it up.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.4. Copying, Moving and Deleting Files ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
These three operations are all performed in a similar way. All can be
performed on either a single file or a group of files. To operate on a single
file, simply move the highlight bar to the file you want to copy/move/delete
using the keys described in Moving Around the Current Directory and press F5 to
copy, F6 to move and F8 to delete. These keys (along with the rest of the
function keys) are listed at the bottom of the screen so you don't have to
memorize them.
If you want to operate on a number of files at once, you should tag the files
you wish to be affected (See Tagging)
If you select copy or move, you will next be presented with a dialog box that
allows you to specify the destination directory and file name. The default
destination is the directory showing in the opposite panel. If this is what you
want, just press ENTER to proceed, otherwise use the arrow keys, Delete,
Backspace etc., to alter the path to what you want. You can also change the
file name if you wish.
You can rename several files at once using wild card characters '*' and '?'.
For example, to change the extension of several files to .bak you would specify
the destination file as '*.bak'. The wildcard characters represent characters
taken from the source file name.
If you select delete, you will be prompted with a confirmation dialog. If
you're sure you want to go ahead with the delete, press Enter, 'y' or click
'OK'. To back out, press ESC, 'n' or click 'Cancel'. If there are files tagged
you will be warned and asked a second time to confirm the delete. This is to
make sure you haven't forgotten that some files are tagged which can happen if
the tagged files have been scrolled off the panel. Either or both of these
confirmations can be disabled if you wish (See Confirmations).
All of the above operations can be stopped mid-process by pressing ESC.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.5. Tagging Files ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
There are several commands available to tag files. These are:
Insert Pressing the Insert key toggles the tag for the
currently highlighted file and moves the
highlight down to the next file allowing you to
repeatedly press Insert to tag multiple files.
Grey + Pressing the '+' key on the numeric key pad pops
up a dialog into which you can enter a file name
mask to specify which files should be tagged. The
following types of wildcard can be used in the
mask:
* Substitutes for zero or more characters of any value.
? Substitutes for one character of any value.
[a-d] Substitutes for one character of value a, b, c or d.
[^a-d] Substitutes for one character of any value except a, b, c or d.
[a-d^c] Substitutes for a, b or d.
Grey - This is just like Grey + except that it untags
files that match the file mask.
Grey * Invert tagging. All untagged files become tagged
and all tagged files become untagged.
Ctrl-Grey + Tag all files.
Ctrl-Grey - Untag all files.
Compare directories Selecting Compare Directories from the Commands
Menu tags all files that do not exist in the
directory of the opposite panel or are newer than
the copy there.
Mouse Clicking the right mouse button on a file name
toggles the tagging for that file. Holding the
right button down and moving the mouse will tag /
untag all files touched.
If the Tag Directories option is not set, only Insert and Mouse allow you to
tag directories. The other tagging methods ignore directories. When the Tag
Directories option is set, all the above commands except Compare directories
affect directory tagging.
When any files are tagged, a summary of the tagged files is shown on the
status line of the panel. This shows the number of files tagged and their total
size.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.6. Creating a Directory ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
To create a subdirectory in the current directory, press F7 and enter the name
of the subdirectory you want to create into the dialog. If the current panel is
in tree view mode, the directory will be created in the directory the highlight
is currently on.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.7. Directory Size Calculation ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
If you want to get an idea of what's taking up your precious disk space it's
often useful to calculate how much space is used by a particular directory and
all its sub-directories. File Commander/2 allows you to do this for one or more
of the directories showing in a file panel.
To calculate the size of a directory, move the highlght on to the directory
you wish to know the size of and press Ctrl-Q. This may take some time if there
are a large number of files or sub-directories in the directory being
calculated. When the directory has been scanned its total size is displayed in
the same field as where a file's size is displayed instead of the word SUBDIR.
If you want sereral of the directories in the panel to be calculated, tag them
before pressing Ctrl-Q and all will be calculated. Calculating all of the
directories provides a useful breakdown of where your disk space is being used.
If you decide that the calculation is taking too long you can cancel it at any
time by pressing ESC.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.8. Creating Workplace Shell Objects ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
File Commander/2 provides a quick and easy way to create Workplace Shell
Objects that is much easier than opening up your templates folder, dragging an
object out and filling in all the details for it. All you have to do is locate
the file you want an object for and press Alt-F6. There is a simple
confirmation dialog to make sure you mean what you've pressed.
If the file is an executable (.exe .com .bat .cmd) a Program object is
created. For all other file types (including directories) a shadow object is
created the same as if you had created a shadow of the file from the Drives
object.
Note that if you have tagged any files, objects will be created for all tagged
files. All objects are created on the desktop ready for you to drop them into
whichever folder you want them in.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.9. Starting Programs ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
There are several ways to start a program using FC/2.
1. Move the highlight bar to an executable file (.exe .com .cmd .bat) and
press ENTER.
2. Move the highlight bar to a file which matches a defined Association and
press ENTER.
3. Select a program from the User Menu.
4. Enter the program name on the Command Line.
With all these methods, except the User Menu, you can start the program in a
separate session by pressing Alt-Enter instead of just Enter.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7.9.1. Associations ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
An association is used to link data files to the program that uses them. To
create an association, add a line of the following form:
mask : program
to your fc.ini file using the Commands/Edit Associations menu option. This file
is created the first time you use Save Setup (See the Options Menu).
You can also use the following when specifying the program:
! Name of current file.
!p Path of current panel.
!P Path of opposite panel.
!f Name of current file with full path.
!s Path of current panel with trailing '\'
!S Path of opposite panel with trailing '\'
!n Nothing, but prevents automatic appending of current file name
If none of the above are used, the name of the current file is appended.
EG
*.dsk:loaddskf ! a:
*.zip:pkunzip ! !P
*.inf:view
*.ico:iconedit
*.zoo:zoo x
*.tif*:pmview
(matches both x.tif and x.tiff)
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 8. Command Line ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The command line provided by FC/2 operates in much the same way as your normal
OS/2 command prompt with a few extra features. The following keys are used to
operate the FC/2 command line:
Pasting file names
Ctrl-J or Ctrl-Enter Pastes the file name of the currently
highlighted file into the command line. Note
that if the character to the left of the
cursor is alphanumeric, a recall from History
will be performed instead.
Ctrl-F Pastes the file name of the currently
highlighted file with its full path into the
command line.
Clipboard
Ctrl-Insert Copies the whole command line to the
clipboard.
Shift-Insert Pastes the clipboard to the command line at
the cursor's current position.
Moving the cursor
Left/Right Arrows Move the cursor around the command line. Note
that these keys do not operate the command
line if the current panel is in brief view.
Use Alt-Left/Right Arrows instead.
Alt-Left/Right Arrows Move the cursor around the command line
regardless of which mode the current panel is
in.
Ctrl-Left/Right Arrows Move the cursor one word left or right.
Ctrl-Home Move the cursor to the start of the line.
Ctrl-End Move the cursor to the end of the line.
Deleting characters
Backspace Delete the character to the left of the
cursor.
Delete Delete the character under the cursor.
Ctrl-Delete Delete the word to the right of the cursor.
Ctrl-Backspace Delete the word to the left of the cursor.
Esc Clear the entire command line.
Changing Drive/Directory
Commands of the form d: and cd somedir are interpreted by FC/2 instead of
being executed by the command interpreter. This provides the following
differences to normal command line behaviour:
1. A CD command that specifies a drive letter will change both the current
drive and directory in one command.
2. If the directory specified in a CD command does not exist in the current
directory then any tree data that has been colleted will be searched for
the directory name specified. If found, it will be changed into.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 8.1. History ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Command history is used to save you re-typing a command that is the same or
similar to a command you've entered before. There are several ways to locate
the command you wish to repeat:
Ctrl-E or Ctrl-Up Recall previously entered command. Repeated use
steps through command history from newest entry
to oldest entry.
Ctrl-X or Ctrl-Down Steps forwards through command history. Useful if
you overshoot using Ctrl-E
Ctrl-J or Ctrl-Enter Recall previously entered command that matches
the text to the left of the cursor. Can be used
repeatedly to find successive matches. Note that
this function only operates when the character to
the left of the cursor is alphanumeric, otherwise
a file name paste occurs as described in Command
Line.
Alt-F8 Displays a window containing a list of previously
entered commands from which you can choose. Once
you've highlighted the command you want using the
Up / Down arrow keys or the mouse, you can press:
Enter Re-execute command now.
Alt-Enter Re-execute command now in a separate session.
Ctrl-Enter Place command on the command line for editing.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9. Menu ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
FC/2 includes a menu system to provide easy access to a range of functions.
Most of the functions on the menu can be activated by short-cut keys which are
listed on the menus. The menu system can be operated by keyboard, mouse or a
combination of both if you like.
Keyboard
1. Activate the menu bar by pressing F9 or Ctrl-N. Also, Shift-F10 activates
the menu with the cursor positioned on the last used function.
2. Select which menu you want by pressing the first letter of its title or by
using the Left / Right arrows and pressing Enter.
3. Use the Up / Down arrows to select the menu item you want and press Enter
to activate it. Alternatively, you can press the key that is highlighted in
the menu item's name.
4. You can press Esc to back out.
Mouse
1. Activate the menu bar by clicking the right mouse button on the top line.
2. Click on the title of the menu you want to use.
3. Click on the menu item you want ot activate.
4. To dismiss the menu, click anywhere away from the menus.
These should be taken as examples only. The menus operate in much the same way
as OS/2 PM menus.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.1. Left / Right Menu ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The Left and Right menus contain exactly the same functions but apply them to
the appropriate panel.
Brief Set panel to view files in Brief mode.
Full Set panel to view files in Full mode.
Wide Set panel to view files in Wide mode.
Info Set panel to show drive summary information.
Tree Set panel to view directories as a Tree.
On/Off Toggle the visibility of the panel. Turning a panel off allows
you to see the output of previously executed commands.
Name Sort panel by file name
Extension Sort panel by file name extension. The extension of a file name
is from the last '.' onwards. Files with the same extension are
ordered by name.
Time Sort panel by file modification time and date. Files are listed
from newest to oldest.
Size Sort panel by file size. Files are listed from largest to
smallest. Files of the same size are ordered by name.
Unsorted Files are listed in the order provided by the file system.
Reverse Reverses the order in which files are listed.
Re-Read Refresh the contents of the panel. Useful if another process has
modified the contents of the panel's directory or if removable
media has been changed.
Filter Display a dialog that allows you to modify the file name Filter
Drive Change the drive being viewed. A small dialog is displayed
showing the currently available drives from which you can
choose.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.1.1. Filters ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The file name filter can be used to define which files you want to see and
which files you don't. It may contain up to 40, space separated file masks that
are tested from left to right. The first mask that matches a file name will
determine that file's visibility. To indicate an exclusion file mask, precede
it with a '!'. If a file name doesn't match any of the masks, it will not be
shown.
EG
*.exe *.com *.cmd *.bat Show only executable files
!*.obj * Show all files except object files.
foo* !*.obj * Show all files except object files unless they
start with foo.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.2. Files Menu ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Manual View User Manual.
User Menu Display the User Menu.
View View the current file.
Edit Edit the current file.
Copy Copy Files.
Rename or Move Move Files.
Make Directory Create a Directory.
Delete Delete Files.
File Attributes Display a dialog to alter File Attributes.
File Case Modify a file or group of tagged files' names to be
upper, lower or mixed case. This is only useful on
case preserving file systems like HPFS.
Select Group Tag a group of files by file name mask.
Unselect Group Untag a group of files by file name mask.
Invert Tagging Toggle the Tagging status of all files in the current
panel.
Quit Exit File Commander/2.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.2.1. File Attributes ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The File Attributes dialog allows you to modify the 'Read Only', 'Archive',
'Hidden' and 'System' attributes of a file or a group of files. To activate it
select it from the Files Menu.
If no files are tagged, you'll be presented with a dialog displaying the
attributes of the currently highlighted file. You can use the Up / Down arrow
to move the cursor and Space to toggle the attribute the cursor is on or you
can click on the check boxes with the mouse.
If you have any files tagged, you'll be presented with a slightly different
dialog. For each attribute, you can set, clear or leave alone that attribute
for all the tagged files.
When you've set all the check boxes the way you want them, press Enter (or
click OK) to proceed or ESC (or click Cancel) to exit without changing
anything.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.3. Commands Menu ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Tree Pop up the Change Directory Tree.
File Find Locate a file using File Find
History View the Command Line History.
EGA Lines Toggle 50 line mode.
Swap Panels Swaps the positions of the left and right panels.
Panels On/Off Removes or replaces the panels allowing you to view
the output of previously executed programs.
Compare Directories Tags files according to the differences between the
two panels. See Tagging for details.
Calculate Dir Size Totals the size of all the files the currently
highlighted diretory or currently tagged directories
and displays the result(s) on the file panel in the
field that normally says 'SUBDIR'
Open WPS Window Causes the Workplace Shell to open the window
corresponding to the directory that FC/2 is currently
displaying.
Register Turns a shareware copy of File Commander/2 into a
registered version. Once you have entered your name
and serial number, you will not see any reminder
messages and your name will appear on the Info panel.
Edit Associations Starts the internal editor on your FC.INI file. Any
changes you make to associations will become active
immediately.
Edit User Menu Starts the internal editor on your main FC.MNU file.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.4. Options Menu ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Configuration Display the Configuration dialog allowing you to alter a
number of options.
Colours Edit the Colour Scheme
Confirmations Display a dialog that allows you to disable some of the
Confirmations.
Hidden Files Toggles whether files with their hidden attribute set will
be shown on the file panels or not. When hidden files are
displayed, they are denoted by a 'Γûæ' character.
Path Prompt Toggles the display of the current path on FC/2's command
line prompt.
Full Screen Toggles whether the panels occupy the full screen length or
just half the screen.
Clock Toggles whether a clock will be shown in the top right hand
corner or not.
Tag Directories Enables the mass tagging commands to tag directories also.
See Tagging Files for more details.
Thousand Separator Toggles the use of a thousand separator in the file size
column of Full and Wide modes. This reduces the number of
significant digits that can be displayed but can increase
readability.
Save Setup Saves all current settings to the file 'FC.INI' so that all
FC/2 options will be set the same the next time you start
it up. This can be performed automatically on exit if you
wish by setting the autosave option (See Configuration).
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.4.1. Configuration ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
To view the configuration options, select 'Configuration' from the Options
Menu. Any options you change take effect as soon as you click OK (or move the
highlight to OK and press Enter). If you use Cancel, all changes you've made
are forgotten.
To select an option to change either click on it with the mouse or use the Up
/ Down arrow keys to move to it. The current option is denoted by a '()'. To
alter non-string options, use the space bar to toggle the value.
Moving up from the first option or down from the last option will highlight
one of the buttons at the bottom of the dialog. You can then use the Left /
Right arrows to move the highlight onto the button you want and Enter to
activate it. It's usually easier to use the mouse.
If you want the changes to still be in effect the next time you start FC/2 you
need to select 'Save Setup' from the Options Menu otherwise the changes will be
lost when you exit. Alternatively, you can switch on 'Autosave Setup' seen
below.
The options are:
Viewer The file name (with full path if not in a directory on your
PATH) of the file viewer to be used when you press F3. All
the '!' substitutions described in Associations can be used
when specifying a viewer or an editor. If this field is
left blank, the Internal Viewer will be used.
Viewer2 As for Viewer but specifies the viewer used when Alt-F3 is
pressed.
Editor Similar to Viewer but specifies the editor used when F4 is
pressed. If left empty, the Internal Editor will be used.
Editor2 As for Editor but specifies the editor used when Alt-F4 is
pressed.
Manual Name of an Information Presentation Facility file (*.inf)
that is to be viewed when 'Manual' is chosen from the Files
Menu. The default is fc.inf (this file).
Left The directory the left panel will display on start up. If
left blank, the current directory for the session will be
shown.
Right The directory the right panel will display on start up. If
left blank, the current directory for the session will be
shown.
Background String added at the start of a command that causes it to be
executed in a separate session. Default value is 'start
/f'. See the OS/2 command reference for more options for
the 'start' command.
Treedir The directory where tree data is stored. If left blank,
tree data will be written to the root directory of each
drive as "fc2tree.dat". The data stored is a representation
of the directory structure of a drive and is used to avoid
re-scanning the drive.
Casefilter A list of file system names (as displayed on the Info
panel) that are not case preserving and so need file names
to be converted to lower case for easier reading. If not
listed here, file names will be displayed as provided by
the file system.
Autosave Switching Autosave on causes FC/2 to automatically perform
a 'Save Setup' just before exiting the program.
Lines Sets the number of lines on screen or in window. Can be any
number supported by your video card for full screen
sessions or any value of at least 25 for a windowed
session. Using a number that is not supported by your card
in a full screen session will result in the number of lines
being set to the next possible value up.
Saver The number of minutes of idle time before FC/2 activates
its screen saver. If set to 0, the screen saver will not
activate. Note that the screen saver only operates when in
a full screen session.
Numlock Specifies if numlock should be fixed on or not. Affects
both FC/2 and any program started by FC/2 unless it is in a
separate session.
Mouspeed When FC/2 is running in a full screen session, this option
specifies the sensitivity of the mouse. The default value
is 8 with smaller values giving a faster mouse and larger
values slowing it down.
Scrolldelay The time (in milliseconds) that FC/2 waits between
scrolling each line when the mouse has been used to scroll
a panel or window. Only used when FC/2 is running in a full
screen session. Use of this option stops the text flying
past before you've had a chance to look at it.
Timemode The type of time display used on the clock and when file
time stamps are viewed in the files panel (Full mode).
Codepage If non-zero, FC/2 will switch to the specified code page.
Otherwise the default code page for the session will be
used. For the best looking display, FC/2 needs to use
graphics characters that are only in code page 437 (US),
specifically the line drawing characters that join single
to double lines. If another code page is active, FC/2 will
avoid using these characters.
Use132 When on, FC/2 will use 132 column display whenever
possible. 132 column mode is only supported on some video
cards in full screen sessions. Versions of OS/2 before 3.0
do not support more than 80 columns in a window.
PMClip When on, FC/2's internal editor will use OS/2's PM
clipboard when performing Copy/Cut/Paste operations
allowing it to share clipboard data with other programs.
When this option is turned off, FC/2 reverts to using its
private clipboard which operates somewhat faster.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.4.2. Colours ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The Colours dialog allows you to alter the colour scheme used by FC/2. To
activate it, select 'Colours' from the Options Menu
You will be presented with a list of items in the colour scheme. Use the four
arrow keys to move to the item you wish to change and then use F to cycle
through forground colours and B to cycle through background colours. Holding
SHIFT at the same time will cycle backwards. There are a total of 16 foreground
and 8 background colours to choose from.
When you're done, press Enter to use the changes you've made or ESC to forget
them. Note that the changes will only be remembered for next time if you use
'Save Setup' or have Autosave enabled.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9.4.3. Confirmations ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Before doing anything significantly destructive, FC/2 will ask for
confirmation from the user to prevent accidental loss of data. If you are
confident in your use of FC/2 and don't want to be asked for confirmation all
the time, you can disable some of the more common confirmation prompts by
selecting 'Confirmations' from the Options Menu.
A dialog displaying a list of confirmation types is then displayed with a
check box next to each one. An 'X' in a check box indicates that the
confirmation is enabled. To disable a confirmation, click its check box with
the mouse and click OK. The keyboard can also be used (Up / Down arrows and
Space, Enter when done).
The confirmations you can alter are:
Delete File/Empty Directory The first prompt you see after pressing
F8.
Delete Tagged Files The second prompt you see after
pressing F8 when there are files
tagged.
Delete Non-empty Directory The prompt that asks you to type "YES"
before doing a tree delete.
Quit FC/2 The prompt shown when you press F10.
With this disabled, F10 causes
immediate exit.
"YES" prompt for Non-Empty Directory Similar to Delete Non-empty Directory
but instead of disabling the "YES"
prompt altogether, it is replaced by an
OK / Cancel choice, the default being
Cancel.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10. Viewing / Editing Files ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
FC/2 allows you to view the current file with a choice of two viewers or to
edit the current file with a choice of two editors. To view a file, use F3 or
Alt-F3. To edit a file, use F4 or Alt-F4. The program used to view or edit is
specified in the Configuration dialog. By default, the built in Viewer and the
built in Editor are used for F3 and F4 respectively.
If you wish to specify the file to view or edit by typing its file name, use
Shift-F3 for view or Shift-F4 for edit. If you specify a file to edit that does
not exist, you will be given the option to create it.
The viewer or editor can be invoked directly when starting FC/2 using the
command line switches /v or /e followed by the name of the file to be viewed or
edited. This allows other programs to call FC/2 to view or edit files for them.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.1. The Internal Viewer ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The file viewer built into FC/2 is a basic text viewer that is perfect for
taking a quick look at your text files. You can use the mouse or keyboard to
scroll the text up and down (Keys: Cursor-Up/Down, Page Up/Down, Home, End).
To scroll the text using the mouse, click the mouse in the top or bottom
thirds of the screen. Using the right mouse button pages up or down. When the
mouse is being used to scroll the text, the speed of scrolling is determined by
the 'scrolldelay' Configuration directive.
If a line is longer than 80 columns it will be chopped off at that length and
the remainder placed one the next line unless you use F2 to select Unwrap mode.
With the text unwrapped, you can use the Left / Right arrows to scroll the text
horizontally. Ctrl-Left/Right scrolls in a much larger step (40 columns). Also,
the mouse can be used to scroll horizontally by clicking the mouse in the
centre third of the screen on the left or right side. ie
o You can search for a string using F7 (or Shift-F7 to find next). The search
is case insensitive.
o Will correctly interpret UNIX, PC or MAC line terminators (LF, CR/LF, CR) or
even a mix of all three.
o F4 will toggle between ASCII and Hex view.
o I think I've got all the bugs out of it but if you ever think it has become
confused, pressing Ctrl-L will repaint the screen.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10.2. The Internal Editor ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The built in editor is a simple text editor that allows you to make quick
changes to any plain text file.
o Like the viewer, the editor will read a file using any type of line
terminator. When the file is written, however, all lines will be CR/LF
terminated.
o Although there is no limit on the size of file you can edit, keep in mind
that the whole file is loaded into memory so opening a multi-megabyte file
may strain your swapper.dat file.
o The editor uses the OS/2 clipboard allowing you to exchange text with other
programs. As text mode applications like FC/2 don't normally have access to
the PM clipboard, a helper PM process (clipserv.exe) needs to be used. FC/2
automatically starts this process when needed. This feature may be turned off
using the 'pmclip' setting in the Configuration
Note: FC/2 allows the copying of blocks of text into the PM clipboard that
are greater than 64K in size. Attempting to paste such blocks of text into a
16 bit OS/2 program will usually cause it to fail.
o If you edit the same file again, FC/2 will return you to the same edit
position as when you last exited the editor.
The following keys operate in the editor:
Left/Right/Up/Down As you'd expect
Backspace Delete character left of the cursor.
Ctrl-Backspace Delete word left of the cursor.
Delete Delete character under the cursor or, if any text
is selected, deletes selected text.
Ctrl-Delete Delete word right of the cursor.
Home Start of line
End End of line.
Page Up/Down Up/Down one page
Ctrl-Home Top of screen
Ctrl-End Bottom of screen
Ctrl-Page Up/Down Start/End of file
Ctrl-Y Erase line
Ctrl-Insert Copy selected text to clipboard
Shift-Insert Paste from clipboard
Ctrl-Delete Delete selected text.
Shift-Delete Cut selected text and place on the clipboard.
ESC or F10 Exit editor (prompts to save if changes made)
Shift-F10 Save and exit
F2 Save now without exiting
F3 Save now with prompt to change file name.
F7 Search for a word in the text (case insensitive)
Shift-F7 Search for the same word again
Ctrl-Q Quote next character. This enables you to enter
control character into the file that would
normally be rejected. For example, pressing
Ctrl-Q ESC would insert the ESC character into
the text.
Insert Toggle Insert/Overstrike mode. When in overstrike
mode, an 'O' appears in the top status line.
Alt-I Toggle Auto Indent mode. When this mode is on
(indicated by an 'I' on the status line) Pressing
ENTER will start a new line with the same
indentation as the line above. This is most
useful when editing program source files.
To select text, hold down Shift and use the above cursor movement keys to move
over the text you want to select. You can also drag the mouse over the text.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 11. The User Menu ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The user menu is a list of functions defined by you to help you carry out
common tasks. It is activated by pressing F2 and then using the Up/Down arrows
and Home/End to choose an item and Enter to select or ESC to cancel. The mouse
may also be used to select a user menu choice.
To create a user menu you need to create a plain text file (using an editor
like the OS/2 System editor "e.exe" or FC/2's internal editor) named fc.mnu
containing your list of menu functions in the same directory as fc.exe. Here
is an example user menu file:
S: Scan for viruses
os2scan c: d:
D: Dos Window
start /dos
F12: Pulse
start pulse
U: Unzip to opposite panel
cd !P
unzip !f
cd !p
A line that starts in the first column is a description line. The key used to
activate the function is first and may be any single letter or number or one of
the function keys F1-F12. After a separating colon comes the description that
will appear in the menu when it is displayed.
Any line that starts with a space or tab is a command and will be executed
when the preceding description is chosen from the menu. It may contain the same
'!' substitutions as Associations with the addition of the following:
!t Substitutes for the name of a file and causes the command to be
executed once for each tagged file. If no files are tagged, !t is
just like !.
!l Substitutes for a list of all tagged files, space separated. The
command line length will not be allowed to grow beyond 1000
characters so if many files are tagged, some might not make it. If
this happens, the files that were not included remain tagged after
the command is executed.
!L Same as above but for the opposite panel.
Local User Menus
In addition to the main user menu, you may create additional special purpose
user menus by creating an fc.mnu file in directories other than the one
containing fc.exe. When you press F2 to activate the user menu, FC/2 first
looks in the current directory for a local user menu and displays it if found.
If no fc.mnu is found in the current directory the main user menu is displayed.
You can force the main user menu to show by pressing Shift-F2 instead of F2.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 12. Using the Mouse ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
You can use the mouse to perform the following operations:
o Select a file by clicking button 1 on a file name.
o Tag/Untag a file by clicking button 2 on it.
o Execute a file or change into a directory by double clicking button 1 on it.
o Scroll the files up or down by clicking button 1 on the line directly above
or below the files.
o Tag several files by holding down button 2 and moving the mouse. If, while
button 2 is pressed, the mouse is moved onto the line above or below the file
list, the panel will scroll, tagging all files that pass by.
o Select a function to perform by clicking on the function bar at the bottom of
the screen. Using button 2 Selects the Alt function. This is particularly
handy for changing drives (Alt-F1/F2).
o Activate the menu by clicking button 2 on the top line of the screen. The
easiest way to make a selection is to hold button 2 down after activating the
menu, "pull down" the menu you want and release button 2 when you have the
correct item highlighted. Clicking outside the menu area will dismiss the
menu.
o Whenever a dialog popup appears that contains push buttons that look like "[
OK ]", you may click on these with mouse button 1 to select the indicated
choice. Clicking button 2 will select the highlighted button.
o Whenever a dialog popup appears that requests a string input (eg Make
Directory), button 1 may be used to position the cursor on the line and
button 2 is equivalent to pressing ENTER. Clicking button 1 outside the
dialog box or on a Cancel button, cancels the operation.
o When the results of a 'File Find' operation are showing, double clicking
button 1 on a file name will cause FC/2 to jump to the directory the file is
in (like pressing ENTER). The window can be scrolled by clicking on the top
or bottom lines of the window.
o When using the internal file viewer, clicking button 1 in the top or bottom
third of the screen scrolls the screen up/down. Using button 2 pages up or
down.
o When using the internal editor, the mouse may be used to position the cursor
on the currently displayed page.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 13. Notes, Hints and Tips ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
o If you use 4os2 as your command interpreter, try to keep the contents of your
4start.cmd to a minimum as it is run every time you execute an external
command in FC/2.
o The fastest way to select a new drive for a panel using the mouse is to click
the right mouse button on F1/F2 in the help bar at the bottom of the screen.
o FC/2's tree information is kept up to date if you create and delete
directories using FC/2. The only exception to this is if a directory tree is
copied or moved between drives.
o If you attach 4DOS/4OS2 descriptions to your files, they will be preserved if
you copy or move them using FC/2.
o If you want your viewer or editor to run in a separate session (or want FC/2
to be able to operate while using a DOS viewer / editor) add the 'start'
keyword before the name of your viewer / editor.
o If you don't get the blue FC/2 icon when you install FC/2 onto your desktop,
you've probably lost the EAs attached to fc.exe. Use InfoZip's unzip when
unzipping the FC/2 distribution.
o People who really don't like the 3D shadow effect can turn it off by editing
fc.ini so that it contains a line:
shadows=off
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14. Contacting the Author ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
If you have any comments, questions, suggestions or bug reports, please feel
free to contact me by any of the following means:
Internet: brianh@kheldar.apana.org.au
Fidonet NetMail: Brian Havard @ 3:632/998
Users of PGP public key encryption may wish to use my PGP Public key
Snail Mail: Brian Havard
PO Box 152
Southland Centre 3192
Victoria
AUSTRALIA
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15. Release History ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
o 13/04/93 v0.1 Initial Release
o 28/04/93 v0.11
o 24/05/93 v0.12
o 07/06/93 v0.13
o 21/07/93 v0.14
o 12/08/93 v0.15
o 13/10/93 v0.16
o 17/01/94 v0.17
o 14/03/94 v1.00
o 25/03/94 v1.01
o 28/03/94 v1.02
o 19/04/94 v1.03
o 25/05/94 v1.1
o 03/06/94 v1.11
o 21/10/94 v1.2
o 28/11/94 v1.21
o 6/5/95 v1.3
o 25/05/95 v1.31
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.1. Version 1.00 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
New Features
o Popup of stored paths
o File Attribute change added.
o Directories can now be tagged for copy/move/delete operations.
o Online, context sensitive, text mode help.
o Auto save setup option.
o Will now work under Tshell.
Minor enhancements
o Added quote next key (Ctrl-Q) to internal editor.
o Added more '!' substitutions which can now be used in User Menu functions.
o Panel on/off status now saved in fc.ini
o Tree is now updated with information seen by reading file panels.
o The need to type "YES" to delete tree can be disabled. Replaced by OK, Cancel
choice.
o When a match is found in the internal viewer, it is now shown several lines
from the top of the screen.
o Unwrap in viewer.
o 'Save As' in editor.
o Create Object fills in 'Working directory'
o Create Object now works for tagged files.
o A value of 0 for the 'lines' configuration causes FC/2 to use the number of
lines already showing.
o File Find will now find hidden files if hidden option enabled.
o Repeated use of same command only entered into history once.
o Home and End now work on command line if panels are off.
Bug fixes
o Fixed trap when using Page-Down in tree popup.
o Should no longer trap on exiting editor.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.2. Version 1.01 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
New Features
o Added 'Edit Associations' to Commands menu.
o Support for 132 column modes in full screen sessions added.
Minor Enhancements
o 'All' option added to second type of tree delete confirmation allowing
quicker deletion of tagged directories.
o Command line colour now affects the output of executed commands.
o Pressing Ctrl now switches key bar as well as Alt.
o Added help for confirmations dialog.
o Home, End, Page Up and Page Down now work in History window.
Bug Fixes
o Odd lines in fc.mnu could cause the user menu to crash.
o If only right panel switched on at start up, it will be active.
o Tree will be kept up to date when moving tagged directories.
o Tick mark next to correct sort mode.
o History window would die if very long lines had been entered.
o Fixed bug that caused occasional random traps (well, one anyway).
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.3. Version 1.02 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Bug Fixes
o Major bug in memory management code introduced in V1.01 fixed.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.4. Version 1.03 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Minor Enhancements
o You no longer have to hold down Alt when seeking to a file name.
o 'help' configuration renamed 'manual' to prevent confusion. The default value
of this is now the full path of fc.inf (as long as it is in the same
directory as fc.exe).
o Added install.doc.
Bug Fixes
o If started with only one panel, use of Alt-F1/F2 to activate other panel
would cause incorrect display.
o Attempting to copy a file over itself handled better.
o Changing sort mode on a tree panel would make a mess of the tree.
o Under some circumstances, deleting a directory from a tree panel would fail
to remove the directory from the tree.
o Changing directory with tree or Ctrl-\ wrongly preserved tagging.
o Attempting to rename a directory containing an in-use file would cause an
incorrect error message.
o Internal viewer did not handle lines containing tabs properly when scrolling
horizontally.
o When moving tagged directories AND files, files went to the wrong directory.
o 4DOS descriptions were not getting removed for moved files.
o A command line length exceeding 512 characters would kill FC/2.
o Entering 'cd' and 'd:' type commands on the FC/2 command line was not
effective if both panels were hidden.
o Store/Recall paths did not work as expected if current panel was a tree.
o Fixed Ctrl-Q in internal editor.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.5. Version 1.1 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
New Features
o Cut & paste in editor.
o Insert key toggles Insert/Overstrike mode of editor.
o Internal viewer and editor can be started from the OS/2 command line using /v
and /e switches.
Minor Enhancements
o fc2tree.dat files are set to hidden.
o Home and End keys operate on the User Menu and the drive selection dialog.
o Ctrl-Left/Right in viewer scrolls horizontally 40 columns at a time.
o 'Tag Directories' option added to Options menu. When enabled, the Grey +/-/*
keys affect directory tagging.
o Mouse support for horizontal scrolling in viewer.
o Ctrl-Grey +/- shortcut keys for tag/untag all.
Bug Fixes
o File/Directory names containing '!' characters would confuse and sometimes
even kill FC/2 when expanding associations or user menu entries.
o Pressing a Ctrl/Shift/Alt key during a File Find would cause it to pause
until another key was pressed.
o When selecting a file from File Find that is in a root directory, the panel's
path was incorrectly set to 'D:' instead of 'D:\' which caused some strange
error messages when attempting to access files in the panel.
o In editor, Ctrl-Page Up/Down could cause incorrect display of the line the
cursor just left.
o In editor, attempting to save to a write protected disk did not report an
error.
o Attempting to view a tree with >4096 directories would cause FC/2 to die.
o Switching to hex view in 132 column mode would leave junk on the screen.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.6. Version 1.11 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Minor Enhancements
o Shift-F10 recalls last used menu position.
o Cursor switches to block when editor set to overstrike mode.
Bug Fixes
o Renaming a directory where only case changes would fail (broken in v1.10)
o In editor, newly typed text would vanish temporarily when selection was
deselected by moving the cursor.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.7. Version 1.2 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
New Features
o FC/2 internal editor now uses PM clipboard for easy exchange of text between
programs.
o Reversal of sort order selectable from Left/Right menu.
o Ctrl '-' changes to previously viewed directory.
o Progress indicator on file copy and move
o Editor now supports Ctrl-Del, Ctrl-Backspace for deleting words.
o Simple auto-indent added to editor.
o Calulation of a directory tree's disk usage.
o User menu commands can be executed for each tagged file.
o Local user menus
Minor Enhancements
o In Alt-F5 popup, pressing number key allows quick activation of a directory.
o Many errors now have a 'Retry' option.
o Page Up/Down in viewer move the view by one line less than the screen
allowing easier continuation of reading.
o Home, End, Page Up/Down operate on File Find results.
o When fullscreen, FC/2 can now use any number of lines supported by your video
card instead of the previous restriction of 25,28,43,50,60.
o Numlock now works properly for windowed sessions.
o Cut, paste and other functions now work with numeric keypad if Numlock is
off.
o "cd.." (no space in between) will now work on FC/2 command line.
o Shift-F1 quick key to view the manual.
o Most operations interuptable using ESC.
Bug Fixes
o In editor, when moving from the end of a long line to a shorter one, the
whole current line could be off the left of the screen.
o Ctrl-J died if directory was empty.
o Fixed running without PM (would die in v1.11)
o Pasting to a line >1024 chars would crash fc2.
o Stored Path wasn't central in 132 column mode.
o In viewer, when search finds text in a column > 80 it would not be correctly
highlighted.
o In editor, 'search again' (Shift-F7) wouldn't start from the correct column
if the view was displaced horizontally.
o Alt-224 wouldn't insert character 224.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.8. Version 1.21 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Minor Enhancements
o Copy progress indicator now shows overall progress when copying directories.
o 'Info' status of panel now saved in fc.ini allowing FC/2 to start up with an
Info panel showing.
Bug Fixes
o In editor, several mouse related problems fixed.
o In editor, a cut command when no text was marked would cause unpredictable
results.
o File name filtering didn't work properly on files starting with '.'
o Directory size calculation would fail after performing many counts.
o 'Drive' option of Left/Right menu missing.
o Copying a directory from a write protected disk would fail with an incorrect
'Disk write protected' error.
o Errors that occur during directory copy/move are handled better.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.9. Version 1.3 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
New Features
o Editor now remembers the edit position between edits.
o CD command used on FC/2's command line will intelligently find the named
directory using tree data.
o Open WPS window of current directory (with Ctrl-W or menu).
o Shadows on all popups (can be turned off if you really don't like it).
o Trees are now kept sorted by name.
o Modify case (upper/lower/mixed) of selected files.
o Configuration option to specify which file systems are case filtered. Was
fixed as FAT and NETWARE.
o Read only attributes are no longer copied from CDROM drives.
o Results of a File Find can be recalled using Shift-Alt-F7
o Exiting FC/2 can now leave the calling shell in FC/2's last current directory
with the help of fc2.cmd
o Shift-Insert (Paste) is now supported on the command line and in entry
fields.
o Whole contents of the command line or an entry field can be placed on the
clipboard using Ctrl-Insert.
o In a user menu entry, a !l can be used to insert the list if tagged files
into a command.
Minor Enhancements
o Directory size calculation shows path of the directory it's counting.
o Stopped flicker of status box during multi-file copy/move.
o Can now run without PM running or PM DLLs available (eg booting from floppy,
Warp's recovery command line).
o If using a code page other than 437, incorrect characters would be displayed.
o Ctrl-Up/Down does history recall, same as Ctrl-E/X
o File panels can read an unlimited number of files. Was previously limited to
4096 but a few people hit this.
o People with no Grey +/- can now use Ctrl-T/Y to tag and untag.
o Ctrl-A added as a shortcut key for File Attributes.
o Command line usage with 'fc /?'
o All case conversion is now code page aware.
o Ctrl-Del (delete word after cursor) now works on the command line.
Bug Fixes
o On unsorted panels, files/directories would wrongly become tagged.
o Associations could not contain an '=' symbol.
o EAs on directories were not being copied.
o An empty directory would not show its size as 0 after being counted.
o A directory's size was being calculated before being relocated on the same
drive which is not necessary as no copying is needed.
o 'Calculate Dir Size' and 'Edit Associations' had the same quick key on the
Command menu.
o If an error occurred during a tree copy operation, the error was being
reported once for every level deep the error occurred at.
o If an error occured during a file copy the partially copied destination file
was not being deleted.
o A "Directory collision" error was being incorrectly reported in a number of
situations.
o Editor: Using F3 SaveAs didn't store current line changes first.
o Editor: Shift-ENTER would mark text.
o Editor: Delete after shift delete would fail.
o When copying a directory tree from a non case preserving file system (eg FAT)
to a case preserving file system (eg HPFS) the files would end up ALL CAPS
(yuk!).
o Copying a directory into itself caused a mess. Now disallowed.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15.10. Version 1.31 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
New Features
o File Find now supports searching files for text and the option to search
either the current directory tree or the whole drive.
o View & edit now works directly on file find list.
Bug Fixes
o File name was not getting passed to external viewer/editor.
o Using Ctrl-NumPad-[0-9] when no panels were showing would appear to work but
didn't actually change the current directory for executed commands.
o Ctrl-\ didn't work if panels off.
o If the current directory was changed while the panels were off, the old
directory's contents would show when the panels were turned back on.
o F1-12 would not work on user menu.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ <hidden> ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Uuencoding is a method of converting binary files into text files. This allows
binary files to be sent as electronic mail messages. Although the process
originated on UNIX systems, ports of the uuencode/uudecode programs are
available on most platforms including OS/2.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ <hidden> ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
To add this PGP public key to your keyring, use the "Copy to file" option on
the "Services" menu. You must then edit the resulting text.tmp file to remove
the leading spaces before running 'pgp text.tmp'
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