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- README.TXT: QUICK START AND INSTALLATION
-
- SMILERSHELL for Windows 3.1
- SMILERSHELL/95 for Windows 95 and Windows NT
-
- QUICK START / HINTS AND TRICKS
-
- Welcome to the ultimate command line and control center for Windows 3.1,
- Windows95, and Windows NT! Windows is great, but sometimes it can be
- awkward. Getting around in Program Manager, File Manager, or Explorer to
- launch an application isn't always easy. Even the Start menu can be tedious.
- Finding files is difficult at best. There's no good way to keep an eye on
- important systemwide resources. And even when you know where all the pieces
- are... wouldn't it sometimes be faster and easier to just drag-and-drop the
- names of a program and its parameter files into one place to build a command,
- then submit it? -- but how?
-
- That's what SmilerShell is for.
-
- SmilerShell is a compact yet powerful Windows control center that takes NO
- space on your desktop. Until you need it, SmilerShell is just a tiny button
- that hops into the titlebar of whichever app you're working in. Right-click
- the button to see your configurable "Apps" list and launch a new program, or
- switch to a currently-running task. Or left-click the button to reveal the
- ultimate Windows command line, which supportspipes, redirection, and internal
- DOS commands (and of course runs Windows programs too). Of course it
- supports long filenames in Win95 and NT. SmilerShell has the best command
- line you've ever seen, as if the plain-vanilla DOS prompt was enhanced by
- lots of handy utilities.
-
- Here's how to get the most out of SmilerShell.
-
- INSTANT INSTALL: You can install automatically, using the enclosed installer.
- Simply run install.exe from Windows, Win95, or NT using Explorer, File
- Manager, the Run item on the Start menu, or in whatever other convenient way
- you choose. Give it the directory to put SmilerShell's files into, and the
- group name for the SmilerShell icons (defaults are suggested). It'll do the
- rest. The installer will make no changes to system files. This makes it
- easy to uninstall, should you decide to do so.
-
- PRESS THE BUTTON: SmilerShell's activation button hops into the title bar of
- whichever application is currently active. Right-click the button and the
- Apps menu appears, ready for you to launch one of your listed apps or switch
- to a currently-running program. Or left-click the button to reveal the
- commandline window. Then later, hit the SmilerShell menubar's "Hide!" item
- and the commandline window vanishes again.
-
- BUTTON EXCEPTIONS: Have a non-standard Windows application with an unusual
- titlebar setup? Use the Button Exceptions menu item to tell SmilerShell
- where in that window you'd prefer the button to go.
-
- BUTTON OFFSET: If you have another utility that uses every active app's
- titlebar, tell SmilerShell how to move its button out of the way by setting
- up a Button Offset.
-
- FAVORITE APPLICATIONS: List your favorite applications on the Apps menu.
- Then just click on one to either select its name into the command line, or
- run it straight off (you can set it up either way). The Apps menu also lists
- all currently-running programs. Click on one to switch to it.
-
- BUILD YOUR OWN COMMANDS: You can list all sorts of things on the Apps menu.
- All Windows or DOS commands and programs, of course. But also SmilerShell
- aliases, multiple commands on one line, DOS internal commands, pipes and
- redirection. Your commands can have parameters, too. Want to have a special
- command to start your spreadsheet program, pre-loaded with specific data,
- from anywhere in your system, with one click? Here's how to do it!
-
- COMMAND HISTORY AND SEARCH: Every time you run a command from the
- commandline, it is saved. To find a previous command of interest, type the
- first letter or two of that command, then press the up-arrow (search back) or
- down-arrow (search forward) key. The last command is connected to the first,
- so you can search in either direction. Arrows on a blank line show all
- commands in order. If you've checked Save State in the Settings dialog, all
- the commands you gave this time will be in the command history when you start
- next time, handy for searching. To see the full command history list, click
- the Command History button, or type HISTORY on the commandline. The full
- history list is also available from the File menu.
-
- COMMAND LINE EDITOR: A retrieved previous command, or anything else you type,
- can be edited to suit. Think of SmilerShell as a one-line word processor.
- It supports insert mode, overtype mode, and clipboard cut/paste.
-
- ALIASES: When you press Enter, the first word of the command is compared to
- the alias list. If it matches, the alias is substituted for that first word.
- You can skip the alias testing by starting the command with an equals sign.
- You can also hang aliases off the function keys F2 through F12; hit the key
- and the command runs. Both kinds of aliases are set up in the Options menu's
- Settings dialog, or from the commandline with the ALIAS and UNALIAS commands.
- A full alias list is also available on the File menu.
-
- RUNTIME PARAMETERS IN ALIASES: Runtime parameters (%1, %2, etc.) make it
- easier to tell aliases what to do when you run them. And if you alias
- multiple commands on one line, the alias acts almost like a batch file, all
- within SmilerShell!
-
- PERSONALIZE: You can set the command line's font and colors any way you like.
-
- HELP: Of course there's full Windows Help. But in addition, you can use the
- Popup Hints (Alt+F1) to get tips on interesting ways to use SmilerShell.
- Popup Hints are especially handy for new users.
-
- ALTERNATE COMMAND PROCESSORS: Do you use 4DOS or NDOS? Tell SmilerShell to
- recognize 4DOS/NDOS commands, and set SmilerShell to use the 4DOS/NDOS
- command processor instead of plain old COMMAND.COM. It's in the Settings
- dialog.
-
- GET SMALL: SmilerShell has a very small window, but you can make it even
- smaller. Use the Options menu to get rid of the menu and title bar. Or type
- Alt+M to toggle the menu, Alt+L to toggle the title bar. Then mouse
- SmilerShell as small as you like. It'll go smaller than an icon!
-
- QUICK DIRECTORY CHANGE: Type DC and the first few letters of the directory
- you want to be in. If it's unambiguous, boom, you're there, otherwise a list
- box pops up with the first possible match highlighted. If you haven't used
- DC yet, you'll be asked for permission to scan the drives listed in the
- Options menu's Settings dialog. If you scan more than one drive, DC can
- change drive as well as directory to get you where you want to go.
-
- SMILERSHELL NEVER FORGETS: Check a box in the Settings dialog and SmilerShell
- will start up next time in the same directory, same screen position, and with
- the same settings, as when you shut it down this time.
-
- DOS IN A WINDOW: Do you prefer to have DOS commands run fullscreen or in a
- window? Toggle this on the fly with the DOS In Window menu item. Or to run
- one command as if DOS In Window is set to the opposite of its current value,
- start that command with a right-bracket (for example >dir).
-
- INACTIVES STAY VISIBLE: After you run a DOS command, do you want the
- command's inactive window to stick around, or immediately vanish? Toggle
- this flag, called Inactives Stay Visible, from the Options menu. Or to run
- one command as if Inactives Stay Visible is set to the opposite of its
- current value, start that command with an asterisk (for example *dir).
-
- REMOVE INACTIVES: Too many inactive windows cluttering your screen? Get rid
- of 'em with this Edit menu item, or just type Alt+R from the keyboard.
-
- DATE AND TIME: Toggle the titlebar date/time clock from the Options menu, or
- just type Alt+C. Prefer 12-hour or 24-hour time? Various date formats? Set
- it the way you like it with the Options menu's Settings dialog.
-
- ALARM CLOCK AND REMINDER: Use the built-in ALARM command to set the alarm
- clock. You can even give it a message to display when the alarm goes off.
-
- WORK WITH FILES: The built-in command SHOW is often a useful way to work with
- files, since SHOW's file list lets you click on a filename to select it into
- the command line.
-
- COMMAND COMPLETION: Type the first few letters of a command name, with
- wildcard characters (* and ?) if you like. Then hit the Tab key. SmilerShell
- will search your PATH for any commands that match. It'll even find matching
- files with runnable File Association extensions.
-
- FIND FILES: Use the Find File item on the File menu, or the built-in 'find'
- command to search for files by name or contents, anywhere in your system. It
- accepts wildcards and can look for files containing specific data. When you
- find the file you want, you can go to its directory or fetch its full name
- into the commandline.
-
- FILE ASSOCIATIONS: With File Associations simply type in the filename without
- the program name, and quite often SmilerShell will know which program to run.
- For example give "FILENAME.TXT" and SmilerShell knows to run Notepad on this
- file. This works very nicely with SHOW or FIND: use SHOW or FIND to pick a
- file, then press Enter to run the proper program with that file.
-
- DRAG AND DROP: SmilerShell supports "drag and drop," so you can drop files
- onto its window from File Manager or any other drag-and-drop server. The
- filenames will be added at the end of the current command line.
-
- CURRENT DRIVE/DIRECTORY IN THE TITLE BAR: Toggle this from the Options menu,
- or just type Alt+D.
-
- SYSTEM RESOURCES: Toggle the System Resources display onto the menu bar from
- the Options menu, or just type Alt+S, to see a real-time running report of
- your available Windows memory and resources. If you toggle off the menu, the
- resources report will appear in the command line. Don't worry, nothing you
- type will be overwritten by the resources report! Just type, your text will
- reappear exactly as you left it.
-
- INSERT OR OVERTYPE MODE: Toggle this from the Options menu, or just type
- Alt+O. In overtype mode a flag appears in the title bar.
-
- TOPMOST WINDOW: Make SmilerShell a "topmost" window from the Options menu, or
- just type Alt+T. That way, it's always visible and ready for use, even when
- you're working in another window.
-
- GET RID OF THE MENU: Hit Alt+M to make SmilerShell even smaller. Hit Alt+M
- again to bring the menu back, or use the Show SmilerShell Menu item on the
- System menu (the dash thing in the upper left corner).
-
- SAVE YOUR STACK: You can save the current command stack to a file and reload
- it automatically at startup, or at any other time. This gives you a
- preloaded batch of commands you can search on. The startup loading is set up
- in the Settings dialog.
-
- KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS: SmilerShell has a lot of keyboard shortcuts that can
- speed things up quite a bit.
-
- These SmilerShell commands work immediately, without going through a menu.
-
- Alt+C Date/time clock in titlebar
- Alt+S System Resources report in menubar
- Alt+D Current directory in titlebar
- Alt+O Overtype/insert mode
- Alt+T Topmost window
- Alt+L Show/hide titlebar
- Alt+M Show/hide menubar
- Alt+I Inactive windows stay visible
- Alt+W DOS commands windowed/fullscreen
- Alt+F1 Popup Hints
- Tab Command Completion: find all matching commands on the PATH
-
- You can display any menu, or use any menu item, from the keyboard. To
- display a menu press its Alt key combination. When in a menu, press
- any item's underlined key to run that item.
-
- Alt+F File menu
- Alt+E Edit menu
- Alt+N Options menu
- Alt+A Favorite Apps menu
- Alt+H Hide the commandline window
- Alt+P Help menu
-
- These standard Windows commands are available in SmilerShell:
-
- F1 Help
- ALT+F4 Exit
- Alt+Bksp Undo last action
- Ctrl+Z Undo last action
- Shift+Del Cut selected text, send to the Clipboard
- Ctrl+X Cut selected text, send to the Clipboard
- Ctrl+Ins Copy selected text, send to the Clipboard
- Ctrl+C Copy selected text, send to the Clipboard
- Shift+Ins Paste contents of Clipboard into commandline
- Ctrl+V Paste contents of Clipboard into commandline
- Del Clear selected text
- Esc Clear entire commandline
- Ctrl+Esc Show Start menu (Win95) or Task Manager (Win 3.1)
-
-
-
- WHY IS THIS A SHELL?
-
- The word "shell" is sometimes used for a wrapper that surrounds other
- applications and hides them. SmilerShell does that. You can set up its Apps
- menu to run anything you want, quickly and easily, from anywhere. No muss,
- no fuss.
-
- But SmilerShell also does the opposite of that. SmilerShell's commandline
- lets you "shell out," making all the power of the command line available from
- an environment in which that power is not otherwise accessible.
-
- One word, two meanings. Faster, easier, more powerful. That's what
- SmilerShell is, and that's why it's a shell.
-
-
-
- INSTALLING SMILERSHELL
-
- SmilerShell includes the following files which are installed to the
- directory you choose:
-
- smishell.exe the SmilerShell program
- smishell.hlp the documentation, in Windows help file format
- readme.txt overview and installation instructions
- sample.stk sample command stack file
- whatsnew.txt new features and revision history
- orderfrm.wri SmilerShell's order form / invoice
- dealers.txt toll-free numbers and SmilerShell vendors worldwide
-
- SmilerShell also comes with these files:
-
- install.exe automated SmilerShell installer
- file_id.diz formatted description file, for BBS uploads
- vendinfo.diz formatted description file for software vendors
- vendor.txt text description file for software vendors
-
- In the Windows 3.1 version of SmilerShell, this file is installed to the
- Windows system directory if not there already:
-
- ctl3dv2.dll Microsoft-supplied system file which gives a
- 3-D look to SmilerShell and many other programs
-
- You can install SmilerShell automatically, using the enclosed auto-installer.
- To do this, simply run install.exe from within Windows. You can run it using
- File Manager, or the Run item on the Start menu or Program Manager's File
- menu, or in whatever other convenient way you choose. Give it the directory
- to put SmilerShell's files into, and the Program Manager group name for the
- SmilerShell icons (appropriate defaults are suggested). It'll do the rest.
- The installer will make no changes to your system set-up or to any systemwide
- files. It copies the SmilerShell files to the directory you specify, and puts
- its icons in the Program Manager group you choose. The Windows 3.1
- SmilerShell installer puts Microsoft's ctl3dv2.dll into your Windows system
- directory if not already there (many programs use this Microsoft systemwide
- tool). The SmilerShell program generates the file smishell.pif smishell.pif
- in your Windows directory so it can submit DOS commands without impact on any
- system files.
-
- Optionally, you can set up an initialization file. But if you start
- SmilerShell without an initialization file, you'll be asked if you'd like
- SmilerShell to create one and fill it with reasonable values. You can view
- and change these values with the Settings dialog.
-
- Optionally, give a non-default location for the initialization file. Perhaps
- you're on a network, and want to install SmilerShell on a server, but let
- everyone have their own local setup. See the section The Initialization File
- in the documentation.
-
- Optionally, you can create a command stack file, having a list of commands
- that you want loaded into SmilerShell at startup. See the section Command
- Stack Files in the documentation.
-
-
-
- UNINSTALLING SMILERSHELL
-
- To uninstall SmilerShell, simply delete its files from the directory you
- chose when installing it, and remove smishell.pif from your Windows
- directory. For the Windows 3.1 version only, remove ctl3dv2.dll from your
- Windows system directory if it wasn't there before installing SmilerShell
- (note, however, that many programs use this Microsoft systemwide tool).
-
-
-
- HOW TO ORDER SMILERSHELL OR SMILERSHELL/95
-
- You are welcome to test the fully-functional evaluation version of SmilerShell
- or SmilerShell/95 for 30 days. The evaluation version of SmilerShell contains
- all the features found in the actual product. You can try the it under real-
- world working conditions on your own system, to see if it meets your needs.
- After the trial period, you must either purchase SmilerShell or remove it from
- your system.
-
- To order, send $29.95 (plus $5 for shipping) to:
-
- Bardon Data Systems
- 1023 Key Route Blvd.
- Albany, CA 94706
-
- Or send $49.95 (plus $5 for shipping) for both SmilerShell and SmilerShell/95.
- Outside North America please add an additional $6 for overseas shipping
- charges.
-
- You can order SmilerShell through Bardon by mail or phone, or through our
- toll-free telephone order-taking service (800) 242-4775 (weekdays 7 to 6
- Central time), or on CompuServe, or through distributors worldwide. Details
- and addresses are in the file DEALERS.TXT.
-
- If ordering through Bardon, you can print and mail orderfrm.wri, the order
- form that came with this package. It's in Windows Write format. With a
- MasterCard or Visa you can order by phone, at (510) 526-8470, in which case
- you'll be given your registration number immediately so you can get rid of
- those reminder screens right away. Or simply mail in your card number and
- expiration date.
-
- Registered users get a registration number that will turn off the reminder
- screens, a printed manual, support, update notices, and a disk with the most
- recent version.
-
- Registered users also get a free copy of Reverend Lowell's Treasury of Humor,
- Volume 1: "He Who Laughs, Lasts!" Reverend Lowell's Treasury contains
- thousands of humorous anecdotes collected by Reverend Lowell during his long
- career as an ordained minister. After thirty years of public speaking from
- the pulpit, the podium, and on television, he has amassed over 200,000 items,
- and Reverend Lowell's Treasury represents the "cream of the crop." These are
- Reverend Lowell's favorite funny stories, revealing quotes, interesting
- anecdotes, and zingy one-liners. And there's nothing that would be unsuitable
- in any public setting. There are plenty of items to choose from. Each volume
- of the Treasury covers a different topic, and contains at least as many items
- as you'd find in a full-size book. Many are illustrated in color or
- black-and-white. You can search for any item by keyword or first line. Or
- simply browse through every item page by page.
-
- In addition, registered users get these extra FREE bonuses: Two more handy
- Bardon programs (WHATSNEW lists files not yet backed up, or directories
- containing such files; PR and PRFILTER format output for printing,
- and add an informative header), discount on PsL software-by-mail (up to 2/3
- off!), free CompuServe startup kit, and whatever other goodies will fit on
- the disk.
-
-
-
- SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
-
- Requires Microsoft Windows 95 or Windows NT.
-
-
-
- CONTACT INFORMATION
-
- Bardon Data Systems
- 1023 Key Route Boulevard
- Albany, CA USA 94706-2321
- (510) 526-8470
-
-