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- Path: menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: mwm@contessa.palo-alto.ca.us (Mike Meyer)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: Proper Grammar II
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.applications
- Date: 13 Jun 1993 15:56:16 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 222
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1vfin0$sjh@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: mwm@contessa.palo-alto.ca.us (Mike Meyer)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: grammar, spelling, commercial
-
-
- PRODUCT REVIEW
-
- Proper Grammar II
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: A Postscript file generated by Final Copy II
- accompanies this review in a separate article. - Dan]
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- Proper Grammar II is a grammar checker, and much more. It helps you
- make sure that your text clearly and grammatically says what you want it to
- say.
-
- I ran Proper Grammar II on this document and corrected all the
- errors, except for those in titles and proper names. Word usage is what
- Proper Grammar II says it should be. The only place where I disagreed with
- Proper Grammar II is that it thinks "SoftWood" should be "softwood".
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: So everybody can see the effects of Proper
- Grammar, I have not changed any grammar or spelling in this
- review. What you see is what you get. - Dan]
-
-
- COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: SoftWood, Inc.
- Address: PO Box 50178
- Phoenix, AZ 85076
- USA
-
- Telephone: (602) 431-9151
- Fax: (602) 431-8361
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- $99.95 (US).
-
-
- SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS
-
- Proper Grammar II requires either two floppy disks or a hard disk, at
- least 1 MB of RAM, and AmigaDOS 1.3.3 or better.
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- None.
-
-
- MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
-
- I tested Proper Grammar II on an Amiga 3000 with 16 MB of RAM running
- AmigaDOS 3.
-
-
- REVIEW
-
- Proper Grammar II has most of the features of a simple editor. This
- isn't surprising -- most user actions that aren't simple commands are text
- edits. The only things in the menus that would be out of place in an Amiga
- text editor are the Project>Statistics and some Project>Preferences entries.
- The rest of the display, however, is not much like an editor's.
-
- The window has four areas:
-
- o Four or five lines of text for displaying grammatical errors.
-
- o Four or file lines of text for displaying a brief
- explanation of errors.
-
- o A row of buttons for accessing grammar functions.
-
- o The main text area for editing the working document.
-
- A typical session starts by Opening a document and clicking on the
- Check button. Proper Grammar II then scans the document one sentence at a
- time, looking for things that it thinks are confusing: grammatical errors,
- misspellings, commonly misused words, and so on. While it runs, the Check
- button becomes a Stop button. When Proper Grammar II finds an error, it
- highlights the erroneous text in the text window, and the Check button
- becomes a Continue button to click when you have dealt with that error. If
- you change the sentence with the error, Proper Grammar II rechecks it,
- otherwise, it continues from where it stopped.
-
- The text that appears for an error, and the available options,
- depends on the nature of the error. For most grammatical errors, there is a
- short explanation of the error in the middle window. For example, an
- incomplete sentence generates an explanation of what makes a complete
- sentence, and what things to check. You can usually request a detailed
- explanation. For an incomplete sentence, the detailed explanation includes
- cases where an incomplete sentence is correct.
-
- For spelling errors and some grammatical errors, Proper Grammar II
- suggests one or more replacements. Clicking on the Replace button replaces
- the highlighted text with the suggested replacement. Sometimes more
- suggestions are available at the click of a button, and you can select one
- of those to replace the text. For spelling errors, you can add the
- misspelled word to the user dictionary.
-
- For any error, you can ignore that error for the rest of this session
- or permanently. You can also use the Project>Preferences>Rule On/Off Status
- menu to bring up a list of the error classes that Proper Grammar II can
- detect, and disable or enable each class. If you have disabled a specific
- rule in a class, you can enable it from this requester as well.
- Unfortunately, you can't selectively disable rules from this requester, only
- classes of rules.
-
- The other menu entries in Project>Preferences set aspects of Proper
- Grammar II's behaviors that you won't change often:
-
- o The definition of a paragraph during ASCII I/O.
-
- o Whether Proper Grammar II starts on a workbench screen or a
- custom screen.
-
- o The kind of that custom screen Proper Grammar II starts on.
-
- o How sensitive Proper Grammar II is to certain kinds of
- errors.
-
- The Macros menu, the only menu other than the Project and Edit menu,
- is for ARexx macros. The Macros menu allows you to bring up a file requester
- to run macros, and to invoke ten macros named PGMacro_1 through PGMacro_10.
- Because these macros are available as the function keys F1 through F10
- respectively, the menu entries aren't very useful. However, the Proper
- Grammar II ARexx commands render this point moot. The ARexx commands allow
- you to juggle screens and windows, get text from Proper Grammar II, and
- insert text in the current project. There is no way to open a document from
- ARexx, or to save one, or to build macros to coordinate Proper Grammar II
- with other products.
-
-
- LIKES AND DISLIKES
-
- The major shortcoming of the product -- one that caused me to leave
- it on my shelf for years -- is that it doesn't work well with ASCII files.
- It insists on reformatting them, and doesn't provide any way to control that
- reformatting. You must either make every sentence a separate line, with no
- newlines in it, or reformat your document afterwards. This includes
- deleting extraneous spaces and dealing with lines that are much too long.
-
- Proper Grammar II insists on using fonts supplied by SoftWood, which
- make it look like a DTP package doing its best to display an outline font
- that will print nicely at 300 DPI. While this is acceptable in a DTP
- package, it isn't in a utility like Proper Grammar II. Because of this, I
- can't really use the program on my Workbench.
-
- Proper Grammar II does not use the 2.0 features when they are
- available. It can't open on a named public screen, it doesn't create a
- public screen, and it doesn't create any AppIcons.
-
- On the plus side, there is a great deal of flexibility in tailoring
- what Proper Grammar II considers an error. I found it quick to learn and
- use, and compliant with the Amiga User Interface Style Guide.
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION
-
- Proper Grammar II comes with an average manual. It guides you
- through the program for simple things. However, the documentation on the
- ARexx commands, like the ARexx commands themselves, is to brief to be useful.
- Nothing more than a list of commands, with a short -- and often ambiguous --
- description of what it does. There is no syntax or examples; you have to
- figure the commands out by trial and error.
-
- SoftWood chose to print the manual is brown on white rather than
- black on white. It's not a problem, but is a bit disconcerting.
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- The other similar products I've used are nearly 10 years old at this
- point. The UNIX diction command isn't nearly as thorough or flexible. I
- could coerce the CP/M software I used into doing most of the things that
- Proper Grammar II does, but it wasn't as easy to use.
-
-
- BUGS
-
- I didn't find bugs so much as missing features. Suggested changes
- have been sent to SoftWood, and I hope they will appear in the future.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- I didn't discuss any bugs with the company, but found SoftWood to be
- very prompt at upgrading Proper Grammar II to a version that worked with
- Final Copy II Release 2 when I needed that.
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- The warranty is the usual miserable warranty that makes software
- companies' lawyers happy, and users either laugh or cry. The software is
- what you get, they will replace the disks if they are bad, and nothing is
- SoftWood's fault.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- Proper Grammar II is a good product. It does what it claims to do,
- and makes doing it easy and fast. It is doesn't take full advantage of the
- communications and user customization features of the Amiga, but that
- doesn't affect the basic operation of the program. The only caveat is that
- you won't want to use Proper Grammar II if the majority of your work is
- ASCII text files.
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
-
- Copyright 1993 Mike W. Meyer, All Rights Reserved
-
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Send reviews to: amiga-reviews-submissions@math.uh.edu
- Request information: amiga-reviews-requests@math.uh.edu
- Moderator mail: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu
-