IMPORTANT: If you are new to MUSE, be sure to read the section named “IMPORTANT Information if You’re New to MUSE”. If you are updating from MUSE 1.01, be sure to read “IMPORTANT Information if You’re Updating from MUSE 1.01.” If you are updating from MUSE 1.00, be sure to read “IMPORTANT Information if You’re Updating from MUSE 1.00.” In any case, read through the TABLE OF CONTENTS to see the list of topics in this document.
Welcome to MUSE 1.1. This update contains many new features. It also fixes some problems you may have experienced with MUSE 1.00 or 1.01. These release notes contain information that was not available when the manuals went to press. For complete instructions about installing or updating MUSE, and for an explanation of new features in MUSE 1.1, please see MUSE QuickStart.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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IMPORTANT Information if You’re New to MUSE
IMPORTANT Information if You’re Updating from MUSE 1.01
IMPORTANT Information if You’re Updating from MUSE 1.00
GENERAL INFORMATION
- Query Builder
- Crosstab Formula dialog box
- Global Options
- Radius Rocket Users
- MUSE Preferences
- Using Scaling Calculations
- Page Setup and Print Dialog Boxes
- Printing Difficulties
IMPORT, LOAD, AND OPEN INFORMATION
- Data Access Manager (DAM)
- MUSE Import Log
- Auto Import Forms in System 6
- Using Commas in Dimension Member Names
- Using Numerics as Dimension Members
- Changing Category Text
- Excel, DIF, and DBF3 Files
- WKS Files
- Character Limit
- Reloading WorkBooks with Cleared Cells
DATABOOK INFORMATION
- Improving DataBook Access Over a Network
WORKBOOK INFORMATION
- Move Data to Labels
- Multiple-word WorkBook Formulas
- Sorting Data by Last Name
- Display of Multiple Data Items
- Displaying Units in Labels
CHART INFORMATION
- Setting Chart Defaults
- Attempting to Chart Dates
- Display of Double-Y Charts
- Display of 3D Charts
- Scaling in Charts
SCRIPT INFORMATION
- Picklists in Queries
DICTIONARY INFORMATION
- Dictionary Changes (see separate Dictionary Changes documents)
- Dictionary “Hot Keys”
- Units of Measure
- Standard Deviation and Variance Numbers
- Using Significant Digits
LANGUAGE INFORMATION
- All vs. Summation
- “Meaningful” Dimension Members
- Using Complex Conditional Formulas
- Using Calendar Units in Formulas
- Combining Summation with Respective
OTHER INFORMATION
- Extras File Changes
- Corrections to the Manuals
- Upcoming Features (see separate Upcoming Features document)
IMPORTANT INFORMATION IF YOU’RE NEW TO MUSE
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As a result of new features in MUSE 1.1, some of the pictures and information in MUSE Handbook and MUSE Reference are no longer accurate. For more information on new MUSE features, please see Chapter 3, “New Features,” in MUSE QuickStart. In particular, please be aware:
When you open MUSE 1.1, a Script window no longer appears; a Query Builder icon does appear; and the WorkBook that opens by default fills the screen in 10-row by 10-column format. In addition, when you create a new Script window, it initially appears at the bottom of the screen.
Tools and environment icons (Script, WorkBook, Chart, and Query Builder) that are unavailable appear dimmed in MUSE 1.1. Previously, the tools did not appear at all, while the environment icons appeared highlighted—even when they were unavailable.
The DataBook window now displays a zoom box in its upper right and does not display an “X” for deleting tables. When you zoom the DataBook window, a Delete option (among others) appears. Pictures in the MUSE manuals appear without this zoom box.
The Table window now offers a Report option. Pictures in the MUSE manuals appear without this option.
Due to a change in MUSE Settings defaults, results are sometimes different from those in MUSE 1.00. For more information, see “Using Significant Digits” later in this document.
The menu commands for creating Script window queries, WorkBooks, and charts have been changed to Create Query, Create WorkBook, and Create Chart, respectively.
The Resize dialog box for WorkBooks now reads “Resize all labels and cells”.
Double-clicking a table name in the DataBook window now displays the Table View window instead of creating a WorkBook template; therefore, step 2 on page 1-10 of MUSE Handbook should read, “Click Fruit and Pulp Table and click the WorkBook icon.”
The Data Items label in a WorkBook template now displays the Table name (or as much of the Table name as will fit).
Picklists have been greatly improved in MUSE 1.1: two new options (Respective and Apply Locally) appear in certain circumstances; you can now select all dimension members within a dimension by selecting “All <Dimension Name>” at the top of each dimension picklist; and you can select individual dimension members and data items by using standard Macintosh® selection techniques (click to select, Shift-click to append the selection range, and Command-click to append the selection discontiguously). For example, step 4 on page 1-12 of MUSE Handbook should read “Click 1986 and Shift-click 1990 to select all five years.” Similarly, steps 6 and 7 should indicate the standard click and Shift-click procedure. For more information on improved picklists in MUSE 1.1, see “Improved picklists in WorkBooks” and “Improved picklists in queries” in MUSE QuickStart, Chapter 3.
Several MUSE-specific options that formerly appeared in the Print dialog box now appear in the Page Setup dialog box. For example, “Fill Page With Chart” appears in the Page Setup dialog box. If you want to select (or deselect) this option, choose Page Setup from the File menu with your Chart window active. In addition, a checkbox for Print Preview now appears in the Print dialog box.
Since the exchange rates for MUSE 1.1 reflect close of business January 29, 1993 (as published in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal), results involving exchange rates are different from those in MUSE 1.00. For more information on exchange rates, see MUSE QuickStart, page 4-10.
The Load Data and the Import Data dialog boxes now offer two new buttons: New DB and Open DB. These buttons allow you to create a new DataBook and Open an existing DataBook, respectively.
The New Table dialog box now offers a Cancel button, allowing you to cancel a data load.
The Import Definition dialog box has been significantly improved. Please see MUSE QuickStart, Chapter 3 for more information.
The WorkBook Borders, Settings, and Defaults dialog boxes all appear differently than those pictured in MUSE Handbook.
The Chart menu commands, X Axis and Y Axis, now appear on submenus of the Axis Format, Axis Label Format, and Tick Label Format menu commands. These menu commands are essentially the same commands that used to appear on submenus of the X Axis and Y Axis menu commands. In addition, Z Axis appears on these same submenus when working with 3D chart.
In MUSE 1.00, building a query from a WorkBook created a query that could reproduce the original WorkBook—but often with its labels in different orientation. In MUSE 1.1, the order in which dimensions appear is the same. For example, the example query in MUSE Handbook, page 1-14.
Once again, for more information on new MUSE features, please see Chapter 3, “New Features,” in MUSE QuickStart.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION IF YOU’RE UPDATING FROM MUSE 1.01
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Charts saved with MUSE 1.1 cannot be opened with MUSE 1.01 or earlier. Please back up your charts before saving them with MUSE 1.1. If you distribute chart files to others, be sure that they are aware of this change. For more information on new MUSE features, please see Chapter 3, “New Features,” in MUSE QuickStart.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION IF YOU’RE UPDATING FROM MUSE 1.00
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CAUTION: DataBooks and dictionaries opened or created with MUSE 1.01 or later cannot be opened with MUSE 1.00. Please back up your DataBooks and dictionaries before opening them in MUSE 1.1. If you share DataBooks and dictionaries over a network, be sure that all users—DataBook owners in particular—are aware of this change.
Compact Pro 1.32, the program used to build the MUSE installers and updaters, does run in 32-bit mode. If you are running a computer in this configuration, there is no need to turn off 32-bit mode before installing or updating MUSE.
Charts saved with MUSE 1.1 cannot be opened with MUSE 1.01 or earlier. Please back up your charts before saving them with MUSE 1.1. If you distribute chart files to others, be sure that they are aware of this change.
For more information on new MUSE features, please see Chapter 3, “New Features,” in MUSE QuickStart.
GENERAL INFORMATION
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QUERY BUILDER
When adding definitions to the dictionary or to your DataBook, be sure that the Query Builder window is closed; otherwise, MUSE retrieves groups and formulas for each definition you add. When you re-open the Query Builder window, MUSE will then retrieve formulas and groups only once.
CROSSTAB FORMULA DIALOG BOX
MUSE evaluates dimension member or data item numbers (the numbers that represent dimension members and data items within the Crosstab Formula dialog box) enclosed within brackets [ ], but treats those enclosed within braces { } as literals. By enclosing data item numbers in braces (for example), you can instruct MUSE to compare categorized or linked textual data items. When using the Crosstab Builder, MUSE will enclose any categorized or linked data items in braces. This parallels the Paste vs. Paste Special behavior in WorkBook labels.
GLOBAL OPTIONS
While you can choose the period, comma, and Option-space characters for Number Grouping and Decimal Point symbols, MUSE works best with its defaults (comma for number grouping and period for decimal point). If you do choose other symbols, it is likely that some MUSE modules like Query Builder and Crosstab Builder will not interpret these symbols correctly and will therefore generate unwanted results. We suggest using these alternate settings as display options for finished data.
RADIUS ROCKET USERS
The Radius Rocket add-on card is incompatible with MUSE 1.1. We will fix this as soon as possible. If you use a Radius Rocket, please contact us so that we can ship you this fix as soon as possible.
MUSE PREFERENCES
Your System Folder contains a set of MUSE preferences. These are stored in your System Folder: Preferences: MUSE Folder.
• MUSE Extensions (folder)—stores extensions for XCMDs and System 7 inter-application files.
• MUSE Settings (file)—stores your default settings. Use the Set Default command from the Script, WorkBook, and Chart menus to create default settings. If you want to revert to the “original” defaults (those that MUSE sets the first time you launch it), quit MUSE, drag MUSE Settings out of this MUSE Folder, and re-open MUSE.
• MUSE Templates (folder)—stores import templates for MUSE that you create.
• MUSE Temporary (folder)—stores temporary files for MUSE, such as the PICT files that are created for animated charts.
USING SCALING CALCULATIONS
Use Scaling Calculations, an option in the Global Options dialog box, is now ON by default. In fact, updating to MUSE 1.1 from 1.00 will update your MUSE Settings file. When Use Scaling Calculations is ON (checked), large values appear with textual scalings. For example, $6,000,000 appears as “6 million dollars”.
PAGE SETUP AND PRINT DIALOG BOXES
The Page Setup and Print dialog boxes in System 7 are different from those in System 6. The MUSE manuals show the System 7 versions of each.
PRINTING DIFFICULTIES
There have been some problems printing high-percentage enlargements when also using large fonts. In scripts, keep smart page breaks on when printing to get optimal print layout in the output.
There have also been some problems printing animated charts from some Macintosh computers.
IMPORT, LOAD, AND OPEN INFORMATION
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DATA ACCESS MANAGER (DAM)
Data Access Manager (DAM) allows an application program like MUSE to communicate with databases or other data sources even if that application program knows nothing about the specific data source with which you want MUSE to communicate.
MUSE uses high-level DAM to access data using query documents (QDocs). This means that you can import data using a QDoc. You can create QDocs by using one of the popular third-party data query tools like ClearAccess™, GQL™, and DataPrism™.
To import (or auto import) data using QDocs,
1. Choose Import (or Auto Import) from the File menu.
2. Select the QDoc as your source file.
3. Specify a destination DataBook.
4. Click Import. A dialog box may appear in which you can specify a user, a password, edit your query, and confirm the QDoc.
5. Edit the QDoc as needed and click OK to confirm the QDoc. MUSE then passes the QDoc to DAM which in-turn accesses and retrieves the remote data. When it is finished, the MUSE Import Definition dialog box appears.
6. Continue your import as usual.
7. If you want to automatically import data using this QDoc in the future, be sure to save the logical template so that you only need to choose this logical template for subsequent auto imports.
MUSE IMPORT LOG
When you import data through the Auto Import menu command (or through an auto import form you’ve created through the Auto Import menu command), MUSE creates a file named “MUSE Import Log” that reports activity about your auto import. Specifically, this log indicates whether your import was successful, if any errors occurred, and—if so—where the import was canceled. After importing through auto import, open this text file from TeachText or another text/word processor to ensure that MUSE imported your data. In System 7, MUSE Import Log appears on the Desktop; in System 6, on the root level of your hard drive. MUSE adds entries to this log for each auto import.
AUTO IMPORT FORMS IN SYSTEM 6
In System 6, you cannot open an auto import form from the Finder if MUSE is already open. Instead, choose Auto Import from the File menu and open the form using the Auto Import Form Definition dialog box.
USING COMMAS IN DIMENSION MEMBER NAMES
MUSE 1.1 removes commas from numerics (data type of “number”) in labels when loading data from a WorkBook to a DataBook.
USING NUMERICS AS DIMENSION MEMBERS
If you are using numerics as dimension members, be sure to use a unique number unless you intend to link dimension members between tables.
CHANGING CATEGORY TEXT
When changing the text of categories, MUSE loses indexes. We recommend that you do not change category text, even when rebuilding DataBooks.
EXCEL, DIF, AND DBF3 FILES
You can open Excel, DIF, and DBF3 files as WorkBooks and load the WorkBook into a DataBook in MUSE version 1.1; in effect, importing a DBF3 file. MUSE loses the last line of a DBF3 file, however, if you directly import them into DataBooks in MUSE version 1.1.
WKS FILES
If you choose Save All from the Windows menu and, through the order MUSE presents windows for you to save, you save—in sequence—a WorkBook in WKS format, a chart in PICT format, and a WorkBook in WKS format, MUSE will quit. To avoid this behavior when using the Save All command, save all windows in MUSE format first and then save selected files in the non-MUSE formats you want.
CHARACTER LIMIT
There is a limit of 999 characters per cell in a WorkBook, per query in a script, and per data item value in DataBooks.
RELOADING WORKBOOKS WITH CLEARED CELLS
If you reload a WorkBook in which you have cleared cells, MUSE does not update the DataBook values to “blank”, as it should.
DATABOOK INFORMATION
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IMPROVING DATABOOK ACCESS OVER A NETWORK
MUSE 1.1 includes a DataBook Cache feature that allows faster access to DataBooks over a network. To set the DataBook Cache, choose Global Options from the Special menu and change the Cache percentage. The DataBook cache is set to 10% by default. You can set a maximum cache to the difference between available MUSE memory and the MUSE application size (plus 350K):
Maximum Cache = Available MUSE Memory – (MUSE Application Size + 350K)
For example, on an 8Mb Macintosh running System 7, you can set an approximate 25% cache (718K of 2800K). Since MUSE requires a minimum DataBook cache, setting a cache of 0% actually yields a 50K cache.
WORKBOOK INFORMATION
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MOVE DATA TO LABELS
The menu command, Move Data to Labels, cuts your one- or two-column or row selection and pastes each cell as a literal into corresponding row or column labels. In effect, Move Data to Labels automates a one- or two-column or row Cut–and–Paste Special.
MULTIPLE-WORD WORKBOOK FORMULAS
Multiple-word formulas in WorkBook labels where at least a single word—but not all of those words—is a DataBook or dictionary entry (such as DATE OF START), work only if the DataBook containing the complete formula is open or if you surround the multiple-word component with quotation marks. For example, even with the Boston DataBook open and a DATE OF START column, adding TODAY – DATE OF START as a separate column label will result in “no table” appearing for the label’s associated data points...unless you enter the formula with quotation marks around DATE OF START.
SORTING DATA BY LAST NAME
Since sorting by last name only operates on dictionary entries (such as dimension members, category items, and categories), it is dimmed when you select data of other types.
DISPLAY OF MULTIPLE DATA ITEMS
When multiple data items appear in one label, they should be enclosed by parentheses to produce descriptive text when intersecting maximum, minimum, or mode. For example, “Land Area for Top Country” produces a complete reply (land area data and descriptive text indicating the top country); however, “Land Area per Population for Top Country” produces only the data (there is no descriptive text indicating the top countries). Since formulas imply parentheses “(Land Area per Population) for Top Country” or “LAP for Top Country” when LAP is defined as “Land Area per Population” will produce descriptive text indicating the top country.
DISPLAYING UNITS IN LABELS
For best results, if your WorkBook shows units in labels, show units in cells before opening and referring to data in any additional DataBooks.
CHART INFORMATION
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SETTING CHART DEFAULTS
Unlike setting defaults for Script and WorkBook windows, when you choose Set Default from the Chart menu or press Command-D, MUSE does not display a dialog box for you to control. Instead, your current chart settings become the defaults.
ATTEMPTING TO CHART DATES
Since the MUSE dictionary does not store dates as real numbers, attempting to chart dates produces a blank chart. The ability to chart dates will be offered in future versions of MUSE.
DISPLAY OF DOUBLE-Y CHARTS
When charting data with two types of units (dollars and gallons for example) and your selection encompasses only one dimension member in any one dimension, clicking Double-Y in the alert box that appears yields a Regular chart.
DISPLAY OF 3D CHARTS
The 3D Colors command from the Chart menu works when your Monitors control panel is set to 256 colors (or grayscales). It does not affect 3D chart colors when your Monitors control panel is set to 16 or fewer colors (or grayscales).
SCALING IN CHARTS
When you create a chart from a WorkBook in which one or more cells contain percents with scaling (such as .03% thousandths), the chart values are off by that scaling and the axis label displays percent only. We recommend that you remove scaling on percent cells by converting the scaling to none before charting.
SCRIPT INFORMATION
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PICKLISTS IN QUERIES
Respective and Apply Locally are not available in query picklists.
DICTIONARY INFORMATION
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DICTIONARY CHANGES
See the separate Dictionary Changes documents on your Extras disk.
DICTIONARY “HOT KEYS”
You can now simply type the first character or characters of a language element and MUSE will immediately scroll to the language element whose first character or characters are an exact match or the next closest to those you type. For example, when viewing units of measure, typing the letter “c” would scroll the language element list to “cables”; typing “bw” would also scroll the language element list to “cables” since these characters are after “bu” (for “bushels”) alphabetically.
UNITS OF MEASURE
The Dictionary window Units button now reads “Units of Measure”.
STANDARD DEVIATION AND VARIANCE
The definitions of the standard deviation and variance operators have been changed, from the standard statistical definitions to sample-based estimates. The estimates are designed to work faster for large data sets, but are less accurate for small data sets. The error is about 10% for data sets of less than 10 items, about 2% for less than 35 items, and decreasing from there.
USING SIGNIFICANT DIGITS
Significant digit settings when used with complex functions (such as standard deviation) may round the results more than generally expected. Scientists will appreciate the feature that many of us will feel generates errors of imprecision.
LANGUAGE INFORMATION
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ALL VS. SUMMATION
To avoid confusion between viewing all dimension members and adding together all of the values for a particular dimension, the word “all” is no longer a synonym for “summation”. In queries where you may have used the word “all” to imply “summation, use the word “sum” (a synonym for “summation”) instead.
“MEANINGFUL” DIMENSION MEMBERS
Although you can use numerics as dimension members, we strongly recommend that you do not use anything (such as numerics, dates, times, and so on) that may already have meaning to MUSE. Instead, prefix each dimension member with a letter that will differentiate it from an existing dictionary or DataBook entry. For example, in the Boston DataBook, Personnel Table, each employee number begins with P. In this way, you will not run the risk of MUSE confusing a dimension member with another dictionary entry.
USING COMPLEX CONDITIONAL FORMULAS
You can now use complex conditional formulas. For example, if you wanted to create a formula for which MUSE displays different information for different products, create an assignment query that defines your formula. Use this format: “My Formula” is “if (entry text for current fruits = ““apple””) then Juice Sales otherwise Pulp Sales”! You may then use this formula in queries. To see that the formula is indeed working, create a query that compares the results of your formula with the original values. For example, “My Formula, Juice Sales, Pulp Sales for fruits for United States for 1987 through 1989?” It is important that you structure your query so that the dimension for which you created the conditional formula follows the formula itself. You can only use one of these per query.
USING CALENDAR UNITS IN FORMULAS
If you created any formulas in MUSE 1.00 that referred to units that have been changed to “calendar units” (see “Changed Units” in the Dictionary Changes documents on your Extras disk), you must change these formulas to reflect the new unit names to ensure correct replies.
COMBINING SUMMATION AND RESPECTIVE
Combining “summation” and “respective” in a query is unnecessary since summation is the result of adding all the elements in a list or set.
OTHER INFORMATION
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EXTRAS FILE CHANGES
All DataBooks from the Extras disk were re-created in MUSE 1.1 to save disk space and to save you from having to convert these files.
Annual Currency Data: Added 1991–1992 and changed exchange rates to reflect those published in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal at year-end.
Boston DataBook: corrected spelling error “Pensecola” [Pensacola] in Personnel Table, Location.
Science DataBook: corrected data errors in Major Ocean Currents (Transport) and Planetary Info (Mean Orbital Velocity and Equatorial Escape Velocity) tables, tables now appear alphabetically, and several table names have been changed:
“Amino Acid Table” is now “Amino Acid Info”
“Asteroid Data” is now “Asteroid Info”
“Data on Elements” is now “Atomic Elements”
“Planetary Data” is now “Planetary Info”
“Star Table” is now “Star Info”
World DataBook: The Currencies table now includes more exchange rate units and years. In MUSE 1.01, we added 1991 to the Currencies table, changed Table name to Currencies ’86–91, corrected typographical error “East German” [East Germany], changed “Korea” to the more specific “South Korea”, corrected typographical error “wons” to “won”, alphabetized East Germany, European Currency Unit, Germany, South Korea, and West Germany.
World Currencies Folder: Contains 1982 to present year-end exchange rates as published in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal.
World Facts DataBook: 1992 data was not available when 1.1 shipped.
ClearAccess™ Samples: Another folder “For DAL Server” is included in addition to “For ORACLE for Macintosh” and “Create Demo Tables MUSE” and “DROP Demo Tables MUSE” have been updated to work with ClearAccess 1.4. Please see “! Read me! TEACHTEXT” in the ClearAccess™ Samples folder and MUSE QuickStart, page 4-16 for more information.
CORRECTIONS TO THE MANUALS
MUSE QuickStart, Page 2-5: After you locate and select your registered copy of MUSE and click Open, a dialog box appears indicating that MUSE 1.1 has retrieved your previous registration information. When you click OK to this dialog box, the MUSE startup screen appears with your registration information in its lower-left corner.
MUSE QuickStart, Page 3-24: Since the Crosstab Builder pop-up menu now reads “Average” instead of “Mean”, step 4 should read, “Click Salary in the WorkBook Cells list and, in the pop-up menu that appears, choose Average.”
MUSE QuickStart, Page 3-46: Clicking the Done button dismisses the Auto Import Form Definition dialog box, but DOES NOT import data. If you have not saved your current settings, MUSE displays a dialog box asking if you want to save your auto import form. Once you do save an auto import form, you can use it for automatically importing data.
MUSE QuickStart, Page 3-67: Using QDocs, you can import data into MUSE. You cannot open it into a WorkBook. Therefore, QDocs appear in the “Select a file to import” dialog and not in the standard Open dialog box.
MUSE Tutorial, Pages P-10 and 1-5: The button in the center of the Query Builder window should read “Formula”.
MUSE Tutorial, Pages 1-16: After completing step 2, MUSE creates a query that reads “Juice Sales, Pulp Sales for Countries for 1990 for Apple, Orange”. In addition, the query immediately preceding it is the one you typed in on page 1-10, “What were Juice Sales, Pulp Sales for Countries for 1990 for Apple, Orange?”.
MUSE Tutorial, Pages 2-8 and 2-14: When the WorkBook setting Auto Evaluation is on (or when it is off and you recalculate a WorkBook), MUSE displays “empty list” for each cell whose intersection no longer defines a value.
MUSE Tutorial, Pages 5-14: If only one DataBook is open, MUSE does not display the “Attach script to” dialog box.
MUSE Handbook, Page 1-10: The Resize Shortcut sidebar should read “You can resize WorkBook cells ‘to fit text,’ by pressing Command-Shift-R.”
MUSE Handbook, Page 4-3: The query “Juice Sales for the United States for apples for 1990?” should be “Juice Sales for the United States for Apples for 1989?”. The query itself produces a legitimate reply in MUSE, but the corresponding picture on page 4-3 doesn’t match.
MUSE Handbook, Page 9-13: The description for Expand Single Column indicates more information is available under “Printing a region of a window” later in the chapter. There is no further information for Expand Single Column.
MUSE Reference, 1-17 (second bullet): “Specify time in the format H(H):M(M)(:S.SS))” should be “Specify time in the format H(H):M(M)(:S(S))” and its associated examples would not display fractions of seconds.
MUSE Reference, 1-18 (Date and time notations, second sentence) “MUSE can display the time in one of the following formats:” should be “You can input time in one of the following formats:” MUSE can display the time in one of the following formats: HH:MM:SS (12-hour clock) or HH:MM:SS (24-hour clock).
MUSE Reference, 8-13 (heading): “Solar time and lunar time” should be “Solar time and calendar time”.
MUSE Reference, 5-23: The query “Juice sales, pulp sales for apples for USA for fiscal years, total” should be “Juice sales, pulp sales for fruits for USA for fiscal years, total”. The query itself produces a legitimate reply in MUSE, but the corresponding picture on page 5-23 doesn’t match.
MUSE Reference, C-9: (Number 52) “item_name” should be “data_item”
MUSE Reference, C-10: (Number 64) “Data_item” should be “Data item”
MUSE Reference, E-3 (fifth message): The example of “sine, 7” should be “sine”.
MUSE Reference, E-4 (second message): In the example, the words “not in dictionary” indicated any text that is not found in the dictionary.
MUSE Reference, E-6 (sixth message): The example of “[1:number element]” is “4+5” should be “[1:classes data items]” is “[1] text” OR “[1:classes | data items]” is “[1] text”.