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-
-
- ToolsX and ToolsXConfig Documentation
-
- by Steve Tibbett
-
- Version 1.00
-
-
-
- NOTICE
-
- ToolsX and ToolsXConfig (TX and TXC from now on) are programs meant
- for use under Kickstart 2.0 and are totally useless under 1.3.
-
-
- OVERVIEW
-
- These two programs let you add items to the 2.0 Workbench TOOLS menu.
- The items you add to the menu can also have a Hotkey associated with
- them, provided the commodities library is available. (It normally is
- under 2.0 unless you erase it).
-
- ToolsX is meant to be put in your WBStartup drawer and forgotten. It
- will read the environment variable that ToolsXConfig creates,
- and adds the items to the Tools menu. It then goes to sleep waiting
- for either menu selections, or hotkeys to be hit.
-
- ToolsXConfig is where you define what ToolsX is going to do. You can
- add menu items, delete them, assign hotkeys, stack size, and home
- directory, to each menu item.
-
-
- FEATURES
-
- - Allows you to put menu items on the Workbench
- Tools menu.
-
- - Lets you attach a hotkey to each of the menu items.
-
- - Uses Commodities - the hotkeys use standard commodities
- definitions and ToolsX can be controlled via Exchange.
-
- - Gives a proper path to spawned programs even if ToolsX
- is started from the WBStartup drawer.
-
- - Very easy to install
-
- - Graphic user interface for editing tools menu items.
-
- - Allows you to specify a home directory and a stack size
- for each individual menu item.
-
-
- INSTALLATION
-
- Drag ToolsX's icon into your WBStartup drawer on your System partition
- or floppy, and put ToolsXConfig somewhere convenient. The Prefs drawer
- would be a logical place for it to live, or perhaps in the Tools directory.
-
- Now run ToolsXConfig and add the items to the tools menu that you
- want to be there. Exactly how to do this is described in the section
- on ToolsXConfig, but the program has a graphic user interface that you
- should be able to use without having to read the documentation.
-
- I have also included a very simple ToolsList containing just a
- single menu item which starts a Shell window when you select it from
- the menu, or press Control-Shift-F1. If you want to use this, copy
- it to ENV:ToolsList before starting ToolsXConfig or ToolsX.
-
-
- TOOLSX
-
- ToolsX reads the file "ENV:ToolsList", and adds the tools to the tools
- menu that the file specifies. The "ENV:ToolsList" is created by
- >ToolsXConfig.
-
- ToolsX can be placed in your WBStartup drawer. This is the best way
- to run it, as everything in the WBStartup Drawer is automatically loaded
- when you reboot, by Workbench. ToolsX has code in it (supplied by Mike
- Sinz) to get a proper path, so shells launched from ToolsX will have
- the proper path. (Normally programs started from WBStartup do not
- have a path). If you are just using Workbench, the path is of no
- concern to you.
-
-
- TOOLSXCONFIG
-
- This program is how you talk to ToolsX. When you run this program,
- it will open a window with a scrollable list in the center of the
- window showing you the tools currently in the list, and gadgets for
- adding, deleting, and editing existing tools. There are also 3
- gadgets at the bottom of the window for Save, Use, and Cancel.
-
- There are two ways to add items to the list. One is to click on
- Add, and fill in the requester that will pop up asking for the
- Title (the text that goes into the menu), the command itself, what
- directory the command will be executed from, the hotkey that will
- activate this item (or an empty string for no hotkey), and the
- stack size.
-
- The other way is to just drop a Workbench icon into the TXC window!
- The program that the icon would call up if you double-clicked it
- will be in the Command field, the name of the icon will be the
- Title, and the stack size and directory will come from the icon.
-
- When you select SAVE, the ToolsList file is written to ENV: and
- to ENVARC: where it will be stored permanently. (The standard 2.0
- startup-sequence copies the environment variables from ENVARC: to
- ENV:). Selecting USE will save the ToolsList to ENV: only - not to
- ENVARC:, so the changes will only last until you reboot.
-
- When ToolsXConfig exits, it signals ToolsX (if it's running) that
- it should take another look at the ToolsList file. This way, your
- changes take place as soon as you select SAVE or USE, rather than
- having to reboot to see them.
-
- In the requester where you edit or add new tools, there are 5 fields
- that you can fill in. The first one, "Title: ", is informational
- only - this is the text that shows up in the Tools menu.
-
- The next field, the "Command: " field, is the name of the program
- to load when this item is selected. The command's current directory
- when it is started will be the "Directory: " field - so if you want
- to add "DPaint" as the Command, and DPaint was in WORK:DeluxePaint,
- then you could set the Directory: to WORK:DeluxePaint. Or you
- could put WORK:DeluxePaint/DPaint as the Command: and have
- WORK:Pictures as the Directory. The latter way would have the
- WORK:Pictures directory be DPaint's current directory, so when
- it opens a file requester, it would show that directory.
-
- If you select a command's menu item with one or more Workbench
- icons already selected, then those icons will be the arguments
- for the command being started. If the command has a "%s" anywhere
- in it, then the %s will be replaced with the name of a single
- command - if the command has a %l in it, it will be replaced with
- a list of ALL the icons currently selected.
-
- For example, if you select IconOne, IconTwo and IconThree and select
- a tool menu item whose command is 'Echo %s', then it would behave
- as if you had typed 'Echo "IconOne"' and then 'Echo "IconTwo"' and then
- 'Echo "IconThree"' - the command is started once for each selected
- icon. If the command was 'Echo %l' then it would be as though you
- had typed 'Echo "IconOne" "IconTwo" "IconThree"' from the CLI.
- (Note that the arguments that ToolsX inserts are always quoted).
-
- The Stack: field will be the stack size for the program being
- started. If you don't know what to put here, put in a number
- like 8192 - some programs need more stack. If a program crashes
- randomly, increasing the stack may help.
-
- The Hotkey: field is where you specify what keystroke you want
- to start this program. These are global - no matter what window you
- are currently working in, if you hit this keystroke, then this
- program will be started. Be careful to avoid conflicts with keystrokes
- your normal programs may use.
-
- The strings that you can put here to say what key you want to use
- are documented in the AmigaDOS manual, in the section on commodities.
- If any of your menu items have a hotkey, then ToolsX becomes a
- commodity - running Exchange will show ToolsX and let you Enable,
- Disable, and Kill it off.
-
-
- ADDTOOLS
-
- If you used my earlier AddTools program, then you've probably got
- a ToolsList in your S: directory. To update this to the new format
- that ToolsX uses, simply add two blank lines after each entry. You'll
- have to save this new file to ENV: and to ENVARC:.
-
- (AddTools used 3 lines for each menu item, ToolsX uses 5).
-
- ToolsX is AddTools with the 3 most requested features added: Hotkeys,
- a GUI, and an X on the end of the name. 8-)
-
-
- QUITTING
-
- There are two ways to quit ToolsX. One is to find it's task and
- send it a BREAK signal - if you have run ToolsX from the WBStartup
- drawer (as you should!), then the tools that come with AmigaDOS
- will not let you send it a Break signal.
-
- But if any of your menu items have a hotkey, then you can run
- the Exchange program (in the Utilities directory of your Workbench
- disk), and it will show you ToolsX in it's list of commodities.
- Select ToolsX, and select "Kill" and all the ToolsX-added tools
- will disappear from the Tools menu, and ToolsX will exit.
-
-
- CREDITS
-
- Thanks go to Craig Dorrell, Jim Ogilvie, and Ken Robinson, for
- testing and suggestions, and to Mike Sinz for the WB2CLI() code that
- lets ToolsX have a proper path even when started from the
- WBStartup drawer.
-
-
- THE AUTHOR
-
- You can reach me via Portal (SteveX), Usenet (SteveX@cup.portal.com),
- my BBS (613-731-3419), or voice phone (613-731-5316).
-
- Since you're obviously using 2.0 if you're using ToolsX, look for
- other 2.0-enhancing programs by the same author. PointerX puts
- a spin on the Workbench Busy pointer's clock, and AssignX will
- add an "Assign..." and "Mount" buttons to the "Retry" and "Cancel"
- buttons on those pesky "Please insert volume..." requesters.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT
-
- These programs are Copyright 1991 by Steve Tibbett. These programs
- may be freely distributed, unaltered.
-
-