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C/* D0WE0` F1n G2H2 I3 J4K4 L5 M6#N6, O7: R8gS8p T9~ U:V: W;  ACOPY VERS 3.3 OPTION DEFAULTS (Screen 1 of 4)  Option Option Default Option Configuration: Character Status Setting =================================================================== Copy only non-archived files....... A) ' ' B) C) Update older files (Z80DOS/ZSDOS).. D) ' ' E) F) Copy directory AND system files.... G) ' ' H) I) Copy only if files already exist... J) ' ' K) L) Skip copying if files exist........ M) ' ' N) O) Overwrite R/W files................ R) ' ' S) T) Overwrite R/O and R/W files........ U) ' ' V) W) +$ A<B< C= D>E> F? G@BH@K IAY JBKB LC MDND OE RFSF TG%  ACOPY VERS 3.3 OPTION DEFAULTS (Screen 2 of 4)  Option Option Default Option Configuration: Character Status Setting =================================================================== Move files (delete source files)... A) ' ' B) C) Make destination files system...... D) ' ' E) F) Archive source files............... G) ' ' H) I) Archive destination files.......... J) ' ' K) L) Copy datestamps (Z80DOS/ZSDOS)..... M) ' ' N) O) Verify files after copying......... R) ' ' S) T)  i5  0 1 24 3g 4   ACOPY VERS 3.3 DEFAULTS (Screen 3 of 4)  Enable disk directory caching............. 0) Number of retries if copy fails........... 1) Option flag character..................... 2) ' ' Non-ZCPR3 maximum user number............. 3) Non-ZCPR3 and CFG file default filename... 4) +[ b 0& A[ B C D E F # G@K Hs Io J K L M N 7 O@_ P  VALID DRIVE VECTOR (Screen 4 of 4)  Non-extended ZCPR3 systems only: Use internal ACOPY valid drive vector instead of environmental maximum drive specification......................... 0) Set all valid drives to YES: A) Drive A... | I) Drive I... B) Drive B... | J) Drive J... C) Drive C... | K) Drive K... D) Drive D... | L) Drive L... E) Drive E... | M) Drive M... F) Drive F... | N) Drive N... G) Drive G... | O) Drive O... H) Drive H... | P) Drive P... YESno disabledENABLED ON off  ACOPY VERS 3.3 OPTION DEFAULTS  Each option may be enabled or disabled. If disabled, the default setting will remain in effect! The option character for each option may be changed if you prefer a different mnemonic. Each current option character will be displayed in the command line help screen. The default setting for each option may be toggled between ON and OFF. Selecting an option from the command line will then toggle the default setting, reversing the option operation. The command line help screen will reflect the current default settings by displaying the operation of each option if it is selected. COPY ONLY NON-ARCHIVED FILES: If ON, the default is to copy only non-archived (changed) files. Source and destination files will be marked as non-archived. If OFF, the default is to ignore the archive bit when selecting files for copying. UPDATE OLDER FILES (Z80DOS/ZSDOS ONLY): If ON, copy and automatically overwrite only if source file modification dates are newer than destination file modification dates or if no destination files exist. If OFF, ignore datestamps when copying. COPY ALL (SYSTEM AND DIRECTORY) FILES: If ON, the default is to copy both System AND Directory files. If OFF, the default is to copy only Directory files. COPY ONLY IF DESTINATION FILES ALREADY EXIST: If ON, the default is to copy a file only if a destination file of the same name already exists. If OFF, the default is to ask before overwriting. SKIP COPYING IF DESTINATION FILES ALREADY EXIST: If ON, the default is to not copy a file if a destination file of the same name already exists. If OFF, the default is to ask before overwriting. OVERWRITE EXISTING R/W FILES: If ON, the default is to overwrite existing R/W files without asking. If OFF, the default is ask before overwriting. OVERWRITE EXISTING R/O AND R/W FILES: If ON, the default is to overwrite existing R/O and R/W files without asking. If OFF, the default is ask before overwriting.  ACOPY VERS 3.3 OPTION DEFAULTS  See the HELP screen for screen 1 for basic option default information. MOVE FILES (DELETE SOURCE FILES: If ON, the default is to delete source files after copying. If OFF, the default is to not delete source files. MAKE DESTINATION FILES SYSTEM FILES: If ON, the default is to make destination files System files. If OFF, the default is to make destination files Directory files. ARCHIVE SOURCE FILES: If ON, the default is to archive source files (mark as not changed) after copying. If OFF, the default is to leave the archive bit of source files unchanged. ARCHIVE DESTINATION FILES: If ON, the default is to archive (mark as not changed) destination files after copying. If OFF, the default is to leave the archive bit of destination files unchanged. COPY FILE DATESTAMPS (Z80DOS/ZSDOS ONLY): If ON, copy source file datestamps to destination file datestamps so that destination files are dated the same as the source files. If OFF, destination files are dated as newly created. VERIFY COPIES: If ON, the default is to CRC verify copies. If OFF, the default is to not verify copies.  ACOPY VERS 3.3 OPTION DEFAULTS  DISK DIRECTORY CACHING: You may enable or disable disk directory caching. Caching is always disabled under CP/M3+. OPTION FLAG CHARACTER: The character signifying an option specification may be changed, if desired. NUMBER OF COPY RETRIES: The number of times ACOPY will retry if CRC verification fails may be changed. A number from 0 to 9 may be entered. NON-ZCPR3 MAXIMUM USER NUMBER ACCEPTED: If you wish to limit the user numbers that ACOPY will accept, you may enter a user number from 0 to 31. In ZCPR3 systems, the maximum user number will be automatically taken from the environment. NON-ZCPR3 AND CFG FILE DEFAULT FILENAME: This filename is used as the default configuration overlay (CFG) file. In non-ZCPR3 systems, this filename is also the program name that is displayed in the comand line help screen syntax display. In ZCPR3 systems, the current program name is displayed automatically. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered.  ACOPY VERS 3.3 VALID DRIVE VECTOR  USE ACOPY VALID DRIVE VECTOR FOR NON-EXTENDED ZCPR3 SYSTEMS: If YES, use ACOPY's internal valid drive vector in place of the environmental maximum drive byte in earlier non-extended ZCPR3 environments. If NO, the ZCPR3 environmental maximum drive byte will be used. VALID DRIVE VECTOR: Under non-ZCPR3 systems, or under earlier non-extended ZCPR3 systems, the valid drive vector flag may be set to YES to allow you to use the valid drive vector to specify whether individual drives will be accepted as valid by ACOPY. Under extended ZCPR3 systems, such as found in NZCOM, the valid drive vector will be taken from the environment. Set all valid drives to YES.9  1-2-35YES NO~ CHKDIR Installation Menu (1) Warm boot on exit? . . . . . . . . .  (2) Check null files? . . . . . . . . . .  (3) Tag character for disk labels . . . .  h Option (1) -- As distributed CHKDIR does not overwrite the command processor so it can make a simple return on exit. If your disk directories are so large that CHKDIR runs out of memory, you can gain a little space by answering "YES", which will cause the CP to be overwritten and a warm boot on exit. Option (2) -- While reading a directory CHKDIR always reports the names of null (zero-length) files, but it does not include such files in its directory checking routines because programs such as SAP erase such files by default. If you want null files included in the checking routines, answer "YES" here. Option (3) -- This option has no effect unless Option 2 is set to "YES". The tag character is the first character of disk labels, such as those used by cataloging programs. The character is usually "-" (2Dh), "#" (23h), or "!" (21h). If this option is configured, disk labels will not be checked, even if Option 1 is "YES". This is important if you use lower-case disk labels. If you don't want disk labels skipped, make this option a null (00h).  e AG]Ez]I]M]O]RF]Sy]V]Dz]U]C GB" 0*152@F3Ky4V5a6l7wE __________ COPY Configuration Screen 1 _________ A) Archive Bit Control of Select and Copy E) Existence Test of File on Destination I) Inspect Files Before Copy M) Multiple Disk Copy O) Existence Test of R/O File on Dest. R) Copy ONLY files which exist (Replace) S) System Files Excluded V) Verify After Copying U) Use Default Destination Directory below B) Default Destination Directory Name C) Default Destination Drive/User D) Check for DateStamper Stamps __________ COPY Configuration Screen 2 _________ 0) Excluded Files................. 1) ............................... 2) ............................... 3) ............................... 4) ............................... 5) ............................... 6) ............................... 7) ............................... YES NO ZSDOS COPY V1.71 Archive - If yes, copies only those files which have the archive attribute clear. Exclude - If yes, excludes system (hidden) files from copy. Inspect - if yes, COPY prints the name of each file and asks if you wish to copy it. Multiple - If yes, copies all listed files to the specified drive/user, then prompts for a new disk and repeats the copy operation. Exist - If yes, tests if the file exists on the destination drive/user before copying. If the file exists, you are asked if you want to replace it. On systems with stamping enabled, the stamps are compared and an added prompt of SAME, OLDER, or NEWER is shown to indicate the comparative age of the files. RO Exist - Similar to "Exist" (above), but applies only to read-only files. Replace - If yes, files will only be copied if the destination already exists. The "N" option is disabled but dates will still be compared. Verify - If yes, the CRC's of the source and the copied file are checked to confirm error free copies. Use - If yes, if no destination is specified, then use the directory specified below to copy files to. Otherwise the DOS default directory is used as the destination. Backup - The name of the directory you normally copy most of your files to. Default - The "normal" destination drive and user to use if the named backup directory isn't found. DO NOT use wildcards! ZSDOS COPY V1.71 Exclude - File names listed here will not be found in the directory scan and consequently cannot be copied. To remove an entry, select the number and enter a single space for the name. To add an entry, enter the ambiguous or unambiguous file name and type separated by a period.  m S_e CPSET CONFIGURATION S) Suppress display of changes YESNO The S option determines whether or not CPSET automatically displays the results after new settings have been entered. If set "YES", display of changes is suppressed; if set "NO", results are displayed. This default setting can be overridden by a command line option when CPSET is run.   *}g 1T2345 6S78DT  A B#C&D)E,F/7G2YH5{I8J;YES NO CRUNCH/UNCR Installation Menu (Page 1 of 2) (1) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  (2) Include System files? . . . . . . . .  (3) Erase existing files without asking?  (4) Keep larger files without asking? . .  (5) Default to Tag mode? . . . . . . . .  (6) Default to Archive mode? . . . . . .  (7) Warm boot on exit? . . . . . . . . .  (8) Suppress multi-sector disk I/O? . . .  (D) Maximum drive and user (DU) . . . . .  (T) Default filetype (Z, Y, or Q) . . . . ? ? CRUNCH Filetype Exclusion List  (Page 2 of 2) (A) . . . . . . . . . .  (B) . . . . . . . . . .  (C) . . . . . . . . . .  (D) . . . . . . . . . .  (E) . . . . . . . . . .  (F) . . . . . . . . . .  (G) . . . . . . . . . .  (H) . . . . . . . . . .  (I) . . . . . . . . . .  (J) . . . . . . . . . .  Option 1 -- Quiet mode. "YES" causes CRUNCH and UNCR to default to quiet mode, with only the filenames displayed as the file is uncrunched or crunched. The Q command line option toggles the default mode chosen here. Option 2 -- Include System files. "NO" causes CRUNCH and UNCR to filter out system (hidden) files as it reads the directory. If "YES" is selected, system files will be included. The default can be toggled with the S command line option. Option 3 -- Overwrite without prompt. "YES" causes existing files with the same name in the destination directory to be erased and overwritten without notice by CRUNCH and UNCR. If "NO" is chosen, you will be prompted before files are erased. The E command line option toggles the default. Option 4 -- Bigger File. "NO" will cause CRUNCH to ask "Result file larger than original, keep it anyway?". If "YES" is selected, the question will not be asked and the resulting file will always be kept. This question is asked only when the source and destination directories are the same. This configuration option has no effect on UNCR. Option 5 -- Inspect (Tag) mode. "YES" causes CRUNCH and UNCR to default to Tag mode. The default is toggled by the I and T command line options. Option 6 -- Archive mode. "YES" causes CRUNCH to default to Archive "backup" mode. The default can be toggled by the A command line option. This configuration option has no effect on UNCR. Option 7 -- Warm boot. "NO" is the correct selection in most cases. "YES" causes a warm boot each time CRUNCH and UNCR exit to the operating system, and is included for systems which do not allow the CCP to remain resident. Option 8 -- Turbo-DOS. "YES" turns off multi-sector disk I/O for CP/M 3.0- compatible systems, like TurboDOS, which don't support that method. Multi- sector I/O is never used under CP/M 2.2, so this configuration option is not significant. Option D -- Maximum drive and user allowed. This configuration option is only effective under vanilla CP/M systems and for user areas under 15. User areas above 15 cannot be accessed when CRUNCH and UNCR are run under CP/M. Under ZCPR3 all 32 user areas are available and the CPR is used to parse the file specifications, so this option has no effect. If you wish, you can enter a DU specification here, which will become the maximum drive and user available under CP/M. Option T -- Default filetype. This UNCR option is used only when files are uncrunched or unsqueezed to and from the same drive and user. In that case a wildcard filetype ("*") will default to files with the character entered here as the middle character of their filetype. Normally, for crunched files this option should be "Z". If you use UNCR more often to decompress squeezed or LZH-encoded files, enter "Q" or "Y". This option is not used by CRUNCH. FILETYPE EXCLUSION LIST (For CRUNCH only) You may enter up to 10 three-letter filetypes to be ignored by CRUNCH. When these filetypes are encountered, no attempt will be made to crunch the files unless they are explicitly specified on the command line. Instead they will be copied (if the destination is a different directory) or ignored (if the source and destination directories are the same). The defaults already installed are "ARC", "ARK", "LBR", and "FOR". It is not necessary to add ?Z? or ?Q? to the list because CRUNCH will recognize squeezed and crunched files automatically by reading their headers. All the filetypes must be filled in. To eliminate a filetype from the list, simply overwrite it with a repeat of one of the others, such as "ARK", that you don't want crunched. UNCR does not use this exclusion list. /  1#2'YES NO DETAB-Z Installation Menu (1) Default TAB increment . . . . . . . .  (2) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  Option (1) -- This option sets the default increment that DETABZ will use to fill tab characters with spaces. For compatibility with CP/M and MS-DOS text files, this value should be set to 8, but you can set it to another value if you wish. Option (2) -- This option determines whether DETABZ will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. The default may be toggled by using the "Q" option on the command line. -  0 ~12  DSKMAP VERS 1.0 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename...................... 0) Number of screen lines.................... 1) Number of screen columns.................. 2)  DSKMAP VERS 1.0 OPTION DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: This filename is used as the default configuration overlay (CFG) file. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered. NUMBER OF SCREEN LINES AND COLUMNS: Set to 0 to use the default values from the ZCPR3 environment.g ( 1_2_3_4R_567!8"_YES NO DSKNUM Installation Menu (1) Set label to read/only? . . . . . . .  (2) Set label to system? . . . . . . . .  (3) Set label to archive? . . . . . . . .  (4) Reset drive before saving number? . .  (5) Label tag character . . . . . . . . . .  (6) Default label (7 characters) . .  (7) User area for label (0-31, or higher)  (8) Make label lower-case? . . . . . . .  Options (1),(2),(3) -- These options select whether DSKNUM will set the READ/ONLY, SYSTEM, and/or ARCHIVE file attribute bits on the disk labels it creates. At minimum, the read/only attribute should be set to YES. Option (4) -- This option determines whether DSKNUM will reset the drive before attempting to save the last number used back into itself. If you are going to be running DSKNUM from a floppy diskette, this option should be set to YES. Option (5) -- The tag character is the first character in a disk labels. "#" or "!" are recommended, but see the documentation file. Option (6) -- The default disk label name is used if no name is given in the command line. Seven characters maximum. Option (7) -- If your disk labels will always be written to the same user area (highly recommended), then enter that user area here. If any number higher than 31 is entered, DSKNUM will write to the user area given in the command line, or to the current one. Option (8) -- Lower-case labels will stand out more in disk directories, but they cannot be easily manipulated (erased, renamed, attributes changed) by most standard utilities. Since disk labels are rarely changed, however, selecting YES here should cause no problems. K  0 1 2 3H45  DSTATS VERS 1.2 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename.......................... 0) Number of screen lines (0=Z3ENV Lines)........ 1) Number of screen columns (0=Z3ENV Columns) ... 2) Default display of allocation map............. 3) Default pause before allocation map display... 4) First character in label filename............. 5) " "  DSTATS VERS 1.2 OPTION DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: This filename is used as the default configuration overlay (CFG) file. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered. NUMBER OF SCREEN LINES AND COLUMNS: Set to 0 to use the default values from the ZCPR3 environment. DEFAULT DISPLAY OF ALLOCATION MAP: Set to YES to display allocation map by default. Set to NO to display allocation map only by option. DEFAULT PAUSE BEFORE ALLOCATION MAP DISPLAY: Set to YES to pause before allocation map display. Set to NO to display first allocation map screen automatically. FIRST CHARACTER IN LABEL FILENAMES: Usually '-', this initial filename character is used to flag filenames as dir: label files for utilities such as LDSK.YESNO   A)B)C*D+E+F,G3,H35I4?J1lK1uL2  ERAZ VERS 1.5 OPTION DEFAULTS (Screen 1 of 2)  Option Option Default Option Configuration: Character Enabled? Setting =============================================================== Eraze only non-archived files...... A) ' ' B) C) Erase directory AND system files... D) ' ' E) F) Inspect files before erasing....... G) ' ' H) I) Carry over last du: as default..... J) ' ' K) L) y  01G2z3   ERAZ DEFAULTS (Screen 2 of 3)  Option flag character..................... 0) ' ' Excluded files flag character..............1) ' ' Non-ZCPR3 maximum user number............. 2) Non-ZCPR3 and CFG file default filename... 3) n 07ApBCDEF =G@fHIJKLM(N QO@zP  VALID DRIVE VECTOR (Screen 3 of 3)  Non-extended ZCPR3 systems only: Use internal ERAZ valid drive vector instead of environmental maximum drive specification.................. 0) Set all valid drives to YES: A) Drive A... | I) Drive I... B) Drive B... | J) Drive J... C) Drive C... | K) Drive K... D) Drive D... | L) Drive L... E) Drive E... | M) Drive M... F) Drive F... | N) Drive N... G) Drive G... | O) Drive O... H) Drive H... | P) Drive P... YESNO NO YESON OFF  ERAZ VERS 1.5 OPTION DEFAULTS  Each option may be enabled or disabled. If disabled, the default setting will remain in effect! The option character for each option may be changed if you prefer a different mnemonic. Each current option character will be displayed in the command line help screen. The default setting for each option may be toggled between ON and OFF. Selecting an option from the command line will then toggle the default setting, reversing the option operation. The command line help screen will reflect the current default settings by displaying the operation of each option if it is selected. ERASE ONLY NON-ARCHIVED FILES: If ON, the default is to erase only non-archived (changed) files. If OFF, the default is to ignore the archive bit when selecting files for erasinge. ERASE DIRECTORY AND SYSTEM FILES: If ON, the default is to erase both directory and system files. If OFF, the default is to erase directory files only. be overwritten. INSPECT FILES BEFORE ERASING: If ON, the default is to inspect and approve files before erasing. changed) after copying. If OFF, the default is to erase files without inspection. CARRY OVER LAST DU: AS DEFAULT: If ON, the default is to carry over the last du: as the default. files after copying. If OFF, the default is to use the logged du: as the default. ERAZ OPTION DEFAULTS OPTION FLAG CHARACTER: The character signifying an option specification may be changed if desired. EXCLUDED FILES FLAG CHARACTER: The character prefixing the excluded filename mask may be changed if desired. NON-ZCPR3 MAXIMUM USER NUMBER ACCEPTED: If you wish to limit the user numbers that ERAZ will accept, you may enter a user number from 0 to 31. In ZCPR3 systems, the maximum user number will be automatically taken from the environment. NON-ZCPR3 AND CFG FILE DEFAULT FILENAME: This filename is used as the default configuration overlay (CFG) file. In non-ZCPR3 systems, this filename is also the program name that is displayed in the comand line help screen syntax display. In ZCPR3 systems, the current program name is displayed automatically. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered.  VALID DRIVE VECTOR  USE ERAZ VALID DRIVE VECTOR FOR NON-EXTENDED ZCPR3 SYSTEMS: If YES, use ERAZ's internal valid drive vector in place of the environmental maximum drive byte in earlier non-extended ZCPR3 environments. If NO, the ZCPR3 environmental maximum drive byte will be used. VALID DRIVE VECTOR: Under non-ZCPR3 systems, or under earlier non-extended ZCPR3 systems, the valid drive vector flag may be set to YES to allow you to use the valid drive vector to specify whether individual drives will be accepted as valid by ERAZ. Under extended ZCPR3 systems, such as found in NZCOM, the valid drive vector will be taken from the environment. Set all valid drives to YES. T AqBqCqDqEqF qG@qHqIqJqKqLqMqN qO@qPqR>uSeTVeWFe0e1e2 e3 -e4!Ne FF CONFIGURATION MENU Drives which may be searched by FF. Type drive letter to toggle. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P z z z z z z z z z z z z z z z z R) Return number of files found in register number z S) include System files in the search ? zzz T) Terminator following DIR/DU for found files is z V) View console screen with Paging enabled? zzz W) auto-Wildcarding in the search argument? zzz 0) Limit default drives to logged-in ones? zzz 1) display drive # headers for found files? zzz 2) Use NDR to control search? zzz 3) Wheel control? zzz 4) NDR for wheel user? zzz FF CONFIGURATION OPTIONS DEFAULT DRIVE LIST The search for files named in the command tail defaults to those selected here. This default list is not used if a drive list is included on the command line. In addition, the default list of drives is also limited to those which are marked accessible in the Drive Vector in the Z33/34 extended System Environment module if it exists. This prevents FF from attempting to access non-existent or unauthorized drives. R) Number of files is returned in .... defines one of the user registers (0...9) in the ZCPR3 Environment. The number of files found in the current search is returned there for possible use in an Alias or Zex script. This function is turned off by entering 10, an illegal number. T) Terminator .... This is the character following a DU or DIR form in the list of files found. You may wish to use a distinctive character here to differentiate the list from a CPR prompt. V) View in Paging mode. This is a toggle. When yes, FF will paginate its display. When NO, scrolling is continuous. The invokation command line 'P' option temporarily selects the opposite state. Most users prefer the paging by default. W) Auto-wildcarding/Exact mode switch. This is a toggle. When YES is selected, the filename argument is treated as if '*' and '?' wildcard characters had been included. You don't have to include wildcards in the (partial) filename. When NO is selected, FF will only find files that EXACTly match the argument you provided. The 'E' command line option temporarily reverses the default mode. Here's how auto-wildcards work: You specify: FF searches for: AL AL*.* AL. AL*.* ZCPR33.C ZCPR33??.C?? .COM *.COM 0) Use BDOS login vector - Toggles between YES and NO. If YES, then the default list of drives for FF to search is restricted to those which are currently logged in AND within the Z3ENV MAX drive limit AND listed in the Extended Environment drive vector. If NO, then the BDOS login vector is not used. The result vector is ANDed with the Configured drive vector to produce a word whose set bits identify the drives to search. (Drives specified in the command tail replace the configured drive vector with one that reflects those drives.) Control word: example: PONMLKJI HGFEDCBA Configured drive vector 00010000 00001111 Max Drive from Env. 00011111 11111111 Vector from Extended Env. 00010000 11111111 Login vector from BDOS 00000000 00000011 (this option) In this example, FF will search drives A and B because those bits are set in all four control words. Drive C or D will be included in the search after they have been logged in by ZCPR or a program. If an extended environment vector is not available, it is ignored. 1) Use headers in the list of found files. This option toggles between YES and NO. When YES is selected, a single line showing the Disk number is inserted on the screen just above the list of files found on that drive. Some like this 'dressing up'. Others find that it just needlessly clutters the screen. In either case, the DU: and DIR:(if defined) for each file found are displayed in the list of files found. Try it both ways - it's easy to change to your liking! 2) Use NDR to control search - When toggled to YES, only named directories with NO PASSWORD are searched. When toggled to NO, all user areas up to MAXUSR from the Z3 Environment are searched. In either case, the drives to be searched are limited to those allowed by the logic of the previous screen. This option is WHEEL sensitive; it is only used when the wheel is reset (non-privileged user). When the WHEEL is SET (privileged user, like a BBS sysop) this option is ignored, and ALL user areas of the selected drives are searched. For a BBS, this option provides precise control of what the caller can find: only those files in the Named Directories shown in his current NDR. For private use, you can avoid accessing floppy drives (whose doors may be open) if none of the FD's have named directories. 3) WHEEL CONTROL - This option is only relevant if Named Directory Register (item 2) is YES. When WHEEL CONTROL is toggled to NO, then FF limits the search to named directories for both wheel and non-wheel users. When toggled to YES, then the named directory limitation applies only to the privilege group (wheel or non-wheel) selected by the next option. 4) NDR for wheel user - When toggled to YES, FF limits the search to Named Directories (non-passworded) for wheel users; non-wheels get MAXUSR from the environment as their limitation. When set to NO, NON-wheels are limited to a search of non-passworded named directories and wheel users are not limited by MAXUSR or named directories. YES NOYESY K B P;S7NGL:CYES NOYES FILESIZE Installation Menu (P) Page screen? . . . . . . . . . . . .  (S) Include system files? . . . . . . . .  (N) Number of file matches allowed . .  (L) Number of screen lines (CP/M only) .  Option P -- Screen paging. "YES" will cause FILESIZE to pause each time the screen fills by default. "NO" will default to continuous scrolling. The P command line option toggles the selected default. Option S -- Include system files. "NO" causes system files to be ignored by default. If "YES" is selected, system files will be included in the search. The S command line option toggles the selected default. Option N -- Number of files. Each matched filename requires 15 bytes of buffer space, or about 15k per 1000 matches. If memory is limited, you will need to reduce the number of files allowed. Option L -- Screen lines. This value is only used under vanilla CP/M. Under ZCPR3 the number of screen lines is obtained from the environment descriptor. Enter the actual number of lines on your screen. i f Q7I?O%KLZWYES NOINTELZILOGUPPERLOWERUPPERLOWERAS IS PRETTY Configuration Menu (Q) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . . .  (I) Default opcode idiom? . . . . . . .  (O) Case format for opcodes? . . . . . .  (L) Case format for labels? . . . . . .  Option 1 -- This option determines whether PRETTY defaults to quiet mode, even if the quiet flag is off. The default can be toggled with a "Q" option on the command line. Option 2 -- PRETTY tries to determine itself whether the source file contains Intel or Zilog opcodes. If it can't figure it out, it defaults to the mode selected here. This configuration option is ignored if the "I" or "Z" options are used on the command line. Option 3 -- Opcodes and common pseudo-ops will be made lower-case or upper- case by default, depending on this selection. The chosen default can be toggled with the "O" command line option. Option 4 -- Labels and any opcodes or operands not recognized by PRETTY will be converted by default to the case selected here. You can also select "AS IS" and the case of labels and less common opcodes will not be changed. The command line "LU", "LL", and "LA" options will override the default. w  1I2Q3-_4cE5A~YES NOBINARY TEXTRECORDS LINESMARKERS FSPLIT Installation Menu (1) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  (2) Default file format . . . . . . . . (3) Default splitting method . . . .  (4) Default output file size . . . . .  (5) Split marker character . . . . . . .  h Option (1) -- This option determines whether FSPLIT will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. The default may be toggled by using the command line "Q" option. Option (2) -- This default file format determines how FSPLIT divides the file. In TEXT mode the file is divided only at the end of a line when using the RECORD and LINE splitting methods and the MARKER method is available. In BINARY (object) file mode only the RECORD splitting method can be used and the file is divided exactly at the end of a record. The format selected here can be changed by the command line options "T" and "O". Option (3) -- This option selects the default method by which FSPLIT determines the size of its output files. RECORDS causes the file to be split after the correct number of records have been output. LINES causes the file to split based on the number lines, rather than records. MARKERS means that the file size is ignored and the file is split only where an internal marker character (set by option 5, below) is encountered. The method selected here can be changed by the command line options "L", "R", "M", "K", and "O". Option (4) -- The default size of the output files if no size is given on the command line is set here. As distributed the default size is 256 (32K in RECORDS mode). The number here is interpreted as records or lines, depending on the current splitting mode (see option 3). If the "K" option is given on the command line, the number is interpreted as kilobytes. Option (5) -- If FSPLIT is in MARKERS mode, it will split the file each time it finds this special marker character. As distributed, the marker character is ^P (10h). To use another marker, enter its ASCII value in hexadecimal here. +  1zMILITARYCIVILIAN GREET Installation Menu (1) Civilian or Military time? . . .  Option (1) -- Selects either civilian (12-hour) or military (24-hour) time. A # N}DA W)P( HELPC CONFIGURATION N) Default file name D) Alternate directory A) Alternate DU W) Allow wildcard help filenames P) Do printer-ready test YES NO Option N defines the default file name that HELPC will search for if none is given on the command line when the program is invoked. Options D and A define the alternate named directory and alternate DU to be searched. Helpc first searches the directory specified on the command line, (the current directory if none specified), for the requested help file. If the file cannot be found, HELPC attempts to search for it in the directory specified at option D. If the system does not contain a directory with this name, then the DU defined by option A is searched. Option W specifies whether HELPC will accept wildcard help filenames. Option P specifies whether a printer-ready test will be made before printing. If your system has trouble with the bios listst call, set this to OFF.  p 0 g  HP VERS 1.4 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename...................... 0)  HP VERS 1.4 OPTION DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: This filename is used as the default configuration overlay (CFG) file. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered. #  0 s1  HPIOP VERS 1.4 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename...................... 0) Character used to invoke HP Calculator.... 1) HON OFF  HPIOP VERS 1.4 OPTION DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: This filename is used as the default configuration overlay (CFG) file. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered. HP INITIATE CHARACTER: This character will be intercepted by the HP IOP and will invoke the HP calculator. A seldom-used control character should be used. ^@ (0h) is the default.#  0 s1  HPRSX VERS 1.4 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename...................... 0) Character used to invoke HP Calculator.... 1) HON OFF  HPRSX VERS 1.4 OPTION DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: This filename is used as the default configuration overlay (CFG) file. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered. HP INITIATE CHARACTER: This character will be intercepted by the HP RSX and will invoke the HP calculator. A seldom-used control character should be used. ^@ (0h) is the default.7 _ WWSR-C D CONFIGURATION OPTIONS FOR LX22 W) Respond to Wheel Byte? YES Command Library File to Use: S) With Wheel Set .....ROOT:COMMAND.LBR R) With Wheel Reset .....ROOT:USERCMD.LBR C) Default FileName for LX22's .CFG file .........CFG YES NOYES W) Respond to Wheel Byte When 'YES', LX uses the command library according to the status of the Wheel Byte. When 'NO', then LX uses the command library named for 'Wheel Set' below at all times. This option is of use in secure systems like a RAS or BBS where the commands available to non-privileged users must be restricted. S) Library to use when Wheel is Set The name given here is a full unambiguous ZCPR filespec. There are NO defaults, as this name IS the default used by LX. This library contains command files for use by a user who has full system privileges, like a Sysop. R) Library to use when Wheel is Reset (or OFF) This library contains only those commands safe for a non-privileged user C) Default FileName for LX22's .CFG file If you choose to rename the configuration file provided with LX, then the same change here will allow ZCNFG to find the .cfg file without its being named on the command line. Only the name is changed; ZCNFG still expects the filetype of the configuration file to be .CFG. This configuration option does NOT have to be changed when/if you rename LX itself to some other name. This option is only for your convenience in selecting a name of your choice for the .CFG file. } # AB!CYD0E1F,G+7H+nI-J/K2 _______________ MCAT6 Configuration ________________ A) Default Lines on Screen if no TERMCAP B) Default Columns on Screen if no TERMCAP C) Horizontal line character " " D) Use General Reset instead of Function 37 E) Ring Bell (Beep) on Errors F) Search for DateStamper before other stamps G) Include Dates in Data Base (MAST.CAT) H) Include Users in Data Base (MAST.CAT) I) Default Drive/User (DU:) for Catalog J) Default drive to Catalog (A..P) : K) Catalog Library File Members YES NO MCAT Version 6.0 LINES - Number of lines to be used for console display if no ZCPR 3 TERMCAP is detected. COLUMNS - Number of displayable columns on console if no ZCPR 3 TERMCAP is detected. HORIZONTAL LINE CHAR - Character to be used to draw horizontal line on the screen. Commonly used characters are "-" and "=". DATES - If your computer can handle Date Stamping of files under DateStamper(tm), ZSDOS or CP/M 3.x, the Modify or Create date can be added to catalog entries by setting this TRUE. USERS - If set to YES, User numbers for files will be included in the Catalog. SEARCH DATESTAMPER FIRST - When set to YES, MCAT will place priority on locating DateStamper File Stamps first, and only use DosDisk, or P2DOS (CP/M Plus compatible) stamps if DateStamper is not active. Setting this to FALSE does not test for DateStamper and scans only DosDisk and P2DOS stamps. DEFAULT CATALOG LOCATION - This is a Drive/User specification for the default location of the Catalog file DEFAULT DRIVE TO CATALOG - This is a Drive-Only specification for a drive to catalog USE GENERAL RESET - Many operating systems other than ZSDOS do not properly handle disk relogs with Function 37, and require use of the General Disk Reset function. This slows operation noticeably and should be used only if required. Set to NO if possible USE BELL ON ERRORS - Set to YES to sound the bell or buzzer on errors, NO for quiet operation CATALOG LIBRARY FILE MEMBERS - Set to YES to include Library file (type=LBR) members in the catalog #  VwB MYLOAD Configuration V) Print all Prompts & Status Messages (Verbose) B) Ring Bell (Beep) on Errors YES NO Two options exist for configuring MYLOAD. They Are: VERBOSE - Set to YES to display all status and prompt messages during execution. On a system with ZCPR 3.x, this flag is combined with the ZCPR3 Quiet Flag, so both must be disabled to silence messages. BELL - When set to YES, a bell character is sent to the terminal when errors are detected. This usually results in Beeps which may be annoying in a crowded office. When set to NO, MYLOAD operates quietly with only screen output. Q  D AU N %ThPI YES NO Note Taker Installation Menu D) Default output drive (0..16; 0 = current) ........ U) Default output user area (0..32; 255 = current) ... N) Default output filename ...................... T) Default output filetype ........................... P) Prompt for filespec on exit ....................... Note Taker Installation Help D) Default output drive This is the drive NT will write its output to if you don't specify a drive and filename at runtime. Set to 00 for current drive. U) Default output user area This is the user area NT will write its output to if you don't specify a user area and filename at runtime. Set to 255 for current user area. N) Default output filename This is the filename NT will write its output to if you don't specify a filename at runtime. T) Default output filetype This is the filetype NT will write its output to if you don't specify a filetype at runtime. Note Taker Installation Help P) Prompt for filespec on exit Set to YES if you want NT to ask for a filespec if none was specified on the command line.o Z 123@4 w5#g6$k7%"_8&T_ ONOFF NTS Installation NOTE FILE DEFAULT: 1) Drive (0=current, A=1) ............ 2) User (255=current) ................ 3) Name .............................. 4) Type .............................. EDITOR DEFAULT: 5) Text Lines (no more than CRT-3) ... 6) Right Margin ...................... 7) Insert ............................ 8) Prompt for "File: " on exit ....... Note File Defaults: If no file name is given on entry or exit to NTS, a default file in a preset directory may be used. If a file name only is given, the default type extension is used. The note entry window appears at the bottom of the CRT. You need to leave blank lines for the date header, but can otherwise use the full screen. (I recommend at least trying the small screen default of 8 lines.)   A B KC DSDEKFKYESNO Start of CBIOSTop of memory Address in D) NZBLITZ VERS 1.4 DEFAULTS Default CFG filename (FILENAME)............. A) OK to save a loaded RSX..................... B) System image will be saved up to............ C) Save system image up to... D) h Save NZCOM.CCP as system file?.............. E) Save NZCOM.CCP as archived file?............ F) Default CFG Filename: Enter the desired default CFG filename in the form 'FILENAME.TYP'. Up to 8 characters may be used. RSXs Ok: Set to YES if it's ok to save loaded RSXs. Set to NO if you don't want loaded RSXs to be saved. System Image Will Be Saved Up To: This entry allows you to toggle through three choices for the top of the saved system image: Start of CBIOS - saves up to the start of the CBIOS. Top of Memory - saves up through the top of memory. Address in D) - saves up to the address specified in menu entry D). Save System Image Up To: Top of save address may be entered here. Top of memory is 0000h. This address is ignored unless 'Address in D)' is selected in menu entry C). NZCOM.CCP: You may save NZCOM.CCP as a system and/or archived file if you desire.!  NpYES NO OE Installation Menu (N) Send NLQ code before printing . . .  Option N -- Near-letter-quality mode. If the printer driver prints a document in letter-quality mode, the driver only outputs that code once before page 1 (unless there is an additional toggle within the document). As a result, when OE begins sending even-numbered pages, the printer does not know to use letter-quality. Setting this option to "YES" causes OE to always put the printer into near-letter-quality mode before it begins sending a document.   0123B4j5678 92A ZB! PRINT V2.1 DEFAULT OPTIONS 0) Number lines 1) Number pages 2) Print exact 3) File name in heading 4) Date/Time in heading 5) Multiple print 6) Inspect before print 7) Default Left Margin 8) Default Line length 9) Text lines/page A) Blank lines/page B) Use form feed? YES NO HELP SCREEN IS NOT IMPLEMENTED 5 M? U !+ !5i+  D;T) Bp!1%2%3%4%5%6>%7`%8% B !1!%2"5%3#W%4$y%5%%6&%7'%8(% B)m!1*%2+%3,%4-%5.%6/;%70]%81% B2!13 %240 %35R %46t %57 %68 %79 %8: % B;h !1< %2= %3> %4? %5@ %6A6 %7BX %8Cz %MILITARYCIVILIANEUROPEANAMERICAN PRTASM Installation Menu 1 (of 6) DATE and TIME FORMAT (D) American or European date? . . .  (T) Civilian or military time? . . .  PRTASM Installation Menu 2 (of 6) SET ELITE PITCH (B) Number of bytes . . (1)  Byte 1 . . . . . .  (2)  Byte 2 . . . . . .  (3)  Byte 3 . . . . . .  (4)  Byte 4 . . . . . .  (5)  Byte 5 . . . . . .  (6)  Byte 6 . . . . . .  (7)  Byte 7 . . . . . .  (8)  Byte 8 . . . . . .  PRTASM Installation Menu 3 (of 6) SET LEFT MARGIN (B) Number of bytes . . (1)  Byte 1 . . . . . .  (2)  Byte 2 . . . . . .  (3)  Byte 3 . . . . . .  (4)  Byte 4 . . . . . .  (5)  Byte 5 . . . . . .  (6)  Byte 6 . . . . . .  (7)  Byte 7 . . . . . .  (8)  Byte 8 . . . . . .  PRTASM Installation Menu 4 (of 6) RESET PRINTER (B) Number of bytes . . (1)  Byte 1 . . . . . .  (2)  Byte 2 . . . . . .  (3)  Byte 3 . . . . . .  (4)  Byte 4 . . . . . .  (5)  Byte 5 . . . . . .  (6)  Byte 6 . . . . . .  (7)  Byte 7 . . . . . .  (8)  Byte 8 . . . . . .  PRTASM Installation Menu 5 (of 6) BOLDFACE ON (B) Number of bytes . . (1)  Byte 1 . . . . . .  (2)  Byte 2 . . . . . .  (3)  Byte 3 . . . . . .  (4)  Byte 4 . . . . . .  (5)  Byte 5 . . . . . .  (6)  Byte 6 . . . . . .  (7)  Byte 7 . . . . . .  (8)  Byte 8 . . . . . .  PRTASM Installation Menu 6 (of 6) BOLDFACE OFF (B) Number of bytes . . (1)  Byte 1 . . . . . .  (2)  Byte 2 . . . . . .  (3)  Byte 3 . . . . . .  (4)  Byte 4 . . . . . .  (5)  Byte 5 . . . . . .  (6)  Byte 6 . . . . . .  (7)  Byte 7 . . . . . .  (8)  Byte 8 . . . . . .  DATE AND TIME FORMAT The date and time are printed at the top of each page. You can select here whether the date should be in AMERICAN or EUROPEAN format and whether the time should be in CIVILIAN or MILITARY format. American dates have the month first and the elements are separated by slashes: "mm/dd/yy". European dates have the day first and the elements are separated by periods: "dd.mm.yy". Civilian format is 12-hour time, with times before noon followed by "am" and times after noon followed by "pm". For instance, 3:00 a.m. will be printed as "3:00 am", while 3:00 p.m. will be printed as "3:00 pm". Military format is 24-hour time. For instance, 3:00 a.m. will be printed as "3:00", while 3:00 p.m. will be printed as "15:00".  SET ELITE PITCH  PRTASM expects the printer to be in elite pitch (12 characters per inch) so it can print an 80-character line while leaving left and right margins. Give the escape string here that will set your printer to elite pitch. For option B enter in decimal the number bytes (characters) required for the escape string. Options 1 through 8 are for entering in hexadecimal the actual bytes of the escape string. Any bytes after the number entered for option B are ignored, so you don't need to zero the remaining bytes.  SET LEFT MARGIN  PRTASM indents the left margin to allow the printed pages to be punched and placed in a loose-leaf binder. Enter the escape string here that will set the left margin of your printer to column 8 (in elite pitch). For option B enter in decimal the number bytes (characters) required for the escape string. Options 1 through 8 are for entering in hexadecimal the actual bytes of the escape string. Any bytes after the number entered for option B are ignored, so you don't need to zero the remaining bytes.  RESET PRINTER  This string will be used to reset the printer to its default configuration when PRTASM exits to ZCPR. In most cases this string should end with a carriage return. For option B enter in decimal the number bytes (characters) required for the escape string. Options 1 through 8 are for entering in hexadecimal the actual bytes of the escape string. Any bytes after the number entered for option B are ignored, so you don't need to zero the remaining bytes.  BOLDFACE ON  Boldface is used in the header line. Here install the escape string that turns on your printer's boldfacing mode. For option B enter in decimal the number bytes (characters) required for the escape string. Options 1 through 8 are for entering in hexadecimal the actual bytes of the escape string. Any bytes after the number entered for option B are ignored, so you don't need to zero the remaining bytes.  BOLDFACE OFF  Boldface is used in the header line. Enter here the escape string that turns off boldfacing. For option B enter in decimal the number bytes (characters) required for the escape string. Options 1 through 8 are for entering in hexadecimal the actual bytes of the escape string. Any bytes after the number entered for option B are ignored, so you don't need to zero the remaining bytes. 3  1+2#YES NO NOYES PRTRLE Installation Menu (1) Print header for each picture? . . .  (2) Form feed after each picture? . . . .  Option (1) -- Determines whether a filename header will be printed by default before each picture is printed. Whatever is chosen as the default can be toggled by the command line H option. Option (2) -- Determines whether a formfeed will be sent to the printer by default after each picture is printed. If this option is set to NO, a formfeed will be sent only after three pictures (that is, three pictures will be printed per page). Whatever is chosen as the default can be toggled by the command line F option. !  1sYES NO QUIET Installation Menu (1) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  Option (1) -- This option determines whether QUIET will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. The default may be toggled by using the "Q" option on the command line. ? ; 172@737407YES NO RENAME Installation Menu (1) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . . .  (2) Include system files by default? . . .  (3) Erase existing files without asking? .  (4) Erase read-only files without asking?  Option (1) -- This option determines whether RENAME defaults to quiet mode. Whatever is chosen here can be toggled with a "Q" option on the command line. Option (2) -- Normally RENAME does not find or rename system files unless the S option is used on the command line. If "YES" is chosen here, all matching files, including system files, will be found and renamed by default. Option (3) -- If RENAME finds another file whose name is the same as the new filename, it will ask if you want to delete the existing file first. Answering "YES" will cause RENAME to erase such a file without first letting you know that the file exists. Erasing blind is not recommended, so most people will select "NO" here. Option (4) -- If RENAME finds an existing read-only file, it will ask before erasing it, even if option 3 is set to "YES" and even if the E option is given on the command line. Because read-only files are supposed to be difficult to erase, a "NO" here is highly recommended. +  1}#2#YES NO REVFN Installation Menu (1) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  (2) Rename R/O files without asking? . .  Option (1) -- This option determines whether REVFN will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. The default may be toggled by using the "Q" option on the command line. Option (2) -- This option determines whether REVFN will rename read- only files without asking for user approval. The default may be toggled by using the "R" option on the command line. /  1#2+YES NO~ SAPZ Installation Menu (1) Erase null files? . . . . . . . . . .  (2) Tag character for disk labels . . . .  h Option (1) -- Determines whether null files will be erased. By default null files are left alone. A "YES" causes them to be erased. Option (2) -- This option has no effect unless Option 1 is set to "YES". The tag character is the first character of disk labels, such as those used by cataloging programs. The character is usually "-" (2Dh), "#" (23h), or "!" (21h). If this option is configured, disk labels will not be erased, even if Option 1 is "YES". If you don't want disk labels skipped, make this option a null (00h).  A B CFD{EFG!123456   SCAN VERS 2.5 DEFAULTS  Number of terminal lines.................. A) Number of terminal columns................ B) Number of lines of screen overlap......... C) Video mode default........................ D) Display found string on line number....... E) Wild card search character (HEX).......... F) h Length of printer initialization string... G) (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Printer initialization string HEX bytes: h h h h h hWordStar modeZCPR3 mode ASCII mode   SCAN VERS 2.5 DEFAULTS  TERMINAL LINES AND COLUMNS: Enter the number of terminal lines and columns for your terminal if you wish to override the values in your ZCPR3 environment. OVERLAP LINES: The number of lines of the previous screen shown on the next screen when paging by screens may also be set. The WordStar 3.0 default is 5 lines. VIDEO MODE: You may select SCAN's default video mode by toggling through the three modes. FOUND STRING LINE: You may select the line that SCAN displays the string found with the find string command. The WordStar 3.0 default is line 13. WILDCARD SEARCH CHARACTER: The WordStar default wildcard search character is ^A (01h) PRINTER INITIALIZATION STRING: The length of the string is entered first, followed by up to six string characters. Each character must be entered individually in hex.]  1 U2U3U4U5&U68U7JUYES NO === SNAP INSTALLATION === 1) Erase existing file without asking? Save segments to image file -- 2) TCAP 3) RCP 4) FCP 5) IOP 6) NDR 7) PATH -- Selecting Choice # Toggles YES/NO -- SNAP Installation Help If the erase option is set to "NO", SNAP will replace an output file of the same name without asking. By default, SNAP saves all system segments to the image file. You can ask SNAP to save only the segments you specify as command line options. SNAP /oo... where o = (T)cap ,(R)cp, (F)cp, (I)op ,(N)dr, or (P)ath If you always prefer to leave out a segment or two, reconfigure the preferences table. (The ENV is always loaded.)  _!]s = 1?2C3O4JG5}K6O7O8W AhB C#D&E)F,G/H2 I5 J87 K;L>MANDOGPJQMRP)SS@TVWYES NO NOYES UNARCZ Installation Menu (1) CPR size in pages . . . . . . . . . .  (2) Default allocation block size . . . .  (3) Allow non-Wheel file type-out? . . .  (4) Buffer size in pages for type-out . .  (5) Line limit for non-Wheel type-out . .  (6) Sound console bell on error? . . . .  (7) Erase existing files without asking?  (8) Page screen displays? . . . . . . . .  Filetypes Illegal for Type-out (first 10 of 20): (A)  . . .  (B)  . . .  (C)  . . .  (D)  . . .  (E)  . . .  (F)  . . .  (G)  . . .  (H)  . . .  (I)  . . .  (J)  . . .  Filetypes Illegal for Type-out (second 10 of 20): (K)  . . .  (L)  . . .  (M)  . . .  (N)  . . .  (O)  . . .  (P)  . . .  (Q)  . . .  (R)  . . .  (S)  . . .  (T)  . . .  Option (1) -- tells UNARCZ how much memory to preserve below the BDOS. Most Z-systems use a 2-kilobyte CPR, so preserving 8 pages is appropriate. Some systems may require 9 or 10 pages. If this byte is set to zero, the CPR will be overwritten and a warm boot forced on exit. The latter may be desirable on systems with a small TPA, or on systems with a permanently resident CPR, such as the SB180 running XBIOS. Option (2) -- specifies the size in kilobytes of the disk allocation block used to calculate the disk space required when files in the archive are extracted, as shown in the archive directory display. A zero causes UNARCZ to use the block size of the current default disk. Any other value will be used directly as the block size (commonly 1, 2, 4, 8, or 16). During extraction, the block size of the output disk is always used. Option (3) -- is for Z-Nodes and is ignored unless the Wheel is off. It determines whether screen type-out of member files in an archive is allowed. When the Wheel byte is on, type-out is always allowed. Option (4) -- sets the size of the buffer used during type-out of a member file. If set to zero, all of available memory is used to buffer the file, but this may cause an excessive delay before type-out begins, and additional delays when the buffer needs to be refilled. Setting this option to 1 lessens delays, but may cause excessive starting and stopping of floppy drive motors. If the Wheel byte is off, this option will be automatically incremented to 1, if set to zero here. If set to a non-zero value, the Wheel byte will have no effect. Option (5) -- is for Z-Nodes and is ignored unless the Wheel is off. It sets the number of lines of a member file that may be displayed before UNARCZ aborts the type-out. If set to zero, an unlimited number of lines is allowed. When the Wheel byte is on, type-out is always unlimited. Option (6) -- determines whether UNARCZ sounds the console bell when it displays an error message. Option (7) -- determines whether, during file extraction, an existing file of the same name in the target directory is erased without asking for permission first. Whichever selection is made, the "E" command line option will toggle UNARCZ to the other mode. Option (8) -- determines whether screen displays will be paged or continuous by default. Whichever selection is made, the "N" command line option will toggle UNARCZ to the other mode. During file extraction the display is never paged. Options (A) - (T) -- comprise a list of filetypes that will be excluded automatically from type-out. The list should include filetypes that usually indicate a binary file, such as COM, OBJ, and EXE. A question mark will match any character. To eliminate any filetype from the list, replace it with one you want to exclude from type-out or repeat a previously listed filetype, such as "COM". Do not leave one of the filetypes in the list blank, or you will be unable to type any file with a blank filetype. 5  1-2-3-YES NO UNERASE Installation Menu (1) Wildcard filename allows list only? .  (2) Page screen by default? . . . . . . .  (3) Pause for disk change by default? . .  Option 1 -- Wildcard file recovery. If set "YES", a wildcard character in a filename automatically puts UNERASE in list-only mode. It lists matching erased files to the screen, but does not recover any of them. If set "NO", UNERASE enters list mode only when the "L" command line option is given; otherwise, all matching files are recovered. Wildcard file recovery is extremely dangerous. It can easily recover files which claim allocation blocks used by other files. Change this to "NO" ONLY if you are SURE you know what you are doing. Option 2 -- Screen paging. This configuration option turns screen paging on or off by default. It's your choice. The default chosen here can be toggled with the command line "P" option. Screen paging never works when files are being recovered. Option 3 -- Pause for disk change. For most people this option should be "NO". If you have only one disk drive, you may want to make a pause the default mode by changing this option to "YES". The default chosen here can be toggled with the command line "C" option. K  0'1'2(3-4q5   UNERAZ DEFAULTS (Screen 1 of 2)  List specified erased files.... 0) Option character... ' ' 1) Enable option...... 2) Default setting.... Option flag.................... 3) Flag character..... ' ' Defaults for non-ZCPR3 systems only: 4) Program name... 5) Maximum user....... Q  0 "A [B C D E F (G @QH zIoJKLMN <O@eP  VALID DRIVE VECTOR (Screen 2 of 2)  Non-extended ZCPR3 systems only: Use internal UNERAZ valid drive vector instead of environmental maximum drive specification......................... 0) Set all valid drives to YES: A) Drive A... | I) Drive I... B) Drive B... | J) Drive J... C) Drive C... | K) Drive K... D) Drive D... | L) Drive L... E) Drive E... | M) Drive M... F) Drive F... | N) Drive N... G) Drive G... | O) Drive O... H) Drive H... | P) Drive P... YESNO NO YESON OFF  UNERAZ VERS 1.2 OPTION DEFAULTS  Each option may be enabled or disabled. If disabled, the default setting will remain in effect! The option character for each option may be changed if you prefer a different mnemonic. Each current option character will be displayed in the command line help screen. The default setting for each option may be toggled between ON and OFF. Selecting an option from the command line will then toggle the default setting, reversing the option operation. The command line help screen will reflect the current default settings by displaying the operation of each option if it is selected. LIST SPECIFIED ERASED FILES: If ON, the default is to only list the specified erased files. If OFF, the default is to unerase the specified erased files. OPTION FLAG CHARACTER: The character signifying an option specification may be changed, if desired. For non-ZCPR3 systems only, the following defaults may be changed: PROGRAM NAME: If you rename UNERAZ, the new program name, which is displayed in the command line help screen syntax display, may be changed to match. In ZCPR3 systems, the current program name is displayed automatically. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered. MAXIMUM USER NUMBER ACCEPTED: If you wish to limit the user numbers that UNERAZ will accept, you may enter a user number from 0 to 31. In ZCPR3 systems, the maximum user number will be automatically taken from the environment.  VALID DRIVE VECTOR  USE UNERAZ VALID DRIVE VECTOR FOR NON-EXTENDED ZCPR3 SYSTEMS: If YES, use UNERAZ's internal valid drive vector in place of the environmental maximum drive byte in earlier non-extended ZCPR3 environments. If NO, the ZCPR3 environmental maximum drive byte will be used. VALID DRIVE VECTOR: Under non-ZCPR3 systems, or under earlier non-extended ZCPR3 systems, the valid drive vector flag may be set to YES to allow you to use the valid drive vector to specify whether individual drives will be accepted as valid by UNERAZ. Under extended ZCPR3 systems, such as found in NZCOM, the valid drive vector will be taken from the environment. Set all valid drives to YES.9  11213-~YES NO UNJUST Installation Menu (1) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  (2) Preserve trailing spaces? . . . . . .  (3) Tag character for ignored blocks . .  h Option (1) -- This option determines whether UNJUST will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. The default may be toggled by using the "Q" option on the command line. Option (2) -- ZDE uses a trailing space to indicate that the line ends with a soft carriage return. WordStar document files also have lines that end with a trailing space. To preserve trailing spaces the T option can be used on the command line or this option can be set to "YES" to preserve them by default. Option (3) -- Any blocks in the file that are delimited by this tag character will be copied verbatim by UNJUST. No spaces will be removed. As distributed, the tag character is ^P (10h). To use another character, enter its ASCII value in hexadecimal here. [  1A2A3A4@I5sYES NO AlwaysSET Only WHEEL Installation Menu (1) Default to Quiet mode? . . . . . . .  (2) Case-sensitive password? . . . . . .  (3) Echo password while entering? . . . .  (4) Require password: . . . . . . .  (5) WHEEL password: . . . . . . . .  Option (1) -- This option determines whether WHEEL defaults to quiet mode. Whatever is chosen here can be toggled with a "Q" option on the command line. Option (2) -- If "YES" is chosen here, the password entered must match the password exactly, upper-case matching only upper-case and lower-case matching only lower-case. If there are any lower-case characters in your password, you won't be able to enter the password on the command line unless this is set to "NO". Such a password must be entered interactively when WHEEL prompts for it. Option (3) -- Select "YES" if you want WHEEL to echo the password to the screen as you type it interactively. If "NO" is selected, only dots will be echoed. Option (4) -- Normally WHEEL only requires a password to SET the Wheel Byte (turn it on). If "Always" is selected, WHEEL will require a password for everything, including display of the usage screen. Option (5) -- This is the actual password that must be entered on the command line or in answer to WHEEL's prompt. If the password is entered here in upper-case, it can be given on the command line even if option 2 above is set to "YES". If option 2 is set to "NO", the case of the password is unimportant. A password also cannot be entered on the command line if it begins with a slash ("/"), or if it contains a colon (":") or embedded spaces.   AB?CwD?E*F*G+SH-I.J/K0/L2^M=N> _______________ XCAT6 Configuration ________________ A) Default Lines on Screen if no TERMCAP B) Default Columns on Screen if no TERMCAP C) Horizontal line character " " D) Ring Bell (Sound buzzer) on errors E) Include Dates in Data Base (MAST.CAT) F) Include Users in Data Base (MAST.CAT) G) Default Drive/User for Catalog H) Output Device for Listing I) Default Lines per Page on Printer J) Use Hardware Form Feeds in Print Lists K) Default Output File Drive/User (DU:) L) Default Output File Name M) Display dates in US Format N) Date Separation Character " " $YES NO ConsoleDisk File Printer XCAT Version 6.0 LINES ON SCREEN - Number of lines to be used for console display if no ZCPR 3.x TERMCAP is detected. COLUMNS ON SCREEN - Number of displayable columns on console display if no ZCPR 3.x TERMCAP is detected. HORIZONTAL LINE - Character to be used to draw horizontal line on the screen LINES PER PAGE - Number of printable lines per page of printed output. OUTPUT DEVICE - Selections are Console, Printer and Disk File. Selecting this entry steps through the options USE BELL ON ERROR - Use Bell (beeper) on errors. You may disable this feature to avoid disturbing others by setting to NO INCLUDE DATES - Include Last Modified or Create date in Catalog. INCLUDE USERS - Include File User Number for each file in Catalog. DISPLAY DATES IN US FORMAT - If set to YES, dates in output listings will be displayed as MM/DD/YY. If set to NO, dates will be shown as DD-MM-YY. (See separator character) DATE SEPARATION CHARACTER - Character to put between Day, Month, and Year fields in dates $  C=Z5FW^QFB]EQ'Pc$lOp1AqtS'L-?N D ZEX v. 5.0 Configuration Options C) show Command processor prompt Z) show "ZEX:" in prompt F) permit abort and Flow control (Control-S, Control-C) Q) quiet all console output (except |SAY| messages) B) ring Bell when reporting compilation/loading errors E) Exit quietly, without termination message P) scan Path for script file R) if path option, scan current directory O) use Only the absolute drive/user for script file A) absolute drive/user xxx S) Short console status delay value [05] L) Long console status delay value [0F] N) command processor's zex Noise equate value [00] D) Debugging output YES NO C) show Command processor prompt Display the command processor's command-line prompt (e.g. "ROOT:A1>") with each command line. Z) show "ZEX:" in prompt Display "ZEX:" before each command-line. F) permit abort and Flow control (Control-S, Control-C) Allow a Control-S to halt the flow of an application program's console output. If Control-C is then typed, allow application, remainder of script, or neither to be cancelled. If this feature is enabled, keyboard characters cannot be "typed ahead" while ZEX is running. Q) quiet all console output (except |SAY| messages) Suppress all console output (except messages from |SAY| directives). B) ring Bell when reporting compilation/loading errors Ring bell as part of error messages during compilation of script and loading of ZEX. E) Exit quietly, without termination message Exit without a termination message when ZEX cancelled externally. ("ZEX done"). P) scan Path for script file Search along the ZCPR3 Path for the script file. $) if path option, scan current directory If path option enabled, search the current directory for script file. O) use Only the absolute drive/user for script file Look only in the absolute directory (drive/user) to find the script file. A) absolute drive/user The absolute directory (drive/user) for the script file. S) Short console status delay value Number of "false" console status conditions after each input character. L) Long console status delay value Number of "false" console status conditions after each carriage- return character. N) command processor's zex Noise equate value The value of the ZEXNOISE equate in your ZCPR command processor. 0 = ZCPR never prompts when ZEX is running. 1 = ZCPR prompts when ZEX is running and quiet flag is not set. 2.. = ZCPR always prompts when ZEX is running. D) Debugging output Display compiled script on console as a debugging aid and wait for carriage-return. _  0 12A3+4 U5 6eu7  ZFIND VERS 1.4 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename (FILENAME)........ (0)   Search for files on.................... (1)   When searching a list of files, display (2)   Default to displaying found string line (3)   Default to displaying found string in a (4)   Block delimiter string..... Line feed + (5)  <--as a HEX character  Screen display paging default.......... (6)   Overwrite existing output file......... (7)  all user areas specified user area onlyall files searched only files with matchesin context (3 lines)as found line only delimited blockline Page display Don't page displaywithout askingAsk first  ZFIND VERS 1.4 DEFAULTS  Default CFG Filename Enter the desired default CFG filename in the form: form 'FILENAME'. Up to 8 characters may be entered. File Search This option can be set to search all user areas on the specified drive for files, or to search only the specified or default user area. Default Found String Display Sets the default found string display to either Line or Delimited Block. When set to Line, ZFIND displays the line in which the string was found. When set to Delimited Block, ZFIND displays the block in which the string was found. The block is defined as the text between two delimiter strings, set using the delimiter configuration byte. Default Found String Line Display Context displays the found line with the previous line and the next line. Otherwise, only the found string line will be displayed. This option is only active in the line display mode, and will be ignored in the demimited block display mode. Block Delimiter String The block delimiter string is two characters long. The first character is always a line feed, which means that the second configurable delimiter character must always appear as the first character in a line. Because the delimiter is not limited to displayable characters, it must be entered as a HEX character. The distribution default delimiter is '-' (2Dh), matching the XFOR string of LF,'-'. A delimiter of RETURN (0Dh) will match a double spaced line (cr,LF,CR,lf,...). A delimiter of ';' (3Bh) will match source code comments beginning in the first column. Filename Display Set to display all filenames being searched or to display only the filenames containing matched strings. Page Screen Display The screen display is normally paged. This option may also be set to disable screen paging, useful when writing to an output file. Overwrite Existing Output File Normally set to ask before overwriting an existing output file. May be set to overwrite without asking. When appending to a file, it is assumed that the output file exists. If not, a file will automatically be created.   +]Uz  MT#C#Q#PT#D ABC!D$<E'^F*G-H0I3J6K9'L<HM?jNBOEPHQKRNSQ3TTTYES NO ZLT Installation Menu One M) Max. lines to type for nonwheel ........... T) Restrict file types ....................... C) Restrict control character print .......... Q) Default to Quiet output ................... P) Default to paged output ................... D) Default typing delay (0..9 or "X" for none) ZLT Installation Menu Two A) Exclude filetype A ..... B) Exclude filetype B ..... C) Exclude filetype C ..... D) Exclude filetype D ..... E) Exclude filetype E ..... F) Exclude filetype F ..... G) Exclude filetype G ..... H) Exclude filetype H ..... I) Exclude filetype I ..... J) Exclude filetype J ..... K) Exclude filetype K ..... L) Exclude filetype L ..... M) Exclude filetype M ..... N) Exclude filetype N ..... O) Exclude filetype O ..... P) Exclude filetype P ..... Q) Exclude filetype Q ..... R) Exclude filetype R ..... S) Exclude filetype S ..... T) Exclude filetype T ..... ZLT Installation Menu One Help M) Max. lines to type for nonwheel. The number of lines ZLT will display when the wheel byte is off. Set to zero for no limit. T) Restrict file types. Set to YES to restrict viewing of files with the types shown in Menu Two. C) Restrict control character print. Set to NO to allow ZLT to display all control characters. Q) Default to Quiet output. Set to YES to tell ZLT to display quietly by default. The "Q" option will now result in verbose display. P) Default to paged output. Set to NO to tell ZLT not to page the display. The "P" option will now result in paging. D) Default typing delay. The speed at which ZLT sends characters to the screen. "9" is slowest, "0" is fastest, "X" disables delay. ZLT Installation Menu Two Help You may install up to 20 file types for ZLT to exclude. ZLT will not display files with these types. You may use "?" to match any character at this position, e.g., "C?M" matches files with type "COM" and "CQM". To use less than 20 entries, simply copy the last type to be excluded to the remaining entries.  !K| P&%( 0<@1<@20<@3y<@4<@5 D@6@T<@7AZM PUS R#H&0E)yAB6k@F5Ao@ ZMAC ASSEMBLER INSTALLATION MENU 1 of 3 I/O CONTROL OPTIONS DEFAULT FILE TYPES 0) Listing to Terminal NO | Z) Z80 Source Z80 1) Listing to Disk File NO | M) MACLIB/Incl LIB 2) Listing to Printer NO | P) List File PRN 3) Generate Object File YES | S) Symbol Tbl SYM 4) Generate Symbol File NO | R) REL Object REL 5) Object Type (HEX/REL) REL | H) HEX Object HEX 6) Make Error Log file YES | E) Error log file ERR 7) STOP if errors exceed 50 | SYSTEM INTERFACE OPTIONS B) Z3 Msg Buffer Offset 42h | A) Alternate DU: B8 F) ZCPR3 System File # 4 | I/O CONTROL OPTIONS (0..6) Default values for missing command line options. When a command line option is used, it toggles the associated option value. 0) Listing to Console? 'C' option 1) Listing to Disk File? 'P' option 2) Listing to Printer? 'L' option 3) Generate OBJect File? 'O' option 4) Generate Symbol File? 'S' option 5) OBJect type (HEX/REL) 'H' option 6) Make Error Log File? 'E' option 7) STOP if errors exceed xxx (not a command line option) xxx defines the number of non-fatal errors that will cause an abort of the current assembly. If xxx is 0, such errors will never cause an abort. xxx is a decimal number from 0 to 65535. DEFAULT FILETYPE OPTIONS Default filetypes exist for all files and are as shown on the screen. A filetype in an explicit filespec takes precedence over the default. Z) Source File type is the default filetype for the Source file to be assembled. Change it if you normally use some other extension (like .ASM or .MAC) for source files. M) MACLIB/INCLUDE file type is the default extension for names given in INCLUDE, .IN or MACLIB statements. L) Listing File type is the default filetype for the listing file. An explicit filetype in the command line P option takes precedence. MORE DEFAULT FILETYPE OPTIONS S) Symbol table File type is the default filetype for the Symbol Table file. An explicit filetype in the command line S option takes precedence. R) REL OBJect File type is the default filetype for the mREL format object file. An explicit filetype in the command line O option takes precedence. H) HEX OBJect File type is the default filetype for the Intel HEX format object file. An explicit filetype in the command line O option takes precedence. E) Error Log File type is the default extension for the Error Log File. An explicit filetype in the command line E option takes precedence. SYSTEM INTERFACE OPTIONS F) Z3 System File number (1 to 4) On the first assembly error, the name of the current input file is written into the system file buffer number specified. B) Z3 Msg Buffer Offset (40H to 4FH) The error type, DU spec for the file, and file line number are entered in the Z3 message buffer at the offset named above. A) Alternate DU This option supplies the DU to search for an input file after an unsuccessful search of the current directory. A ? in the DU is a form of wildcard. It refers to the currently logged Drive or User determined when ZMAC is invoked.  0`<@1<@2<@3;<@4?w@5C{@6@{@7_<@8 <@9@8@AO<@Wv<@S8s@O9s@P:s@E<bs@F=<@T 8@M\@ ZMAC ASSEMBLER INSTALLATION MENU 2 of 3 LISTING FORMAT BUFFER SIZES, 128 Byte Records 0) Form Feed at Start NO | S) Source Files 16 1) Form Feed at End YES | O) Object File 8 2) Keep Page Parity YES | P) PRN List File 16 3) Page Size from Z3 ENV NO | E) Error Log File 4 4) Default Page Length 66 | 5) Dflt. LST line length 128 | LINES TO LIST IN PRN 6) Dflt. PRN line length 128 | F) False Conditionals NO 7) Include Line Numbers YES | T) .TITLE, PAGE, etc. NO 8) Statement Sequence NO | M) Macro Expansions LALL 9) Line Number first YES | List High Byte first in: A) Addresses in Operand YES | W) Words in DW stmnts YES DEFAULT BUFFER SIZES ZMAC employs user configurable file i/o buffers which are allocated at run-time. Allocation is automatic; buffers not required by default settings or command tail argument options are not allocated. The space is instead allocated for use by the memory-resident symbol and Macro tables. When file i/o buffers ARE allocated, their size is that assigned during configuration. Buffer sizes are stated in terms of 128-byte records. Thus, the default size of the Source file buffer is 16*128=2K. You may change these to a number between 1 and 32. (zero length is not allowed). Smaller buffers make room for assembly of larger and more complex source files; larger buffers increase the speed of an assembly through reduced disk I/O. LISTING FORMAT CONTROLS 0) Form Feed at Start of listing? YES causes a form feed before the listing starts. NO assumes that the printer is at top-of-page when the assembly listing starts. 1) Form Feed at End of listing? YES causes a form feed after the last line is printed and avoids leaving the printer in the middle of a page. NO to eliminate this formfeed. 2) Keep Page Parity in Listing? After printing is complete, ZMAC notes whether an odd or even number of pages has been printed. If the number is odd, then an extra formfeed is issued. With fan-fold paper, all listings will then have the same orientation with respect to the fold. NO to disable this feature. LISTING FORMAT CONTROLS - II 3) Get Page size from Z3 Environment? YES will cause ZMAC to retrieve the page length and width for both the console and the printer from the currently selected ones in the ZCPR3 environment. NO causes the values in 4), 5), and 6) to be used. 4) Default Page Length The total length of the page in lines. ZMAC allows for top and bottom margins. This page length is used for both the Printer and the PRN file. 5) Default Page width for List Device The total width in terms of print characters. ZMAC allows for margins. LISTING FORMAT CONTROLS - III 6) Default Page width for PRN file Listing This number specifies the line length for lines sent to the PRN file. Lines longer than this will be truncated on the right. This line length and the one for the list device (printer) work independantly. 7) Include Line Numbers in Listing? NO to remove line numbers from the listing. 8) Statement Sequence for line numbering? NO to number lines in the PRN listing in accord with their position in the source file. A separate line number sequence is maintained for each source file. This makes it easy to locate lines in the source which may need changing. YES will cause line numbers to be assigned sequentially, in the order in which source statements appear in the PRN listing. LISTING FORMAT CONTROLS - IV 9) Line Number First? YES causes line numbers to appear at the far left of the listing. NO will cause the line numbers to be printed between the CODE field and the source line field. F) List False Conditionals? NO means source lines within a false conditional block will not be included in the listing. YES means you want those lines listed. T) List .TITLE, PAGE, etc. statements? NO means lines containing Listing Control pseudo-ops will not be listed. This is the same as if the .XCTL pseudo-op had been invoked. The EFFECT of the hidden pseudo-ops is still present. YES causes lines containing those pseudo-ops to be included, and is equivalent to the action of the .LCTL instruction. LISTING FORMAT CONTROLS - V HIGH BYTE FIRST in: A) Addresses in Operand W) Words in DW stmnts These two selections control the order in which the high and low bytes of 16 bit quantities (words) are displayed in the assembly listing. Humans generally like to see the high byte first; the actual order of storage (ie as shown in a memory dump) is low byte first. Toggle these as your needs dictate. M) Macro Expansions: XALL, SALL, LALL This is a three way toggle that selects which of the macro listing options will be used as default. Refer to the descriptions of .XALL, .SALL, and .LALL in the ZMAC Manual.  A2&<@B2'<@C3>'6&EGh'F2@':&G'L@H2'<@J2(8@MJ:(D&DK=(H&YI@(L&K2 l(<@14(<@24(<@34(<@ASEGCSEG1 ZMAC ASSEMBLER INSTALLATION MENU 3 of 3 -- ASSEMBLY DEFAULTS A) Suppress Assy Statistics NO B) Suppress Propeller? xxx C) M-REL Max Symbol length 6 E) ASEG default start address 0100H F) Default initial segment CSEG G) Use 16 BITS to test Trueness H) Allow LABEL redefinition ? NO J) Pass ALL externals to REL ? YES M,D,Y) Default Date: 05/23/89 K) Put Date/Time in Rel file? NO 1) .PRINTX output on Pass 1 ? YES 2) .PRINTX output on Pass 2 ? YES 3) SAK after error msgs only ? YES ASSEMBLY DEFAULT OPTIONS A) Assembly Statistics are sent to the screen at the end of each assembly. You may wish to suppress these when assembling many sources with an alias. B) The 'busy' indicator is a simulated rotating propeller displayed on your screen. You can toggle this off to please your taste or preserve the sanity of a hard copy output device. C) Standard M-Rel files only transmit up to 6 characters of symbols and names. Depending on the capabilities of programs that use the REL files, this can be increased to 7. ZMLIB and ZML permit 8. 8 significant characters are very useful with the .REQUEST statement because it allows arbitrary library file names. E) ASEG starts by default at this address. If it's the address you want, no ORG statement is necessary. The standard addresses are 100H and 0. Some linkers may be confused by rel files that start with ASEG assumed to start at 0. (ZML works with both.) ASSEMBLY DEFAULT OPTIONS - II F) Some assemblers start with an implied ASEG, others with an implied CSEG statement. You may choose the default relocation base either way with ZMAC. This option toggles between the two. DEFINE THE MEANING OF "TRUE" G) Use 16 BITS to test Trueness Use LOW BIT to test Trueness An expression used in an IF (conditional assembly) clause is reduced at assembly time to a 16 bit number which is tested by one of two methods: 1) is it zero or non-zero, and 2) is it odd or even? Z/NZ is a 16 BIT test; odd/even is equivalent to a test of the least significant (LOW) bit. TRUE is defined as NZ when 16 BIT testing is being used, and as ODD (lsb = 1) when LOW BIT is the test chosen. It is important to know which convention is being used in order for your IF clauses to have predictable behavior. Digital Research assemblers use the LOW BIT method for testing values. The Microsoft (continued on next screen) ASSEMBLY DEFAULT OPTIONS - III M80 assembler uses the 16 BITS method (Z/NZ) for testing. This option determines which method ZMAC uses by default. The two pseudo-ops .IF1 and .IF16 permit control of the method used from within the assembly source. H) Allow LABEL Redefinition - The SET and ACCEPT pseudo-ops will permit redefinition of symbols which were first encountered as a statement label if you select a YES answer to this item. ACCEPT makes such assignments during pass 1 only, leaving the assigned value intact during pass 2. Make sure you fully understand the assembly process if you turn this option on! Phase errors can result. J) Include ALL Externals in REL file - If YES, then externals declared but never referenced in source code are included in the REL file and the code in which the symbols occur will be included at link time. NO means that such symbols will be ignored, permitting the use of standard EXT lists whose references are only used as required by the following code. ASSEMBLY DEFAULT OPTIONS - IV M,D,Y) DEFAULT DATE (Month/Day/Year) This is the date used by ZMAC when no system clock is present. It is overwritten by the system date/time functions at each invocation. The .SETDAT and .SETTIM assembler instructions in turn supersede both defaults. The date and time is included in assembly listing headers and is passed to the mrel object file for use by the linker, library manager, or other programs that use the rel file. K) Put Date/Time in the REL file Toggles the function on/off. Linkers which do not recognize the embedded date/time data will sometimes issue a 'duplicate symbol' error message. This does not interfere with successful linking and can be ignored or toggled off with this option. ASSEMBLY DEFAULT OPTIONS - V 1) .PRINTX output on pass 1 ? 2) .PRINTX output on pass 2 ? These two options are toggles. When 'YES', the .PRINT and .PRINTX pseudo-ops produce output by default on that pass. You may thus select pass 1, pass 2, or both passes for .PRINT to be active. Note that logic in ZMAC interprets a NO for both passes as a request to print on BOTH passes; the response is the same as if you had said YES to both options. This is done because the purpose of the .PRINT statement is to produce console output. The selection provided by these options makes ZMAC behave as intended when assembling source written for other assemblers, each of which uses slightly different conventions. The as-distributed configuration, output on pass1 only, is probably the most generally useful. ZMAC automatically over rides these defaults in IF1 conditinal assembly blocks or if the ZAS style pass number argument is present in the .PRINTX statement. ASSEMBLY DEFAULT OPTIONS - VI 3) SAK (Strike Any Key) after error msgs only ? Before sending the assembly statistics report to the screen, ZMAC checks to see if any text has been sent to the screen by .PRINTX, by .ACCEPT, or by the error handling function. If error messages are present, ZMAC will always pause with the "Strike any key to continue" message giving you the opportunity to read the messages before they are scrolled off the screen. Option 3 allows you to select or inhibit the same screen pause for non-error messages generated by the .PRINT and .ACCEPT pseudo-ops. This option is a toggle. When the YES response is selected, the screen pause caused by .PRINT, .PRINTX, or .ACCEPT will be ignored. When the NO is chosen, then output from these pseudo-ops is not ignored, and the SAK message will be active. You might wish to use the YES option during assemblies controlled by a script so that you do not have to 'stand by' to press a key for each module assembled. NOYES NOHEXRELLOW BIT16 BITSLALLSALLXALL@O  j 0f &S 1 &C2 &3 &4  &5@ &B#6)f7/8,92AM9>&RF8B&HJA?L5d ZML LINKER INSTALLATION MENU 1 of 2 I/O CONTROL OPTIONS DEFAULT OUTPUT FILE TYPES 0) Sym Tbl list/Console xxx | S) Symbol Table file .SYM 1) Page Console display xxx | C) Executable A:0100 .COM 2) Sym Tbl list to File xxx | B) Executable A:other .BIN | 6) /P option, A:0100 .PRL 3) Supress Propeller xxx | 7) /P option, A:0000 .SPR 4) Supress Status Rpt. xxx | 8) /P option, A:other .BPR 5) Z3 Quiet flag for both xxx | 9) FS/I option .RSX SYSTEM INTERFACE OPTIONS | DEFAULT INPUT FILE TYPES M) Z3 Msg Buffer Offset 42H | R) mREL Source file .xxx F) ZCPR3 System File # xx4 | H) PRL hdr file xxxxxxxx.xxx A) Alternate DU: ?8x | L) mREL Library file .xxx I/O CONTROL OPTIONS Options 0 through 5 toggle (YES/NO) each time they are selected. 0) and 2) control automatic output of the global symbol table. Setting either or both to YES causes the symbol table to be generated and sent to the selected device(s). If 1) is set to yes, then console output will be paged. 3) Display of the activity indicator and linker pass number is inhibited when this item is answered YES, superseding the state of the Z3 QUIET flag. 4) Display of the status report at the end of link is inhibited if YES. Like 3), the YES supersedes the state of the Z3 Quiet Flag. 5) When YES, the Z3 Quiet Flag will inhibit BOTH the activity indicator and the status report. For non Z-systems, this item has no effect. Options 3-5 give you the choice between more information and reduction of console screen clutter. The activity indicator simulates a rotating propeller which is very hard on printers and braille terminals. DEFAULT FILETYPES File type extensions on the command line supersede the defaults shown here. The file type for output files containing code depends on the load address at which the program is linked. The default load address (normally 100H) is set by the A option in MENU 2, and may be assigned by the /A option on the command line. The default output filetype is selected according to the indicated combination of command option (/P, /K, /I, or none) and the default or assigned load address (/A or /A:). Note that the default FN and FT for the /P options only provides defaults for missing parts of a FS/P command line option. If FS is missing entirely, then ZML generates a null-filled PRL header. The PRL header file (FS) may contain executable code. Locations 01 and 02 will be filled with the length of the following program after the file is prepended to the output file and its bitmap. ZML makes the bitmap automatically. SYSTEM INTERFACE OPTIONS A) ALTERNATE DU If ZML can't find a file in the default or named directory, the search will continue in the Alternate you have selected. The "?" entry for either drive or user means to search the default D or U which is current when ZML is invoked. F) ZCPR3 System File number When ZCPR3/33/34 is available, the name of the first input file that caused an error will be stored at this system file number. Note that 'undefined symbol' errors are not assigned to a particular file! M) Z3 Msg Buffer Offset This value defines the destination of potential error or link data that ZML could leave for reference by subsequent programs. It is not currently used, and changing it will have no effect.   P &R &M&&S=F&NUUA6AH0&1@[&I T&2y&3& ZML LINKER INSTALLATION MENU 2 of 2 A) Main Load Address 0100H | 0) Append .REQUEST files U) Uninitialized data is: 00H | 1) Initialized ASEG only? YES P) Make PRL/xPR file xxx | S) PRL header size = xxx rcrds R) Make RSX type file xxx | N) RSX HDR name = xxxxxxxx.xxx M) Mark Free Memory address RELOCATABLE in the bitmap I) Include empty externals?YES | 2) Truncate DS (non PRL)? YES | 3) Truncate DS (for PRL)? YES U) UNINITIALIZED DATA ZML uses the byte displayed here to fill areas skipped over by ORG and DS statements, and as a fill byte in the last sector of the binary output file. You can set this to any value you wish. A) MAIN LOAD ADDRESS The Main Load Address is that memory location at which the first byte of the linked code will be loaded for execution or other memory location-dependent access. For programs operating under CP/M or Z-Systems, that address is the familiar 100H. This menu item allows you to set the default load address to some other value for special applications. The /A command line option achieves the same objective, over-riding the default set here. : 0) xxxxxx .REQUEST FILES "xxxxxx" toggles between "Append" and "Insert" when this menu item is selected. The names of REL Files included in the current link are either appended to the list of files from the command line or are Inserted immediately after the file in which the .request item was found. This affects the ORDER in which libraries are searched to resolve symbols which have been previously declared External. Append is the preferred selection when the .request'd files do not in turn contain the .request item. When .request items are NESTED by being called out in files that are themselves the object of a .request, then the INSERT selection may avoid 'unresolved symbols'. Consider the link command: ZML MYFILE,SYSLIB/ If MYFILE contains a .request MYLIB item, then the linker will (append) process the files in the following order: MYFILE.REL, SYSLIB.REL, MYLIB.REL If the INSERT selection is active, then the processing order will be: MYFILE.REL, MYLIB.REL, SYSLIB.REL If MYLIB.REL contains externals expected to be resolved in SYSLIB, then only the second strategy will be successful! : 1) Initialized ASEG only? A 'YES' here means that ASEG will only contribute code to the output file if it is initialized data generated by instructions or DB or DW statements in ASEG. When toggled to 'NO', this option causes ALL ASEG memory references to be allocated, initialized, and included in the output file. ASEG areas defined with DS or skipped via ORG statements will be included in the output file and initialized to the value you have selected in item U above. Labels defined in ASEG by statements like 'LABEL EQU $' are treated the same as ORG statements by initializing any undefined space preceding the Program Counter ($). Leave this option 'YES' unless you require these unusual effects. P) Make PRL/xPR file (xPR = SPR or BPR file types) A 'yes' here will cause such files to be generated without being named on the command line. The PRL type header will be filled with nulls except, of course, for the obligatory length word at addr 1. : S) Size of PRL type header The length of the null-filled block is 2 records (=1 page=256 bytes) for a standard PRL or SPR file. The S selection allows you to change this length for special applications. R) Make RSX file A 'yes' here causes the linker to always include the file named in the N selection as the first in the output file. The output file type will be set to that selected in MENU 1. N) Name of the RSX input file The name selected here provides default FN and FT for the FS/I command line option. If FS is not specified, then the input file is expected to be as shown here. : M) Mark free memory address ... This selection toggles between RELOCATABLE and ABSOLUTE, and controls treatment of the VALUE word at location $MEMRY (if present) when the bitmap is being constructed for PRL-type files. Leave this selection at RELOCATABLE unless you are **VERY SURE** that your code requires the un-relocated value at $MEMRY. I) Include empty externals? YES means that code for unreferenced external names will be included in the linked file even thought it is not used. NO means that such empty external references will be ignored, resulting in a shorter code image. Some compilers use such externals to force inclusion of library code. : 2) Truncate terminal uninitialized data (not PRL)? When YES, the object file will not include uninitialized (like DS) data areas at the end of the file. Such files may save disk storage space and may load faster if the uninitialized data area is large. If NO, then the uninitialized data is included and is actually initialized to the value specified in the 'U' option. This option applies to all output files except those that contain a PRL or SPR header. 3) Truncate terminal uninitialized Data (for PRL)? When YES, the object PRL/SPR file will not include uninitialized data, as above for non-PRL files. If NO, then the uninitialized data is included. This option applies to PRL/SPR files only, allowing you to treat them differently than 'normal' files. YES NOYESINSERTAPPENDABSOLUTE RELOCATABLE@O7  0 12n3U  ZP VERS 1.5 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename (FILENAME)........ 0)   Default memory mode starting address... 1)  H (FFFFh->Z3ENV)  Default ASCII record display. Hi bits 2)   Menu box line graphics display......... 3)  Unchanged Filtered No line graphics Standout line graphics Line graphics  ZP VERS 1.5 DEFAULTS  Default CFG Filename Enter the desired default CFG filename in the form: form 'FILENAME'. Up to 8 characters may be entered. Default Memory Mode Starting Address Used when no starting address is specified on the command line. Set to FFFFh to default to ZCPR3 Environment. Default ASCII Record Display Mode Set to display ASCII record with hi bits unchanged or filtered. ^A can be used to toggle display mode. Menu Box Line Graphics Display The menu box may be outlined in line graphics, in standout line graphics (if your terminal permits) or the line graphics may be turned off.  A BCSDE%1+20354:5 ?6!D7"I8$  IOPCLK VERS 1.0 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename (FILENAME)............. A) Sound console bell on each hour............. B) Display and update clock every second....... C) 12 hour or 24 hour time display............. D) hour Number of spaces preceding clock display.... E) Zero-terminated terminal message string (HEX): 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ESC, h, h, h, h, h, h, h Terminal message termination character...... 8) h YESNO 1224c  IOPCLK VERS 1.0 DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: Enter the desired default CFG filename in the form 'FILENAME.TYP'. Up to 8 characters may be used. SOUND CONSOLE BELL ON EACH HOUR: Set to YES to sound the console bell on each hour DISPLAY AND UPDATE CLOCK DISPLAY EVERY SECOND: Set to YES to display the clock as 'hh:mm:ss' and to update the display every second. Default is to display the clock as 'hh:mm' and to update the display every minute. 12 HOUR or 24 HOUR TIME DISPLAY: Toggle to select the desired display format. NUMBER OF SPACES PRECEDING CLOCK DISPLAY: Enter the number of spaces you wish to precede the clock display in order to position the display where you want it. ZERO-TERMINATED TERMINAL MESSAGE STRING: Enter the string required by your terminal to display a message in the host terminal display field. The first character is assumed to be ESC. Seven additional characters maximum may be entered. Each character must be entered individually in hex. TERMINAL MESSAGE TERMINATION CHARACTER: Enter the terminal message termination character in hex. -  OqU I LBREXT CONFIGURATION O) Overwrite existing files U) Uncompress member files I) Inspect mode YESNO YES The O option determines whether LBREXT will overwrite existing files without asking permission first. Set this option to "NO" if you want LBREXT to pause and prompt if a file with the same name as the one being extracted already exists in the destination directory. Set it to "YES" to automatically overwrite existing files. The U option determines how compressed files are to be treated. Set this option to "YES" if you want LBREXT to expand, (uncompress), squeezed, crunched or LZH encoded member files as they are extracted from the library. Set it to "NO" if you want the files to be extracted from the library but left in compressed form. The I option determines whether LBREXT defaults to Inspect mode. Set this to "YES" if you want to "tag" the files to be extracted. +  S}#TYes No CRCBLD Installation Menu (S) Exclude system files? . . . . . . . .  (T) Tag character for disk labels . . . . .  Option S -- System files. Set this option to "No" if you want system (hidden) files included in ambiguous file specifications. If "Yes" is chosen, system files will not be found or included. Option T -- Tag character. This is the tag character (the first character) that you use for your disk labels, so CRCBLD can automatically obtain the disk number. A "-" is not recommended. If you use DateStamper and you choose a "!" for your tag character, this feature will not work in user 0. Instead, you will prompted for a disk number. [  CWSKLKFJKQ~KPOYes NoYes JUSTIFY Installation Menu (C) Default right margin column . . . . .  (S) Justify lines starting with space? .  (L) Justify lines regardless of length? .  (F) Retain form feeds? . . . . . . . . .  (Q) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  (P) Show line count progress reports? . .  Option C -- Right margin column. This is the column number that JUSTIFY will use when filling a line with spaces. The value entered can be changed on the command line. Option S -- Justify lines beginning with a space. Setting this option to "Yes" allows justification of indented paragraphs without using the "]" special character in the text file. The default selected can be changed with the command line "S" option. Option L -- Justify lines regardless of length. Normally lines are filled only if they can be justified using two spaces or less between each word. If you want all lines filled, regardless of the number of spaces it takes, enter "Yes" here. The default selected can be changed with the command line "L" option. Option F -- Retain form feeds. If this option is "No", form feeds will be removed from the file just like any other control character. If you want form feeds preserved, set this option to "Yes". The default selected can be changed with the command line "F" option. : Option Q -- Quiet mode. This option determines whether JUSTIFY will be in verbose or quiet mode by default (that is, if the quiet flag is off -- the quiet flag is always observed). The default, including the quiet flag, may be toggled by using the command line "Q" option. Option P -- Progress Reports. Normally JUSTIFY displays a running line count while it is working. This report can be suppressed by selecting "No". ;  C#D+YES NOPRINTERCONSOLE ECHO Installation Menu (C) Default to upper-case? . . . . . . . . .  (D) Default output destination . . . . .  Option C -- Default Case. This configuration option determines whether ECHO defaults to sending text in upper-case or lower-case. The default can be changed within the text string with the "%<" and "%>" escape sequences. Option D -- Default Destination. Whether ECHO defaults to console or printer output of the text string is set by this option. The selected default can be changed within the text string with the "%C" and "%P" escape sequences. S M 1?273 I4A7Yes No TVIWyseBarsDots LCS Configuration Menu (1) Terminal type . . . . . . . . . . . . (2) Install hashed block? . . . . . . . .  (3) Hashed block type . . . . . . . . . . (4) Load fonts quietly? . . . . . . . . .  Option (1) -- Terminal. The lead-in string for font loading is different for Wyse 60 and Televideo 965 terminals. This option determines which one will be used. Option (2) -- Install hashed block. Televideo terminals do not include a hashed block in their graphic character set. If "Yes" is selected, a hashed block will be installed for the graphics character 92h, which may be selected in graphics mode with an upper-case "R". This option has no effect if "Wyse" is selected for option 1 above. Option (3) -- Type of hashed block. Two types of hashed blocks have been implemented in LCS. One is composed of dots and one of bars. Try them both to see which you prefer. This option has no effect if "No" is selected for option 2 or "Wyse" is selected for option 1 above. Option (4) -- Quiet mode. Normally, LCS reports the font it is loading, such as "Loading Roman font". Setting this option to "Yes" will suppress the "Loading" message. 5 + U-V-S#-Yes No UMAP Installation Menu Do NOT set both U and V options to "Yes" (U) Show full user stats as default? . . .  (V) Show vacant user areas as default? . .  (S) Extra spaces in vacant user display? .  Do not set both the U and the V options to "Yes"; they are mutually exclusive. If both options are made the default, then the "no option" mode will be lost. If either of the options is made the default mode, using either command line option will turn the mode off. Option U -- Show user area usage. As distributed, UMAP displays only brief total directory statistics, unless the "U" option is given on the command line. If you would prefer complete user area directory statistics as the default, select "Yes" here. Option V -- Show vacant user areas. If you use UMAP chiefly to determine which user areas are free, you may wish to select "Yes" so that vacant user areas are displayed by default. Option S -- Space vacant user display. If "No", UMAP with the V option displays vacant user areas in compact form on the left side of the screen. "Yes" will add extra space to the display, spreading it the width of the screen. It's your choice. u  DMT_P/ARcqQAYES NOYESEUROPEANAMERICANMILITARYCIVILIAN ZTIME Installation Menu (D) Date entry and display format . . (T) Time display format . . . . . . . (P) Pause for key before setting clock? .  (R) First date/time storage register . .  (Q) Quiet mode for M and E options? . . .  Option (D) -- ZTIME can display the date either in AMERICAN order (March 13, 1990) or in EUROPEAN order (13 March 90), as chosen here. A date entered on the command line is also expected to be in the same order chosen here (either mm/dd/yy or dd.mm.yy). Option (T) -- The time can be displayed either in 12-hour CIVILIAN format (3:21 pm) or in 24-hour MILITARY format (15:21). This option does not affect command line time entry, which must always be in military format. Option (P) -- It takes time for ZTIME to load from disk, read the clock, parse the command line date and time specification, and then set the clock to the new time. It most cases a second or two is of no consequence. If you insist that the time setting be as exact as possible, chose "YES" here and ZTIME will prompt for a keypress just before setting the clock. Option (R) -- With the "M" command line option, ZTIME stores the current time in six consecutive ZCPR3 message registers. The available registers are numbered 0 to 31. The register selected here will be the lowest one used, so the highest register number available is 26, which will use through register 31. Other programs (notably ZDE) use message registers, so make your selection based on register usage by other programs you commonly run. Option (Q) -- Most ZTIME operations require screen displays, but no display is necessary for the "M" command line option. Select "YES" and the "M" option will store the date and time silently. In addition, The "E" option will skip showing the current time and display only the elapsed time. s  a bc defg"h Ni zj   PRNTXT VERS 1.6 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename (FILENAME).... A) Do BIOS LISTST printer check....... B) Number of lines per screen page.... C) Message characters used as flags: ====================================== Control character flag............. D) Printer/text toggle................ E) Page the screen display............ F) Include a command line token....... G) Text case change flag.............. H) Change text to lower case........ I) Change text to upper case........ J) cYESNO  PRNTXT VERS 1.6DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: Enter the desired default CFG filename in the form 'FILENAME'. Up to 8 characters may be used. BIOS LIST STATUS PRINTER CHECK: Set to YES to perform the check to avoid hanging on an off-line printer. Set to NO if you don't want PRNTXT to use the BIOS LISTST printer check. NUMBER OF LINES PER SCREEN PAGE: PRNTXT will pause the text after this number of lines has been displayed. CONTROL CHARACTER FLAG: When PRNTXT encounters this character is the message or command line text, it will convert the next character to a control character. PRINTER/TEXT TOGGLE: When PRNTXT encounters this character in the message or command line text, it will toggle the destination of the text between the console and the printer. The default is the console. PAGE SCREEN DISPLAY: When PRNTXT encounters this character in the message or command line text, it will pause the screen display. INCLUDE A COMMAND LINE TOKEN: When PRNTXT encounters this character in the message text, it will substitute the selected token (a number of characters ending in a space) from the command line. Assuming the character is '$': $ - The entire command line tail $1 - The first command line token $-1 - The command line after the first token CHANGE TEXT CASE: When PRNTXT enounters this character in the command line message, it will check the next character to see if it is one of the following case change flag characters:' CHANGE TEXT TO LOWER CASE: This flag, preceeded by the text case change flag character, will change the command line message display to lower case. CHANGE TEXT TO UPPER CASE: This flag, preceeded by the text case change flag character, will change the command line message display to upper case.   a)b)c*+ d+]e+ff,t g-h-i. j9k9l: m38n3Ao4O r5s5t7u7  RENAMZ VERS 1.9 OPTION DEFAULTS (Screen 1 of 2)  Option Option Default Option Configuration: Character Status Setting =================================================================== Rename only non-archived files..... A) ' ' B) C) Rename directory AND system files.. D) ' ' E) F) Skip renaming if files exist....... G) ' ' H) I) Inspect files before renaming...... J) ' ' K) L) Archive renamed files.............. M) ' ' N) O) Delete filename prefixes........... R) ' ' S) off Prefix filenames................... T) ' ' U) off  0v12 3   RENAMZ DEFAULTS (Screen 2 of 3)  Enable disk directory caching............. 0) Option flag character......................1) ' ' Non-ZCPR3 maximum user number............. 2) Non-ZCPR3 and CFG file default filename... 3) ' 0abc d6e_f g@hijk!lJmsn o@p  VALID DRIVE VECTOR (Screen 3 of 3)  Non-extended ZCPR3 systems only: Use internal RENAMZ valid drive vector instead of environmental maximum drive specification......................... 0) A) Drive A... | I) Drive I... B) Drive B... | J) Drive J... C) Drive C... | K) Drive K... D) Drive D... | L) Drive L... E) Drive E... | M) Drive M... F) Drive F... | N) Drive N... G) Drive G... | O) Drive O... H) Drive H... | P) Drive P... YESno disabledENABLED ON off  RENAMZ VERS 1.9 OPTION DEFAULTS  The option character for each option may be changed if you prefer a different mnemonic. Each current option character will be displayed in the command line help screen. The default setting for each option may be toggled between ON and OFF. Selecting an option from the command line will then toggle the default setting, reversing the option operation. The command line help screen will reflect the current default settings by displaying the operation of each option if it is selected. RENAME ONLY NON-ARCHIVED FILES: If ON, the default is to rename only non-archived (changed) files. If OFF, the default is to ignore the archive bit when selecting files for renaming. RENAME ALL (SYSTEM AND DIRECTORY) FILES: If ON, the default is to rename both System AND Directory files. If OFF, the default is to rename only Directory files. SKIP RENAMING IF FILES ALREADY EXIST: If ON, the default is to not rename a file if a file of the same name already exists. If OFF, the default is to ask if an existing file should be overwritten. INSPECT FILES BEFORE RENAMING: If ON, the default is to inspect and approve files before renaming. If OFF, the default is to rename files without approval. ARCHIVE DESTINATION FILES: If ON, the default is to mark renamed files as archived (not changed.) If OFF, the default is to mark renamed files as non-archived (changed.) DELETE FILENAME PREFIXES The default is OFF. If ON, delete the number of leading new_afn wildcard characters from the beginning of the old_afn filenames. Filetypes are not affected. Example: oldfilename: ABCDEF new_afn spec: ??? newfilename: DEF PREFIX FILENAMES: The default is OFF. If ON, add the prefix specified in the new_afn filename to the old_afn filenames. Filetypes are not affected. Example: oldfilename: DEF new_afn spec: ABC???? newfilename: ABCDEF  RENAMZ DEFAULTS  DISK DIRECTORY CACHING: You may enable or disable disk directory caching. Caching is always disabled under CP/M3+. OPTION FLAG CHARACTER: The character signifying an option specification may be changed, if desired. NON-ZCPR3 MAXIMUM USER NUMBER ACCEPTED: If you wish to limit the user numbers that RENAMZ will accept, you may enter a user number from 0 to 31. In ZCPR3 systems, the maximum user number will be automatically taken from the environment. NON-ZCPR3 AND CFG FILE DEFAULT FILENAME: This filename is used as the default configuration overlay (CFG) file. In non-ZCPR3 systems, this filename is also the program name that is displayed in the comand line help screen syntax display. In ZCPR3 systems, the current program name is displayed automatically. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered.  VALID DRIVE VECTOR  USE RENAMZ VALID DRIVE VECTOR FOR NON-EXTENDED ZCPR3 SYSTEMS: If YES, use RENAMZ's internal valid drive vector in place of the environmental maximum drive byte in earlier non-extended ZCPR3 environments. If NO, the ZCPR3 environmental maximum drive byte will be used. VALID DRIVE VECTOR: For use in non-ZCPR3 systems, or in earlier non-extended ZCPR3 systems if the valid drive vector flag is set to YES, you may specify which drives will be accepted as valid by RENAMZ. Each drive may be toggled between YES and NO. In extended ZCPR3 systems, such as found in NZCOM, the valid drive vector will be taken from the environment.? ; 172@737407YES NO ERASE Installation Menu (1) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . . .  (2) Include system files by default? . . .  (3) Erase read-only files without asking?  (4) Erase all files without asking first?  Option (1) -- This option determines whether ERASE defaults to quiet mode. Whatever is chosen here can be toggled with a "Q" option on the command line. Option (2) -- Normally ERASE does not find or erase system files unless the S option is used on the command line. If "YES" is chosen here, all matching files, including system files, will be found and erased by default. Option (3) -- If ERASE finds a matching read-only file, it asks before doing anything, unless the R option is included on the command line. Select "YES" if you want to erase read-only files by default. Since read- only files are supposed to be hard to erase, "NO" is highly recommended unless you are fully aware of the implications. Option (4) -- If the command line contains an "all files" file specifica- tion (*.*), ERASE will ask "Erase all files?" Answering "YES" here will bypass the prompt and ERASE will delete all the files it finds without further ado. A "NO" will help prevent wiping out all the files in a directory by mistake.   w:/ AOSF=HsQPD TVCLE Z!3 P"S7ILL$Yes NoYesAppendConcatBinary TextEuropeanAmericanMilitaryCivilianUpperLower CONCAT Installation Menu (Screen 1 of 2) Command line defaults: (A) Default operating mode . . . . . . . (O) Default file format . . . . . . . . . (S) Check for sufficient disk space? . . .  (F) Transfer file stamps? . . . . . . . . .  (H) Filter high bits and controls . . . . .  (Q) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . . .  (P) Screen/printer paging (CON: or LST:) .  Permanent options: (D) Date format . . . . . . . . . . . . (T) Time format . . . . . . . . . . . . (C) Divider string default case . . . . .  (L) Line feed after return (CON: input) . .  (E) Error on user abort (^C, ^K, ^X) . . .  (Z) End-of-file character for AUX: . . . .  h CONCAT Installation Menu (Screen 2 of 2) Configurable Strings (P) Date and time prefix: " " (S) Date and time suffix: " " (I) Default divider insert: " " COMMAND LINE DEFAULTS: The command line option pairs "A"/"C" and "O"/"T" can be configured to default when neither of a pair is given. Some other command line options are toggles ("S", "F", "H", "Q", and "P") which can turn a feature on or off depending on the defaults chosen. Option A -- Operating mode. The two operating modes are concatenation of the source files into a new destination file, as the name of the program implies, and appending the source files to an already existing destination file. As released the default is "Concat". You can make "Append" the default, if you do more appending than concatenating. The mode selected can be changed with the command line options "C" and "A". Option O -- File format mode. This option determines how CONCAT joins the files. In "Text" mode the files are joined wherever the CP/M end-of-file character is found, even in the middle of a sector. In "Binary" (object) mode the files are joined only on record boundaries and the end-of-file character is ignored. "Text" is the correct setting for most uses, but if you use CONCAT mostly for binary files (for some strange reason!), you can make that the default here. The format selected can be changed with the command line options "T" and "O". : Option S -- Disk space checking. As distributed CONCAT checks for adequate free space before doing any writing to disk. If you're courageous, you can turn off this feature by toggling it to "No". Space checking can then be turned back on with the command line "S" option. Option F -- File stamp transfer. In concatenation mode CONCAT transfers the create date stamp of the first source file to the new file. (If any source file has the same name as the destination file, its file stamp will be used instead.) If you prefer, change this option to "No" to turn this feature off by default. It can then be turned back on with the command line "F" option. Option H -- Filter high bits and control characters. If "Yes" is selected, CONCAT will, by default, reset high bits as they are output and eliminate control characters other than carriage return, line feed, form feed, and horizontal tab. This feature is useful for redirected output to CON: or LST:, but it is not always desirable otherwise. The default selected can be toggled with the command line "H" option. : Option Q -- Quiet mode. This option selects whether CONCAT will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. In quiet mode only error messages are displayed. The default may be toggled with the command line "Q" option. Option P -- Screen and printer paging. During redirected output to CON: or LST:, paging can be selected. When paging is in effect, CON: output waits for a keypress each time the screen fills, while LST: output sends a form feed at the end of each page to skip over the perforations. Paging is not available for disk file or AUX: output. The selected default can be toggled with the "P" option on the command line. PERMANENT OPTIONS: The following options are permanent configurations that cannot be changed from the command line. Option D -- Date format. If the "D" command line option is used to insert the current date and time into the destination file, the date can be in either "American" (December 13, 1990) or "European" (13 December 90) format. It's your choice. : Option T -- Time format. If the "D" command line option is used to insert the current date and time into the destination file, the time can be in "Civilian" format (12-hour time, e.g., "3:21 pm") or "Military" format (24- hour time, e.g., "15:21"), whichever your prefer. Option C -- Default case. This option selects the default case of the divider string if it is entered from the command line. It does not affect the operation of the "%<" and "%>" escape sequences, nor does it affect the internally configured divider string. Option L -- Line feed after carriage return. During redirected input from CON:, a line feed must ordinarily be typed after a carriage return. If you prefer that CONCAT output the line feed automatically, select "Yes" here. Option E -- Error on user abort. Choose here whether you want the program error flag set and the error handler invoked when CONCAT is aborted with a ^C, ^K, or ^X. Calling the error handler is sometimes advantageous because it allows cancelling a SUB or ZEX batch job, but some people might not want the aggravation. : Option Z -- End-of-file character for AUX:. This byte tells CONCAT when it has reached the end of auxiliary input. The default is the normal CPM end- of-file character. CONCAT also sends this character at the end of redirected auxiliary output. The default is ^Z (1Ah), the normal CP/M end- of-file character. If you have a special need, any other character from 00h to FFh can be entered here. CONFIGURABLE STRINGS: When changing the following strings, a carriage return ends input. To enter a carriage return and line feed sequence into the string, use the ECHO-type escape sequence "^M^J". Other control characters can be entered the same way. A delete character can be entered with "%D", a carat with "%^", and a percent sign with "%%". It is not necessary to use the "%<" and "%>" sequences for upper- and lower-case because characters will be printed in the same case they are entered. Option P -- Date and time prefix. If the command line "D" option is used, this string is output just before the date and time. Up to 20 characters are accepted. Option S -- Date and time suffix. If the command line "D" option is used, this string is output just after the date and time. Up to 20 characters are accepted. Option I -- Default divider insert. If the command line "I" option is used, but it is not followed by a divider string, then this default divider string is output between each concatenated or appended file. Up to 76 characters are accepted.  B 0J 1 23A- B. C/ D0 E1 F 2 G@3 H4 I5 J6 K7 L8 M9 N : O@; P< PWD CONFIGURATION 0) Show passworded directories to non-wheels? YES 1) Control display of DU with DUOK (non-wheel)? YES 2) EXCLUDE character for drive list is .... ~ 3) Range designator for drive list is ..... - PWD is allowed to display named directories for the following drives if they are marked with '+'. Permission for each drive may be toggled by entering the drive letter. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP ________________ EXPLANATION OF PWD CONFIGURATION CHOICES 0) Show passworded directories to non-wheels? NO means that PWD will not display DU or Directory Names for directories to which a password has been assigned when the WHEEL byte is reset. This is useful as a security measure on multi-user systems like a Remote Access System. YES means that the DU and Directory Names will always be displayed, disregarding the WHEEL byte. Display of Passwords is never allowed to non-privileged (Wheel reset) users. 1) Control display of DU with DUOK (non-wheel)? NO The DU part of the Named Directory is always included in the display when the Wheel Byte is set. A YES response to this question causes PWD to display DU to non-privileged users only if the DUOK flag in the Z3 Environment is set. Some Remote Systems prefer to inhibit any reference to DU, using only directory names. 2) EXCLUDE character for drive list is .... ~ 3) Range designator for drive list is ..... - These characters are used in the PWD command tail in a drive list expression, which may be an undelimited list of drive letters. The RANGE DESIGNATOR is the character that separates the first and last members of a range of drives, like B-H. The EXCLUDE character inverts the logic for the rest of the drive list, causing the named drives to be excluded from the display. You may change these if you are more comfortable with some other pair of characters. For example, one might prefer a '-' for the EXCLUDE character and '.' (period) for range. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP is a drive permission vector. ++++++++____+___ Set them all '+' to enable display of all possible NDR entries. During execution, this vector is ANDed with the drive vector from the Z3 extended environment (if it's present). Further, the Maximum Drive from any Z3 environment is used to reset bits in this vector for drives greater than the maximum. YES NOYES+_@O 1 1BP2$P32P49P5@'P6GnP7NP8UPP k)IojOlA\N_ DTbMdPDc*L+P TEXT2DB CONFIGURATION MENU (1 of 2) IN OUTPUT DEFAULT FILE TYPES 1) 0Dh CR I) Input File type TXT 2) 0Ah LF O) Output File type DB 3) 09h TAB 4) 01h DIM FIRST SYNTHETIC LABEL is SCR00000: 5) 02h BRIGHT A) Alpha Part____________| | | 6) 07h BELL N) Number Part________________| | 7) 1Bh ESC T) Label terminator_____________| 8) 0Ch FF P) Put Synthetic labels at a OUTPUT FILE DATA STATEMENTS M) the Mnemonic for byte data is DB ,...,0 D) the DELIMITER around mnemonic is a space__| | | L) Final DB argument that terminates the output data______|_| TEXT2DB reads bytes from an ASCII text Input File (IN) and sends them to an Output File (OUTPUT) reformatted as data statements suitable for input to an assembler. Certain control characters are recognized and replaced in the output file with a symbol. An input carriage return and line feed (0Dh and 0Ah), for example, is emitted as ,CR,LF; strings of text are emitted enclosed in quotes. Menu items 1-8 allow you to replace the symbols emitted with others of your choice. Control characters from the input file not included in this list are emitted in their HEX data form. ^K, for example, is emitted as ,0Bh,. Menu item P allows you to select an ASCII character whose presence in the input stream marks the location of a label generated by TEXT2DB and included in proper form in the Output File. For each occurrence of this 'trigger' character, the numeric part of the label is incremented so that duplicate labels are not produced. The first label produced will be that shown in the menu. SYNTHETIC (TEXT2DB generated) LABELS The labels generated have three parts, each of which is independently configurable. The first two parts are 3 character Alpha Numeric fields; the last is a single AN character. The first field, selected as Menu item A, need only satisfy the requirements of a label imposed by your assembler; usually this means that the first character must be Alpha (NOT a number). The second field, selected with Menu item N, is NUMERIC. As displayed during configuration, leading zeros are suppressed; the actual label generated by TEXT2DB will contain the leading zeros. Numbers from 000-999 are allowed. When TEXT2DB generates new labels, it wraps to 0 after 999. The last field, selected with Menu item T, is the label terminator. Most assemblers accept (or require) a colon (':') here. You may change it to some other character, such as a space, if you and your assembler agree upon the suitability of the new character. OUTPUT FILE DATA STATEMENTS The following 4 lines illustrate the format of the OUTPUT file. They are taken from the source which, after assembly, produces the MENU screen for TEXT2DB. Note that the label was generated by TEXT2DB. DB ' F) lines are FOLDED after ' SCR016: DB ' characters to limit line length' DB CR,LF DB 0 Menu items M, D, and L allow you to control the format of such lines. Item M permits substitution of other assembly mnemonics (like DEFB) for the 'DB'. In this example, the mnemonic is surrounded by TAB characters. The following example shows 2 output lines from the file which produces this help screen. Here, spaces are used to delimit the 'DB'. DB 'the ''DB''. In this example, the mnemonic' DB ' is surrounded by TAB characters.',CR,LF Menu item D toggles the delimiters around the DB between TAB and SPACE. TEXT2DB inserts the last DB statement in the file. It contains ONE argument that marks 'end of text'. Menu item L permits changing this argument as required by your string-handling routine. Enter the literal argument of a data statement. Examples are: 0, '$', and 24h. DEFAULT FILE TYPES If you do not specify a complete filename.typ for the Input or Output files on the command line, TEXT2DB will assume the filetype extensions shown in Menu items I and O. If no filename is specified for the Output file, then the name of the input file is used. The default extensions shown can be altered as you wish with these menu selections. BH 1H2r63s L4t> TEXT2DB CONFIGURATION MENU (2 of 2) 1) lines are FOLDED after characters 2) Fold lines BEFORE a space character 3) Maximum line length when no spaces occur: 255 4) The quote character used by TEXT2DB is: ' Menu item 1 - After this number of characters has been sent to the current line, the line is terminated at the next space. Menu item 2 - This menu option toggles between putting the space at the END of the current line, or at the start of data in the new line. Menu Item 3 - If there are no spaces in the input string, the output line length is undefined! This item allows you to set a Maximum Line length at which the line will be terminated and a new line started. You may specify an absolute maximum of from 30 to 255 characters per line. Menu Item 4 - You can change the quote character that TEXT2DB uses as a string delimiter in DB statements. Specify the character that will work with your assembler. YES NOtab__spaceAFTER BEFORE  1U2U3A]4pg5y6U7U NoYesWyse TVIEuropeanAmericanMilitaryCivilian SWZ Installation Menu (1) Is the SB180 an FX model? . . . . . .  (2) Enable setting terminal time? . . . .  (3) Terminal type . . . . . . . . . . . . (4) Date format . . . . . . . . . . . (5) Time format . . . . . . . . . . . (6) Print results when setting clocks? .  (7) Print time when setting clocks? . . .  Option 1 -- SB180 board type. The SB180 comes in two board configurations: the original design and the later FX. If your board is an FX, select "Yes" here. SWZ will not work if the wrong selection is made. Option 2 -- Enable setting terminal time. If you have a Wyse or Televideo terminal with a built in clock, you can configure SWZ to set the terminal clock at the same time as it sets the system clock on your SB180 by using command line option "T". Select "Yes" to enable that option. If you have any other kind of terminal, you should leave this option set to "No" and option "T" will not be available. Option 3 -- Terminal type. If "Yes" is selected for option 1, the terminal type must be selected here: either TVI (Televideo) or WYSE. If option 2 is "No", you can ignore this one. Option 4 -- Date format. The date can be displayed in either "American" (mm/dd/yy) or "European" (dd.mm.yy) formats. It's your choice. Option 5 -- Time format. The time can be displayed in either "Civilian" format (12-hour time, e.g., "3:21p") or "Military" format (24-hour time, e.g., "15:21"), whichever you prefer. : Option 6 -- Print results when setting clocks. SWZ usually reports what it's doing with console messages, such as, "Clock set by SmartWatch". If you would prefer not to see such messages, select "No". Option 7 -- Print date when setting clocks. When setting the system clock or SmartWatch, SWZ usually displays the date and time. If you can do without the noise, select "No". This configuration option does not affect displaying the time at other times. If options 6 and 7 are both set to "No", SWZ will set the clocks quietly. s 2 BkMkP+gV^kDkR_ScL*c NoYes No D.COM Installation Menu (B) Include system files by default? . .  (M) Matches to registers by default? . .  (P) Page screen, printer by default? . .  (V) Reverse video highlighting? . . . . .  (D) CP/M Plus disk labels? . . . . . . .  (R) First ZCPR register to use . . . . .  (S) Maximum number of screen lines . . .  (L) Maximum number of printer lines . . .  Option B -- System files. Normally D shows only non-system files by default. If you would prefer to see all files by default, select "Yes". The command line "B" option will toggle the default chosen here. Option M -- Storing count of matching files. If you prefer that D store the number of matching files to message registers by default choose "Yes". Note, though, that many other programs use memory registers and some of them do not allow changing the registers they use, so it is probably best for most people not to use the registers except when they need to do so. The default you select can be toggled with the command line "M" option. Option P -- Screen and printer paging. If you want D to default to scrolling the directory display continuously without paging the screen (or printer if the command line "L" option is used), select "No". The screen can still be paged with ^S. The default can be toggled with the command line "P" option. : Option V -- Type of highlighting. Normally D prints two horizontal lines on the screen in alternate video at the top and bottom of the directory listing. For terminals using dim video highlighting this display looks very neat, but it looks very bad on terminals using reverse video. Select "Yes" to eliminate alternate video for these lines. Option D -- CP/M Plus disk labels. For CP/M Plus (Z3Plus) machines, D allows display of the disk label in the summary line, instead of the ZCPR3 named directory. The disk label might be more useful for floppy-based systems. "Yes" will select disk labels; "No" will choose named directories. Option R -- Message registers. When D stores the number of matching files (M option) it needs two ZCPR3 message registers. Any registers from 0 to 31 can be used. D will use the chosen register and the next register immediate following. It is highly recommended that you choose one of the user registers beginning with 16. Other programs use registers, notably ZDE, so choose registers keeping in mind the programs you commonly run. : Option S -- Screen lines. Enter the number of lines on your screen. This configuration parameter is used only when D is run under vanilla CP/M. Under ZCPR3 the number of screen lines is obtained from the environment. Option L -- Printer lines. Enter the number of lines on a printer page. Usually it is 66. This parameter is not used under ZCPR3, where the number of printer lines is taken from the environment. R    AB&CFDe EFGHIJ#KBLbMNOPR  ENVCFG Configuration (Screen 1 of 4)  CBIOS address.........A) h Z3ENV address.........B) h Size in records.....C) Extended Environment? D) Z3NDIR address........E) h Number of entries...F) FCP address...........G) h Size in records.....H) RCP address...........I) h Size in records.....J) IOP address...........K) h Size in records.....L) NZBIO address.........M) h BDOS address..........N) h Size in records.....O) CCP address...........P) h Size in records.....R) ` A9BZCzDEFGHI;J[KL MNOPRS#T1U?VMW\  ENVCFG Configuration (Screen 2 of 4)  EXTSTK address........A) h Z3CL address..........B) h Size in bytes.......C) Z3WHL address........ D) h EXPATH address........E) h Number of elements..F) EXTFCB address........G) h Z3MSG address.........H) h SHSTK address.........I) h Number of entries...J) Entry size in bytes.K) QUIET flag............L) SPEED.................M) mhz CRT: N) COLS...O) ROWS...P) LINS...R) PRT: S) PROW...T) PCOL...U) PLIN...V) FORM...W) R >j A B C D E4 F X G@| H 1 2 3 4" 5F 6 j 7@ 8 I J K L/ MN  ENVCFG Configuration (Screen 3 of 4)  ZRDOS PUBLIC Drives and User Areas... Drive A)... | User 1)... Drive B)... | User 2)... Drive C)... | User 3)... Drive D)... | User 4)... Drive E)... | User 5)... Drive F)... | User 6)... Drive G)... | User 7)... Drive H)... | User 8)... SPAR1................ I) h SPAR2................ J) h SPAR3................ K) h SPAR4................ L) h SPAR5................ M) h` \  0g 1 2 A B C) DN Es F G@ H I J K< La M N O@ P  ENVCFG Configuration (Screen 4 of 4)  MAXDRV (A=1, P=16)....0) MAXUSR................1) DUOK..................2) DRVEC...Set all valid drives to YES: Drive A)... | Drive I)... Drive B)... | Drive J)... Drive C)... | Drive K)... Drive D)... | Drive L)... Drive E)... | Drive M)... Drive F)... | Drive N)... Drive G)... | Drive O)... Drive H)... | Drive P)... YES no ONoff  ENVCFG Configuration (Screen 1 of 4)  (NOTE: All addresses are in hex, all sizes in decimal.) CBIOS  - Address of your CBIOS. Z3ENV  - Address of Z3ENV and size in records (normally 2.) EXTENV - Yes, if you have an extended environment. Z3NDIR - Address of named directory buffer and number of 18 byte entries. FCP  - Address of flow control package and size in records. RCP  - Address of resident command package and size in records. IOP  - Address of input/output package and size in records. NZBIO  - Address of NZCOM BIOS. BDOS  - Address of BDOS and size in records. CCP  - Address of CCP and size in records.  ENVCFG Configuration (Screen 2 of 4)  (NOTE: All addresses are in hex, all sizes in decimal.) EXTSTK - Address of external stack. Size is always 48 bytes. Z3CL  - Address of multiple command line and size in bytes (normally 203.) Z3WHL  - Address of wheel byte. EXPATH - Address of path and number of path elements. EXTFCB - Address of external file control block. Z3MSG  - Address of message buffer. SHSTK  - Address of shell stack, the number of entries and the size of each entry. QUIET  - Yes to set quiet. SPEED  - Processor speed in MHZ. CRT  - CRT selection. Normally 0. COLS - Number of CRT columns. ROWS - Number of CRT lines. LINS - Number of CRT text lines. Often ROWS-2. PRT - Printer selection. Normally 0. PCOL - Number of printer columns. PROW - Number of printer lines per page. RLIN - Number of printer text lines per page. Often PROW-8.  ENVCFG Configuration (Screen 3 of 4)  ZRDOS PUBLIC DRIVES  - Set desired ZRDOS public drives to 'YES'. ZRDOS PUBLIC USER AREAS - Set desired ZRDOS public user areas to 'YES'. SPAR1 - SPAR5 - These spare bytes are currently undefined.  ENVCFG Configuration (Screen 4 of 4)  Note: Some utilities check the MAXDRV and MAXUSR bytes while others check the DRVEC vector of valid drives, which allows 'holes' in the map of valid drives. To be safe, set all three. MAXDRV - Set the maximum accepted drive (A=1, B=2, ..., P=10). MAXUSR - Set the maximum accepted user area. DUOK  - Set to Yes if the DU: form is valid. DRVEC  - Set each desired valid drive to Yes.  BNKASPF3DmOCX1V2 3"Yes NoYesTargetLoggedLowerUpper CPD Configuration Menu (B) Show only duplicated files by default? .  (N) Show only missing files by default? . .  (A) Archive duplicated files by default? . .  (S) Include system files by default? . . . .  (P) Page screen by default? . . . . . . . .  (F) Send final form feed by default? . . . .  (D) Include DU's in CPDLIST file? . . . . .  (O) Output directory for CPDLIST . . . .  (C) Case for filename display . . . . . .  (X) Invoke error handler for user abort? . .  (1) Column divider character for console . .  h (2) Column divider character for printer . .  h (3) Filename for file list . . . . . Option B -- Display only duplicated files. With this option set to "Yes" CPD defaults to displaying only files which exist in both directories. The default may be toggled with the command line "B" option. If this option is "Yes", make sure the N option is "No"; otherwise, you will not like the result. Option N -- Display only missing files. If this option is "Yes", CPD will by default display only files in the first directory that do not appear in the second directory. The default may be toggled by using the command line "N" option. If this option is "Yes", make sure option B is "No". Take my word for it. Option A -- Set archive attribute. "Yes" makes CPD default to setting the archive attribute of files in the first directory that are duplicated in the second directory. I can't imagine anyone wanting to make this the default mode of operation, but here it is if you have a need for it. The configured default can be toggled with the command line "A" option. : Option S -- Include system files. As distributed CPD defaults to finding only non-system (directory) files. A "Yes" allows CPD to always find all files, including system files. The default set here can be toggled with the command line "S" option. Option P -- Screen paging. CPD pauses, waiting for a keypress, each time the screen fills, if "Yes" is selected. "No" makes the default continuous scrolling, which can be paused with ^S. The number of lines on the console screen is obtained from the environment. The chosen default can be toggled with the command line "P" option. Option F -- Form feed printer. Choose here whether you want CPD to send a form feed to the printer after it prints the file display. The option has no effect unless the command line "L" (echo to printer) option is used. The form feed default can be toggled with the command line "F" option. Option D -- Include DU specifications. CPD can include DU specifications in the CPDLIST file with each filename. Choosing "Yes" will make that the default. The default here can be toggled with the "D" option on the command line. : Option O -- File output directory. CPD will write its CPDLIST file to the currently logged (default) directory or to the target directory (the first one given on the command line), depending on what you select here. Make your choice based on your usual working habits. Option C -- Case of filename display. CPD can display filenames in upper- or lower-case, whichever you prefer. (Actually, if lower-case is chosen, the case of filenames is actually reversed and any lower-case filename will be displayed in upper-case. Option X -- Error for user abort. Select "Yes" if you want the error handler invoked when CPD is aborted with ^C. This will allow also aborting a ZEX or SUB batch operation. While that can be very useful, some people might find the feature irritating. Option 1 -- Console column divider. By default CPD uses a vertical bar ("|", 7Ch) between each column of the filename display. You can change the column divider to any printable character, such as a space (20h) or even a graphic character if your terminal uses 8-bit business graphics. : Option 2 -- Printer column divider. A vertical bar ("|", 7Ch) is used by default, but any other printable character can be chosen. This option is provided primarily because a character chosen for the console display may not be appropriate for printer output. Option 3 -- Filename for file list. As distributed, CPD names the file list CPDLIST (with no filetype, making it easy to spot in a directory display). If you would prefer another name, you can enter it here. 7 c 0 1I2 3D  DATEFN VERS 1.1 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename............................ 0) Date format toggle.............................. 1) Date format '?ddMMMyy' prefix (' ' for none).... 2) ' ' Date file filetype.............................. 3) ' '?ddMMMyymm/dd/yy  DATEFN VERS 1.1 OPTION DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: You may specify the default configuration overlay (CFG) filename. A maximum of 8 characters may be entered. DATE FORMAT: You may set the date format to '?ddMMMyy' (eg: 22JAN91) or 'mm/dd/yy' (eg: 01/22/91). DATE FILENAME PREFIX CHARACTER: If the date format is set to '?ddMMMyy', you may specify a prefix character for the date filename (eg: -22JAN91). If you enter a space character, DATEFN will not add a prefix. If the date format is set to 'mm/dd/yy', any prefix character will be ignored. DATE FILE FILETYPE: A date file filetype may be specified. Three characters are allowed.Y ! Q-T5DGYES NOMILITARYCIVILIANEUROPEANAMERICAN DATSTP Installation Menu (Q) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . . .  (T) Civilian or Military time? . . .  (D) American or European date order?  Option Q -- Quiet mode. This option determines whether DATSTP will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. The default chosen here may be toggled by using the "Q" option on the command line. Option T -- Time format. Select either civilian (12-hour) time or military (24-hour) time for the screen display. Command line entry is always 24- hour time. Option D -- Date format. Select either American or European date order for both display and command line entry. The American order is "mm/dd/yy". The European order is "dd/mm/yy".   a b nc?dmvenf nl1 Q2 U3 Y4 ]5 a6 e  DD VERS 1.9 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename (FILENAME)..... A) Display using standout video........ B) Fence character..................... C) " " List files.......................... D) Reset disk system at start.......... E) Use BIOS LISTST printer ready check. F) Length of printer init string....... L) (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Printer initialization string...... cYESno HorizontallyVertically  DD VERS 1.9 DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME Enter the desired default CFG filename in the form 'FILENAME'. Up to 8 characters may be used. DISPLAY USING STANDOUT VIDEO Set to YES to use standout video in the display. Set to NO to use only normal video. FENCE CHARACTER You may specify a fence character for the screen display. The default character is '|'. LIST FILES... Set to YES to list files horizontally. Set to NO to list files vertically. RESET DISK SYSTEM AT START Set to YES to always reset the disk system at the start. Set to NO to not always reset the disk system. USE BIOS LISTST PRINTER READY CHECK Set to YES to use BIOS LISTST printer ready check. Set to NO to skip check and assume printer is ready. PRINTER INITIALIZATION STRING If you specify a printer initialization string, DD will send it to your printer during startup. You must also specify the number of characters to be sent.  tgA Q DX!DR"4DS#YL 1PPPD@P4pPWPRPSPA0P  FILEATTR Configuration (Page 1 of 2) Q Operate quietly........XXX X Page screen output.....XXX R Always show results....XXX S Default screen lines...XXX  FILEATTR Configuration (Page 2 of 2) Attribute Defaults 1 F1 attribute.............XXXXXXXXXXX P Public attribute.........XXXXXXXXXXX D No Date attribute........XXXXXXXXXXX 4 F4 attribute.............XXXXXXXXXXX W Wheel Protect attribute..XXXXXXXXXXX R Read Only attribute......XXXXXXXXXXX S System attribute.........XXXXXXXXXXX A Archive attribute........XXXXXXXXXXX Yes NoLeave As-Is Turn On Turn Off Option Q -- If the ZCPR quiet flag is set, FILEATTR will always default to quiet mode. To make quiet mode the default at all times, even when running under CP/M, set this configuration option to "Yes". Whatever is selected here can be toggled with the command line "Q" option. Option X -- A "Yes" will cause FILEATTR to page screen output by default. A "No" will default to continuous scrolling. The chosen default can be toggled with the command line "X" option. Screen paging is always turned off in quiet mode. Option R -- As distributed, FILEATTR prints nothing to the screen when it is operating in quiet mode. If this configuration option is "Yes", the results summary line that gives the number of matching files found and the number of attributes changed will be printed even in quiet mode. Option S -- Enter the number of lines on your video display screen. Under ZCPR 3.3 and higher, the number of screen lines for paging is obtained from the environment descriptor. This configuration parameter is used only if running under CP/M. Attribute Configuration Options As distributed, FILEATTR will not change any file attribute unless explicitly commanded to do so by a command line option. To configure FILEATTR to turn a file attribute ON or OFF by default, toggle the appropriate configuration selection. For example, to make FILEATTR set all matching files to Public by default, change the "Public attribute" setting to "Turn On". Then FILEATTR will set the specified files to Public unless the /NP command line option is given (which would cause the files to be set to Private). Since there is no command which tells FILEATTR not to change an attribute, however, the program will now insist on turning the Public attribute either on (default) or off (through the /NP option). Most users will have neither need nor desire to change the configuration default as distributed which will "Leave As-Is" all matching files.   OsD-sSgsPwQsFCNXs12Yes NoYesTargetLoggedLowerUpper FL Configuration Menu (O) Output to disk file by default? . . . .  (D) Include DU's in output file? . . . . . .  (S) Include system files by default? . . . .  (P) Page screen by default? . . . . . . . .  (Q) Quiet mode by default? . . . . . . . . .  (F) File output directory . . . . . . .  (C) Case for filename screen display . . .  (X) Invoke error handler for user abort? . .  (1) Column divider character for console . .  h (2) Filename for file list . . . . . Option O -- File list disk output. If you would prefer that FL default to screen display only, choose "No" for this option. The default chosen here can be toggled with the command line "O" option. Option D -- Include DU specifications. FL can include DU specifications with each filename in the FILELIST file. Choosing "Yes" will make that the default. The default here can be toggled with the "D" option on the command line. Option S -- Include system files. As distributed FL defaults to finding only non-system (directory) files. A "Yes" allows FL to always find all files, including system files. The default set here can be toggled with the command line "S" option. Option P -- Screen paging. FL pauses, waiting for a keypress, each time the screen fills, if "Yes" is selected. "No" makes the default continuous scrolling, which can be paused with ^S. The number of lines on the console screen is obtained from the environment. The chosen default can be toggled with the command line "P" option. : Option Q -- Quiet mode. The screen display is not necessary for writing a FILELIST to disk. If you prefer no display, choose "Yes". The default can be toggled with the command line "Q" option. Option F -- File output directory. FL will write its FILELIST file to the currently logged (default) directory or to the target directory (the first one given on the command line), depending on what you select here. Make your choice based on your usual working habits. Option C -- Case of filename display. FL can display filenames in upper- or lower-case, whichever you prefer. (Actually, if lower-case is chosen, the case of filenames is actually reversed and any lower-case filename will be displayed in upper-case. This selection does not affect the case of files in the FILELIST. Option X -- Error for user abort. Select "Yes" if you want the error handler invoked when FL is aborted with ^C. This will allow also aborting a ZEX or SUB batch operation. While that can be very useful, some people might find the feature irritating. : Option 1 -- Console column divider. By default FL uses a vertical bar ("|", 7Ch) between each column of the filename display. You can change the column divider to any printable character, such as a space (20h) or even a graphic character if your terminal uses 8-bit business graphics. Option 2 -- Filename for file list. As distributed, FL names the file list FILELIST (with no filetype, making it easy to spot in a directory display). If you would prefer another name, you can enter it here. A $ N~DA W*P) HELPCH CONFIGURATION N) Default file name D) Alternate directory A) Alternate DU W) Allow wildcard help filenames P) Do printer-ready test YES NO Option N defines the default file name that HELPCH will search for if none is given on the command line when the program is invoked. Options D and A define the alternate named directory and alternate DU to be searched. HELPCH first searches the directory specified on the command line, (the current directory if none specified), for the requested help file. If the file cannot be found, HELPCH attempts to search for it in the directory specified at option D. If the system does not contain a directory with this name, then the DU defined by option A is searched. Option W specifies whether HELPCH will accept wildcard help filenames. Option P specifies whether a printer-ready test will be made before printing. If your system has trouble with the bios listst call, set this to OFF. I  NAS AA@AEtAQAYes No RCOPY Configuration Menu Defaults which can be toggled with command line options (N) Set destination NO STAMP attribute? .  (S) Set destination SYSTEM attribute? . .  (A) Set destination ARCHIVE attribute? .  (E) Erase existing files without asking?  (Q) Quiet mode? . . . . . . . . . . . . .  Option N -- NO STAMP attribute. If "Yes" is selected, the "no stamp" attribute will be set by default on each destination file. This attribute suppresses access date stamping under ZSDOS to speed operations. The default can be toggled with the "N" command line option. Option S -- SYSTEM attribute. The system attribute will be set by default on each destination file if this option is "Yes". System (hidden) files are invisible to many programs. The default can be toggled with the command line "S" option. Option A -- ARCHIVE attribute. "Yes" here causes the archive attribute to be set on each destination file by default. This attribute can be an aid to copying modified files back to the source directory. The default can be toggled with the command line "A" option. Option E -- Overwrite existing files. As distributed, RCOPY asks the user by default whether to erase an existing read-write file with the same name in the destination directory. Setting this option to "Yes" will cause existing files to be erased without warning. The default can be toggled with the "E" command line option. (Note that read-only files are never erased.) Option Q -- Quiet mode. This option determines whether RCOPY will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. (The ZCPR3 quiet flag puts RCOPY into quiet mode without regard for this configuration selection.) The default (and the quiet flag) can be toggled by using the command line "Q" option. czA _  0 1 2  3L=4#s  ZBIB VERS 1.0 DEFAULTS Default CFG file name (FILENAME).......... 0) Default Datafile Name (FILENAME.TYP)...... 1) Character Used to Terminate Data Fields... 2) Left Margin (No. of Spaces)............... 3) h Emphasis Byte for WordStar................ 4) h cb  A$B%`C&dD'hE(lF)pG*tH+xI,|J-K.L/M0N1O2@P3DR4HS5LT6PU7TV8XW9\  ZBIB VERS 1.0 Printer Initialization (Screen 1 of 2) Length Byte for Printer Initialization.. A) h Printer Initialization String......... B-M) B C D E F G H I J K L M h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h Length Byte for Printer Termination..... N) h Printer Termination String............ O-W) O P R S T U V W h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h z}m A:B;rC<vD=zE>~F?G@HAIBJCKDILEMMFQNGUOHYPI]RJaSKe0M1N 2O$ 3P( 4Q, 5R0 6S4 7T8 8U<  ZBIB VERS 1.0 Printer Initialization (Screen 2 of 2) Italics On / Underscore On, Length Byte..... A) h B C D E F G H I Italics On / Underscore On String..........B-I) h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h Italics Off / Underscore Off, Length Byte... J) h K L M N O P R S Italics Off / Underscore Off, String.......K-S) h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h Page Length String Length Byte.............. 0) h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Page Length String........................ 1-8) h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h YES NONO YES ONOFFc  ZBIB VERS 1.0 DEFAULTS  NAME OF DEFAULT CFG FILE: ZCNFG will look for this configuration filename if no configuration filename is specified on the command line. Enter the name as 'FILENAME' NAME OF DEFAULT DATAFILE: ZBIB will look for this datafile if no datafile name is specified on the command line. Enter the name as 'FILENAME.TYP' CHARACTER USED TO TERMINATE DATA FIELDS: This character is used to terminate each data field. If the standout in your system doesn't highlight spaces, this character will indicate the end of each datafield. LEFT MARGIN FOR PRINTED CARDS: Enter a value to set the left margin for printed cards. EMPHASIS BYTE FOR WORDSTAR FILE: Select byte to embed in WordStar file to emphasize the title. ^Y (19h) = Italics, ^S (13h) = Underscore,^B (02h) = Boldface.  ZBIB VERS 1.0 PRINTER INITIALIZATION (Screen 1 of 2) Each printer initialization string is displayed as a list of hex digits. Each hex digit may be changed by entering its menu character. First byte is length (in bytes) of string. INITIALIZE PRINTER: Enter the initialization string for your printer. This string is sent at the beginning of each printing session. TERMINATION STRING TO PRINTER: Enter the termination string for your printer. This string is, sent at the end of each printing session.  ZBIB VERS 1.0 PRINTER INITIALIZATION (Screen 2 of 2) TURN ON ITALICS OR UNDERSCORE: Enter the escape code to send to the printer so that titles are italicized or underscored, according to your preference and your printer's capabilities. TURN OFF ITALICS OR UNDERSCORE: Enter the escape code to cancel italics or underscore. PAGE LENGTH STRING: Enter the escape code to set the proper form length for printing continuous feed index cards.  !  h G  A2qB3qC4OqD5qE6qF7qG8/qH9gqI:qJ;qK<qL=GqM>qN?qO@q 1`2q3<q4q5 Ly6!}7"q8#y9$:}A%uqB&yC'}D1' qE0b y 1 q2 q3E q4 YES NO  OPTION LIST  A) Single file replace query ................. B) Multiple file replace query ............... C) Query on archive replacement .............. D) Verify query .............................. E) Verify default if no query or answer ...... F) Suppress display of SYS files ............. G) Alpha sort by name (vs. type) ............. H) Set attributes in copied files ............ I) Use attributes of dest file (if exists) ... J) Set ARC attribute in dest file ............ K) Use path to search for CMD file ........... L) Filter VIEW and PRINT output .............. M) Remember file tags between shell runs ..... N) Start Wild Tag from file pointer .......... O) Start Group Tag from file pointer .........  MACRO RELATED CONFIGURATION  1) Macro leadin character (HEX) ................. 2) Allow immediate execution of macros 0-9 ...... 3) Use path to search for CMD file .............. 4) Use root if no path search for CMD file ...... 5) Fixed user area for CMD file ................. 6) Fixed drive for CMD file (A=0, B=1, etc.) .... 7) Use root of path for ZEX batch file .......... 8) Fixed user area for ZEX file ................. 9) Fixed drive for ZEX file (A=0, B=1, etc.) .... A) Use root of path for tag file ................ B) Fixed user area for tag file ................. C) Fixed drive for tag file (A=0, B=1, etc.) .... D) Erase ZEX file after use ..................... E) User Register for tagged # storage ...........  GENERAL CONFIGURATION  1) Log in current directory with "Z" command .... 2) Upper case for display of file names ......... 3) Clear screen on exit ......................... 4) Time delay on screen refresh after error .....   a  bFc' d e>f?Gg<|h=i4j l5P1 62 73 84 95 :6 ;  REMIND VERS 1.5 DEFAULTS  Default CFG filename (FILENAME)............. A) Default datafile filename ([DU:]FN.FT)...... B) Default backup file filename (FILENAME.TYP). C) Upcoming reminder display default........... D) Page screen display as default.............. E) Include calendar when printing reminders.... F) Form feed after printing today's reminders.. G) End printing session with form feed......... H) Do BIOS LISTST printer ready check.......... I) Printer left margin......................... J) Length of printer init string............... L) (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Printer initialization string.............. cYES noNo upcoming reminders Current month's remindersAll upcoming reminders  REMIND VERS 1.5 DEFAULTS  DEFAULT CFG FILENAME: Enter the desired default CFG filename in the form 'FILENAME'. Up to 8 characters may be used. DEFAULT DATAFILE DU:FILENAME: Enter the default datafile filename in the form 'DU:FN.FT'. The DIR: form is not supported. Up to 16 characters may be entered. If a default DU: is specified, you should specify both the drive and user. Otherwise REMIND will fill in the missing one with the currently logged default drive or user, which usually isn't what is wanted. If no default DU: is specified, REMIND will default to looking for the datafile in the currently logged directory. DEFAULT BACKUP FILE FILENAME: Enter the default backup file filename in the form 'FILENAME.TYP'. Any part is optional. Up to 16 characters may be entered. This file will be written to the datafile directory. : BIOS LIST STATUS PRINTER CHECK: Set to NO if you don't want REMIND to use the BIOS LISTST printer check. The default is to check to avoid hanging on an off-line printer. PRINTER INITIALIZATION STRING: Enter the length of the initialization string first, followed by up to six individually entered printer initialization characters. Enter each character directly by pressing the equivalent key or key combination. PRINTER LEFT MARGIN: Enter the number of characters desired for the printer left margin. : DISPLAY UPCOMING REMINDERS AS DEFAULT: Toggles default display of upcoming reminders. Defaults are no upcoming reminder display, display current month's upcoming reminders and display all upcoming reminders. PAGE SCREEN DISPLAY AS DEFAULT: Set to ON to default to paging screen display. Set to OFF to default to not paging screen display. INCLUDE CALENDAR IN PRINT OUTPUT: Set to YES to include calendar when sending the reminders to the printer. Set to NO to send only the reminders to the printer. The calendar will always be displayed on the console. FORM FEED AFTER PRINTING TODAY'S REMINDERS: Set to ON to send form feed after printing today's reminders. Set to OFF to print upcoming reminders right after today's reminders. END PRINTING SESSION WITH FORM FEED: Set to ON to end printing session with form feed. Set to OFF to end printing session without a form feed. a 01,2W34567.8Y9AB C!D"0E#[YES NO === SCOPY OPTIONS === 0) File attributes in upper case .. 1) Replace by date ................ 2) Older replace query ............ 3) Newer/Equal replace query ...... 4) Single replace query ........... 5) Group replace query ............ 6) Archive replace query .......... 7) Verify query ................... 8) Verify default ................. 9) Suppress SYS files ............. a) Set copied file attributes ..... b) Use destination attributes ..... c) Archive destination ............ d) Display file attributes ........ e) Allow DIR[:] syntax ............ SCOPY OPTION HELP 0. File Attributes in Upper Case: File names are shown in lower case. For set attributes, e.g. SYS or R/O, the character is displayed in underline mode. If that doesn't work, it can be shown in upper case. 1. Replace by Date: If YES, options 2 and 3 are operative and options 4-6 are skipped. If NO, or if datestamps are invalid, skip to option 4. 2. Older Replace Query: If existing dest file has an older datestamp than source, NO means replace it without confirmation. 3. Newer/Equal Replace Query: If existing dest file has a newer or equal datestamp (including time, which is not displayed), YES means ask before replacing it. NO means DO NOT replace it at all. 4. Single Replace Query: Ask before replacing an existing file for single copy operations? This option ignored if Replace by Date is active. 5. Group Replace Query: Same as Option 4 for Group operation mode. 6. Archive Replace Query: Ask on archiving operations. 7. Verify Query: Ask where or not to do CRC check on copied file. 8. Verify Default: If no Verify Query, do a verification? 9. Suppress SYS Files: YES means don't include them in file list. a. Set Copied File Attributes: NO means the copied file has no attributes. b. Use Destination Attributes: If setting copied file attributes (Option a = YES), make them the same as existing destination file, or use source files attributes? c. Archive Destination: YES means set arc attribute on all copies. This is useful for moving work files to a RAM disk. Later, all the files which have been changed can be moved back to permanent storage with the Group Archive command. Datestamp controlled copying can achieve the same result. d. Display File Attributes: If YES, some method of showing file attributes is used (see Option 0). If you aren't interested in file attributes, displaying them only clutters the screen. e. Allow DIR[:] Syntax: Parse initial callup command line the same as the internal Login command. A ":" is automatically supplied for DIR references. With this option, you will need a DIR: when using a mask. FURTHER PATCHING: Single command key bindings may be patched in record 1. The Help Screen will reflect your changes. Group command patching is more difficult: they must be patched in records 26, 56, and 60 for both prompts and "CP 'X'" instructions. Q ~ AAHEP EC@ALtMYes NoYes CCOUNT Configuration Menu (A) Count all characters by default? . .  (H) Ignore high bits by default? . . . .  (P) Page screen by default? . . . . . . .  (C) User abort (^C) is an error? . . . .  (L) Maximum console lines (CP/M only) . .  Option A -- Count all characters. Normally CCOUNT counts and displays the totals only for those characters given on the command line. If "Yes" is selected, all characters in the file will be counted and displayed by default. The default can be toggled with the command line "A" option. Option H -- Ignore high bits. As distributed, CCOUNT ignores high bits when counting characters in a file. Selecting "No" causes characters which have their high bit set to be considered by default as different from those which do not. The command line "H" option will toggle the default chosen. Option P -- Screen paging. A "Yes" will make CCOUNT pause and wait for a key to be pressed each time the screen fills. "No" causes the screen to scroll continuously. This configured default can be toggled with the command line "P" option. Option C -- Error on user abort. Pick "Yes" if you want the program error flag set when CCOUNT is aborted via a ^C from the console. In that case the error handler will be invoked (if one is installed), allowing the user to also abort a running SUB or ZEX batch job. That can be very useful. If you would rather not have the aggravation, however, select "No" and an abort will not be considered an error. : Option L -- Screen lines. Enter the maximum number of lines that can be displayed on your console. This parameter is only used under CP/M. Under Z-System the number of screen lines is obtained from the environment.   0   CFGZ VERS 1.2 DEFAULTS  0) Select the type of floppy disk controller used by your AMPRO for the correct floppy disk step rate display:  1772: 6ms, 12ms, 2ms, 3ms  1770: 6ms, 12ms, 20ms, 30ms - s 2 a bc'9d we  f8 g8@ h8 J i8 j9  EDISK vers 3.0 (Screen 1 of 4)  Default CFG filename................... A) Sign-on message format name............ B) Sign-on message format description..... C) Logical drive to use as E drive........ D) ' ' 48 tpi format in 96 tpi drive?......... E) Density................................ F) Density Number of sides........................ G) Sided Double sided sector numbering method... H) Allocation block size.................. I) k Sector size............................ J) o, a<b>c? d@=eAmfCgEhFiG5jIg  EDISK vers 3.0 (Screen 2 of 4)  Drive E Disk Parameter Block (Hex): SPT (Sectors Per Track)................ A) h BSH (Block Shift Factor)............... B) h BLM (Block Mask)....................... C) h EXM (Extent Mask)...................... D) h DSM (Drive Storage - 1)................ E) h DRM (Directory Entries - 1)............ F) h AL0 (Directory Group Allocation 0)..... G) h AL1 (Directory Group Allocation 1)..... H) h CKS (Directory Check Vector)........... I) h OFF (Reserved Tracks).................. J) h - y s:  EDISK vers 3.0 (Screen 3 of 4)  Use the following preconfigured physical record skew table... S) ' ' A: 1,2,3,4,5 I: 1,3,5,7,9,2,4,6,8,10 B: 1,3,5,2,4 J: 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 C: 1,4,2,5,3 K: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16 D: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 L: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18 E: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 M: 1,3,5,7,9,11,13,15,17,2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16,18 F: 1,3,5,7,9,2,4,6,8 N: 1,5,9,13,17,3,7,11,15,2,6,10,14,18,4,8,12,16 G: 1,4,7,2,5,8,3,6,9 O: 1,6,11,16,3,8,13,18,5,10,15,2,7,12,17,4,9,14 H: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 P: 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17 X: Custom skew table (define it in the next screen)o= 7  0K 1L 2M 3N 4O 5P 6Q 7R$ 8S( 9T, aU0 bV4 cW8 dX eY fZ g[ h\ i] j^ k_ l` ma nb oc pd  EDISK vers 3.0 (Screen 4 of 4)  Custom Drive E Physical Record Skew Table (Decimal): (0) (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (A) (B) (C) --------------------------------------------------- , , , , , , , , , , , , (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) (J) (K) (L) (M) (N) (O) (P) --------------------------------------------------- , , , , , , , , , , , , cYesNo DoubleSingleContinuous Same each side21128k 256k 512k 1024k  EDISK vers 3.0 Configuration  Default CFG Filename Enter the desired default CFG filename in the form 'FILENAME'. Up to 8 characters are available. Format Name The name of the disk format (eg: 'KAYPRO II') is used in the sign-on and help messages. 16 characters are available. Format Description The description of the format (eg: 'DSDD 48 tpi') is used in the sign-on and help messages. 16 characters are available. Logical Drive to use as the E Drive Enter the letter of the logical floppy disk drive you wish to dedicate as the E drive for this format. Only floppy drive letters may be used. EDISK checks the logical drive table in the BIOS to make sure the drive you specify is a floppy drive. 48 tpi Format in 96 tpi Drive? Enter YES is you are reading (writing is not recommended) a 48 tpi format disk in a 96 tpi drive. Enter NO if your format matches your drive. : Density Set to single or double density. Sides Set to single or double sided format. Double Sided Sector Numbering Method Set to 'Same each side' (the normal method) if sectors are numbered the same on each side. Set to 'Continuous' if the sector numbers on the second side starts with the last sector number on the first side + 1. This setting is ignored with single sided formats. Allocation Block Size Set to 1k or 2k blocks. Sector Size Set to 128, 256, 512 or 1024 byte sector size.  EDISK vers 3.0 DPB  The following Disk Parameter Block values may be obtained by running DISKPRAM.COM on a system and drive having the desired format. SPT Number of 128 byte records per track. BSH Block shift factor, determined by the data block allocation size. BLM Block mask, determined by the data block allocation size. EXM Extent mask, determined by block size and the number of blocks. DSM Maximum data block number (not counting the reserved tracks) - 1. DRM Maximum number of directory entries allowed - 1. AL0 Directory group allocation vector 0. AL1 Directory group allocation vector 1. CKS Directory check vector size. OFF Number of reserved system tracks.  EDISK vers 3.0 Drive E Skew Table  The Skew Table defines the skew of the physical 128 byte records, not the logical sectors. Most applications can use one of the predefined skew tables listed in Screen 3. Press menu selection '0' and enter the letter of the table of your choice. If your application requires a skew table not listed, select table 'X' and go to Screen 4 to define your custom skew table. Up to 26 bytes are available.  MMT}QSACAPEYes NoYesSource Code ASCII Text WordStar W WordStar D Re-TabAs Found No Tabs FILT Configuration Menu (M) Default operating mode? . . .  (T) Default tabbing mode? . . . . .  (Q) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  (C) User abort (^C) is an error? . . . .  (P) Show line count progress reports? . .  Option M -- File Mode. FILT has four file modes: "Source Code" for assembler source code; "ASCII Text" for ordinary ASCII text files; "WordStar W" for WordStar document files (removes dot commands); and "WordStar D" for WordStar document files (retains dot commands). Any of these modes can be made the default. See the accompanying documentation for details on the differences between these modes. Whatever mode is chosen as the default can be changed with the "S", "A", "W", or "D" command line options. Option T -- Tabbing Mode. If "As Found" is chosen, tabs and spaces will be left as they are found by default. Otherwise, tabs will always be expanded to spaces on input. If "Re-Tab" is chosen, then FILT will re-tab the file on output. The chosen default can be overridden with the "T", "E", or "K" command line options. Option Q -- Quiet Mode. This option determines whether FILT will be in verbose or quiet mode by default (except that FILT always defaults to quiet mode if the ZCPR3 quiet flag is set). The default may be toggled with the command line "Q" option. : Option C -- Error on user abort. Pick "Yes" if you want the program error flag set when FILT is aborted via a ^C from the console. In that case the error handler will be invoked (if one is installed), allowing the user to also abort a running SUB or ZEX batch job. That can be very useful. If you would rather not have the aggravation, however, select "No" and an abort will not be considered an error. Option P -- Progress Reports. Normally FILT displays a running line count while it is working. This report can be suppressed by selecting "No". #  0 q1  ZXR VERS 1.1 DEFAULTS Default CFG file name (FILENAME).......... 0) Default Trigger Character................. 1) YES NONO YES ONOFFc  ZXR VERS 1.1 DEFAULTS  NAME OF DEFAULT CFG FILE: ZCNFG will look for this configuration filename if no configuration filename is specified on the command line. Enter the name as 'FILENAME' DEFAULT TRIGGER CHARACTER: ZXR is activated when this character is pressed. Enter as a hex value. ZXR comes with ^@ (00h) as the default value. K G L%E0NDA P39? LHC/LHQ CONFIGURATION L) Default LBR name E) LBR extension N) Default file name D) Alternate directory A) Alternate DU P) Do printer-ready test YES NO Option L defines the default library name that LHC/LHQ will search for if none is given on the command line when the program is invoked. Option E specifies the file type or extension of the library. In most cases, this will be "LBR." Option N defines the help file name that LHC/LHQ will search for if none is specified. This is the default for both the library member name and the stand-alone help file name. Options D and A define the alternate named directory and alternate DU to be searched. LHC/LHQ first searches the directory specified on the command line, (the current directory if none specified), for the requested help library or stand-alone help file. If the file cannot be found, LHC/LHQ attempts to search for it in the directory specified at option D. If the system does not contain a directory with this name, then the DU defined by option A is searched. Option P specifies whether a printer-ready test will be made before printing. If your system has trouble with the bios listst call, set this to OFF.    ACXD9SlPQML8FkO O +R!a D"T#F$S%N W&Yes NoEuropeanAmericanMilitaryCivilianTargetLogged LD Configuration Menu  (Screen 1 of 2) Command Line Defaults (A) Sort member names alphabetically? . .  (C) Print embedded comments by default? .  (X) Print CRC's and indexes by default? .  (D) Prefer crunched file embedded date .  (S) Default to summary only? . . . . . .  (P) Page screen by default? . . . . . . .  (Q) Default to quiet mode? . . . . . . .  (M) Store to registers by default? . . .  (L) Echo to printer by default? . . . . .  (F) Final form feed by default? . . . . .  (O) Output member names to file? . . . .  LD Configuration Menu  (Screen 2 of 2) Permanent Options (O) Output directory for DIR file . .  (R) First message register to use . . . .  (D) Date format . . . . . . . . . . . (T) Time format . . . . . . . . . . . (F) Flag character for embedded dates . . .  For Non-ZCPR3 Systems (S) Number of screen lines . . . . . . .  (W) Wheel byte address . . . . . . . .  h COMMAND LINE DEFAULTS: All command line options are toggles. The A, C, X, S, D, P, Q, M, L, F, and O configuration options can be toggled on or off by the corresponding command line options, depending on the defaults chosen. Most options are probably not desirable as defaults, but they're here just in case. Option A -- Alphabetic sort. If you would prefer member files to be displayed in the order they appear in the library, select "No". Otherwise, the display (and the output file, if any) will be sorted alphabetically by default. Option C -- Embedded comments. Some crunched files have a text comment embedded in their headers. The vast majority of embedded comments are insignificant at best, so most people will not want to see them except when requested with the command line "C" option. Nevertheless, if you want to see the comments by default choose "Yes" here. : COMMAND LINE DEFAULTS (continued): Option X -- Alternate display. If "Yes" is selected, two library member filenames will be displayed per line with their CRC's and indexes. If "No" is selected, each line displays a single member with its date stamps, uncompressed name, and (optionally) its embedded comment. Option D -- Date stamp preference. LD normally looks first for a date stamp in the library's directory. If no stamp is found there, it checks the headers of crunched files to see if there is an embedded date stamp. If "Yes" is selected here, LD will check for an embedded date stamp first and will use the directory stamp only if no embedded stamp is found or if the member file is not crunched. Option S -- Summary only. This option determines whether LD defaults to printing only the final summary line. That can be quite useful, but probably not as the default. : COMMAND LINE DEFAULTS (continued): Option P -- Screen paging. If you want LD to pause each time the screen fills, set this option to "Yes". If you're an Evelyn Wood alumnus, on the other hand, you might want to select "No" so continuous scrolling is the default. With continuous scrolling you can still pause the screen with ^S or by using the command line "P" option. (Screen paging is always off during printer output and quiet mode.) Option Q -- Quiet mode. This option determines whether LD will be in verbose or quiet mode by default. (Yes, LD has a quiet mode!) In quiet mode only error messages are displayed, which is sometimes useful with the M and L options, but nobody would want quiet mode as the default. If you're nobody, select "Yes". Option M -- Store results to memory. LD can store the number of matching member files and the number of free library directory entries to message registers. A "Yes" makes this the default; otherwise, the command line "M" option is required. : COMMAND LINE DEFAULTS (continued): Option L -- Printer echo. Printer (LST:) output is only allowed if the wheel byte is on. Normally you won't want this as the default, but it's here just in case. Option F -- Form feed printer. LD can be configured to always send a form feed by default after a library directory is sent to the printer if "Yes" is selected. A "No" means that a final form feed will only be output if the command line "F" option is used. Option O -- File output. "Yes" means that matching member names will be output to a disk file by default. Unless you have some special need, this selection should normally be "No". PERMANENT OPTIONS: The following options are permanent configurations that cannot be changed from the command line. Option O -- File output directory. LD will write its library DIR file to the currently logged (default) directory or to the target directory (the one containing the library file), depending on what you select here. Make your choice based on your usual working habits. Option R -- Message registers. When storing the results to memory, LD uses four consecutive message registers. The available registers are numbered 0 to 31. The register selected here will be the lowest one used, so the highest register number available is 28, which will use through register 31. Other programs (notably ZDE) use message registers, so make your selection based on register usage by other programs you commonly run. Option D -- Date format. The created and modified dates of libraries and their member files can be displayed in either "American" (mm/dd/yy) or "European" (dd.mm.yy) formats. It's your choice. : PERMANENT OPTIONS (continued): Option T -- Time format. The created and modified times of libraries and their member files can be displayed in either "Civilian" format (12-hour time, e.g., "3:21p") or "Military" format (24-hour time, e.g., "15:21"), whichever you prefer. Option F -- Embedded date flag character. The flag character selected here is printed between the date and time if it came from an embedded stamp in the header of a crunched file. Any printable character can be selected, such as "-", "=", "*", "^", or "~". If you do not want a flag displayed at all, enter a space character. : FOR NON-ZCPR3 SYSTEMS: The following permanent options are ignored when running under ZCPR3. Option S -- Number of screen lines. Enter the number of lines on your screen. You can enter any decimal number from 1 to 255. This option is only for vanilla CP/M systems. Under ZCPR3 the number of screen lines is obtained from the environment. Option W -- Wheel byte address. For vanilla CP/M remote systems that maintain a wheel byte, enter the address of that byte here as four hexadecimal characters. If a wheel byte is not maintained, the address should be "0000". Under ZCPR3 the address of the wheel byte is obtained from the environment. K E L#E.NDA P17= LHH CONFIGURATION L) Default LBR name E) LBR extension N) Default file name D) Alternate directory A) Alternate DU P) Do printer-ready test YES NO Option L defines the default library name that LHH will search for if none is given on the command line when the program is invoked. Option E specifies the file type or extension of the library. In most cases, this will be "LBR." Option N defines the help file name that LHH will search for if none is specified. This is the default for both the library member name and the stand-alone help file name. Options D and A define the alternate named directory and alternate DU to be searched. LHH first searches the directory specified on the command line, (the current directory if none specified), for the requested help library or stand-alone help file. If the file cannot be found, LHH attempts to search for it in the directory specified at option D. If the system does not contain a directory with this name, then the DU defined by option A is searched. Option P specifies whether a printer-ready test will be made before printing. If your system has trouble with the bios listst call, set this to OFF.   fy H@AoVEQ P?SrCOX D>F!h P,A4N  Yes NoAskWheel OmitSpecial ZFILES XFOR Configuration Menu (Screen 1 of 2) (H) Print header? . . . . . . . . . . . .  (A) Use which header? . . . . . . . .  (V) Header video attributes . . . . . . .  (E) Entry first line attributes . . . . .  (Q) Quiet mode? . . . . . . . . . . . . .  (P) Page screen output? . . . . . . . . .  (S) Double-space between entries? . . . .  (C) Clear screen for each page? . . . . .  (O) Use variable page overlap? . . . . .  (X) Omit FN.FT in syntax or use Wheel?  (D) Default source drive and user . . . .  (F) Default filename . . . . . . XFOR Configuration Menu (Screen 2 of 2) (P) Program name for usage screen:  " " (A) Alternate header string: " " Option H -- Display header. If this option is set to "Yes", a header will be displayed at the top of each screen page by default, if paging is in effect. The default here is toggled by the H command line option. Option A -- Choose header. This option determines which of two headers will be used by option H above or on the command line. If "ZFILES" is selected, a header for Bill Tishey's ZFILES.LST will be used. If "Special" is selected, XFOR will display a header for "Nolan" FOR files or one of your design. The special header must be entered into XFOR using option A on the second menu screen, or by using the patch file included in the distribution library. The default selected here is toggled by the A command line option. Option V -- Header video attributes. As distributed, when XFOR displays a header, it tries first to use reverse video. If reverse video is not available in an extended TCAP, then XFOR attempts to use standout video, which is usually dim, bright, or reverse. If other attributes are available in your TCAP, or if you want XFOR to always use the standout string or no attributes at all, you can set that here: 0=no attributes, 1=blink, 2=reverse, 3=blink-reverse, 4=underline, 5=blink-underline, 6=reverse-underline, 7=blink-reverse-underline, 8=standout. : Option E -- First line of entry attributes. As distributed, XFOR displays the first line of each entry in standout video, if it is available in your TCAP. The video attributes used can be selected in the same manner as the attributes for the header. See option V, above, for details. Standout is also used for a few messages, such "[more]" and "[searching]". A zero will turn off highlighting. Option Q -- Quiet mode. This option determines whether XFOR defaults to quiet mode (not a dramatic difference). If set to "Yes", the "searching", "end of listing", and "aborted" messages will be suppressed. Option P -- Screen paging. This is a three-way option. If "Yes" is selected, screen output will be paged. If "No", output will be scrolled continuously. If "Ask" is selected, the user will be asked on invocation if he wants paged output. Most users will want "Yes" here, but remote systems should probably set this option to "Ask". The P and N command line options will override whatever is selected here. : Option S -- Space between entries. As distributed XFOR leaves no space between entries as they are displayed on the screen, but the first line of each entry is highlighted. Some users may prefer a blank line between each entry, especially if highlighting is not supported, although the number of entries displayed on each screen will be reduced. For a blank line between entries select "Yes". The default here is toggled by the S command line option. Option C -- Clear screen. As distributed XFOR clears the screen before each page is displayed. If "No" is selected here, the screen will not be cleared. If a header (option H) or variable screen overlap (option O) is used, this option should be "Yes" for best results. Option O -- Screen overlap. As distributed XFOR displays each entry complete on a screen page using variable screen overlap. That is, if an entry is not complete at the bottom of the screen, it is displayed from its beginning at the top of the next screen. If "No" is selected here, the entry will continue on the next screen with the next line. : Option X -- Usage screen. This option affects only the usage screen. If set to "Omit", the filename parameter is omitted from the displayed syntax line and a series of example command lines is included in the display. In addition, a configured program name (option P) is displayed instead of the name by which XFOR was invoked. If this option is set to "Wheel", full syntax is displayed if the wheel byte is set, but the source filename parameter is omitted for non-wheels. The "Omit" selection is intended for non-remote users who call XFOR only by means of aliases or an internally configured filename and want the help screen syntax to represent the way XFOR is used. Option D -- Default drive and user. This configured drive and user is used only if no DU or DIR specification is included on the command line. Set to "??" if the current logged drive and user is to be used. Although it is possible to enter "?1", the configured user will not be used unless a drive is also configured. However, if a drive is configured without a user (e.g., "A?"), the current user will be assumed. Option F -- Default source filename. This filename is used if no filename is given on the command line. If a filename preceded by a colon is given on the command line, this default name is ignored. Option P -- Program name. This is the program name that will be displayed on the syntax line and in example command lines on the usage screen if the Wheel byte is off or if option X is set to "Omit". The option can be used to display the name of the alias by which XFOR is invoked. Option A -- Alternate header string. The desired header string can be entered at ZCNFG's prompt. The maximum is 78 characters. Note that the first column of the header will be overwritten with a bracket ("[") if highlighting is not supported by your TCAP.U w TO Z"M[AL!sC# D.Qc ZCNFG CONFIGURATION T)  Target Program Default Filetype _ _ _ _ .COM O)  Overlay file Default Filetype _ _ _ _ _ .CFG Z)  Z3ENV auto-install for ZCPR3 _ _ _ _ _ NO A)  Alternate D/U for Overlay files _ _ _ _ B8 L)  console Lines per Screen _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 24 C)  Default CFG library name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ CONFIG D)  Default DU for the CFG filespec _ _ _ _ current YESNO CURRENTTARGET P T) and O) - DEFAULT FILE TYPES The default file type extensions used by ZCNFG are shown. You may wish to choose another default filetype extension for configuration overlays (.CFG files) because of conflict with your system standards. Otherwise, leave these as is. An explicit filetype on the command line supercedes the default, allowing you to configure files whose filetype has been changed from .COM to something else. Z) Z3ENV AUTO-INSTALL When set to YES, your current Z3ENV address will be installed in the target program, just as if you had invoked Z3INST.COM. Nothing is done if the current system is not ZCPR3x. Set this to NO if the target program is intended to operate in a CP/M system. It is not needed for target execution under ZCPR33/4. Set it to YES if target programs are likely to be executed by a debugger like DSD or DDT which do not auto-install. : A) ALTERNATE DU (DRIVE/USER) Use this item to select an Alternate Directory. The Alternate Directory is the place ZCNFG expects to find CONFIG.LBR if it exists. This is also the directory which will be searched for a CFG file whose directory has not been specified explicitly on the command line. CONFIG.LBR and ALT: are two of the elements in ZCNFG's search path. The third element of the search path is selected by menu item D. You may assign an explicit DU, or use wildcard notation for an ambiguous directory spec that will be resolved when ZCNFG is invoked. An explicit DU (like B31 or D15) is usually most convenient, especially with a hard disk. Ambiguous specifications are difficult to remember but may be useful for Floppy Disk systems. Examples: ALT assignment ALT: when ZCNFG is invoked -------------- -------------------------- ?? or ??? current Drive and User A? or A?? Drive A, current User ?14 Current Drive, User 14 ?8 Current Drive, User 8 : L) CONSOLE LINES PER SCREEN Set this to the total number of lines your terminal displays. This is a default value which is replaced at execution time by that from the Z3 Environment. ZCNFG uses this number to manage menus and help screens properly. For demonstration purposes, values are limited to a minimum of 12 and maximum of 80. C) CONFIGURATION LIBRARY You may change the NAME of the library, but not the extension, which is always taken to be .LBR. This library is made with NULU, VLU, LPUT, or equivalent. If you put all your CFG files in this library, you will conserve directory entries on your disk. The library must be located in the directory you have assigned in menu item A. When ZCNFG is invoked like: ZCNFG [DIR:]FN[.FT] [CFGFN][.FT] (note no DIR: in the 2nd argument) then the LBR will be searched first for the CFG file. This method is faster than searching several directories for CFG files. : D) DEFAULT DU FOR THE .CFG OVERLAY FILE This item toggles between DEFAULT and TARGET directories. If you choose DEFAULT, then missing parts of the DU portion of the filespec for configuration overlay file are provided from those for the logged directory. This is exactly the way ZCPR3x parses, and is an appropriate choice if you normally invoke ZCNFG with the CFG file present in either the current directory or ALTernate directory. If you choose TARGET, then ZCNFG virtually logs into the TARGET file directory after it has been parsed from the command line. This choice is appropriate if you normally invoke ZCNFG with the CFG file present in the same directory as the target file to be configured or the ALTernate directory. Note that if both the target and CFG files are in the current directory, these choices become equivalent. Also, if your CFG files are normally in ALT:CONFIG.LBR or in the ALT: directory itself, this choice is irrelevant. U  0 12 /3Ha45I6J  ZDB VERS 1.8 DEFAULTS (Screen 1 of 3)  Default CFG file name (FILENAME).......... 0) Default datafile name (DUU:FILENAME.TYP).. 1) Character used to terminate data fields... 2) Left margin for main envelope address..... 3) Lines between return and main addresses... 4) Left margin for main label address........ 5) Use return address in label............... 6)   0  A)bB*C+D,E-1K)2L3M4N5O6P7Q8R9S  ZDB VERS 1.8 Printer Initialization (Screen 2 of 3)  Use BIOS LISTST printer check...... 0) A Printer reset string length byte... A) h B C D E Printer reset string............. B-E) h, h, h, h 1 Form length string length byte..... 1) h 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Set form length for labels....... 2-9) h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h  A.6B/C0D1E2F3G4H5I6J7K8L9M:N;O<P=R>S?T@UAVBWCYDZE1F2G  ZDB VERS 1.8 Printer Initialization (Screen 3 of 3)  Length byte for return address..... A) h Set printer for return address... B-M) B C D E F G H I J K L M h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h Main address string length byte.... N) h Set printer for main address..... O-2) O P R S T U V W Y Z 1 2 h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h YES NONO YES ONOFFc  ZDB VERS 1.8 DEFAULTS  NAME OF DEFAULT CFG FILE: ZCNFG will look for this configuration filename if no configuration filename is specified on the command line. Enter the name as 'FILENAME' NAME OF DEFAULT DATAFILE: ZDB will look for this datafile if no datafile name is specified on the command line. Enter the name as 'DUU:FILENAME.TYP' The drive/user designation is optional. CHARACTER USED TO TERMINATE DATA FIELDS: This character is used to terminate each data field. If the standout in your system doesn't highlight spaces, this character will indicate the end of each datafield. LEFT MARGIN FOR MAIN ENVELOPE ADDRESS: Enter the column number in which you wish to start your main envelope address. LINES BETWEEN RETURN ADDRESS AND MAIN ADDRESS: Enter the number of lines from the end of the return address to the start of the main address. For a standard business envelope, there will be a total of 14 lines from the start of the envelope to the start of the main address. Since a standard return address contains 3 lines plus a one line space to the label address, this value will normally be 10 lines. LEFT MARGIN FOR MAIN LABEL ADDRESS: Enter the column number in which you wish to start your main label address. USE RETURN ADDRESS IN LABEL: Set this flag to YES to use your return address in each label. Your labels must be large enough to accommodate the number of lines required.  ZDB VERS 1.8 PRINTER INITIALIZATION  Each printer initialization string is displayed as a list of hex digits. Each hex digit may be changed by entering its menu character. First byte is length (in bytes) of string. USE BIOS LISTST PRINTER STATUS CHECK: Some systems hang if the BIOS LISTST is called. If your system has this problem, set this flag to NO and ZDB will skip the BIOS printer status test and will assume your printer is always ready. RESET PRINTER: Enter the reset string for your printer. This string is sent at the beginning and end of each envelope or label printing session. SET FORM LENGTH FOR LABELS: Set the form length on your printer to the number of lines per label for the size label you are using.  ZDB VERS 1.8 PRINTER INITIALIZATION  Each printer initialization string is displayed as a list of hex digits. Each hex digit may be changed by entering its menu character. SET PRINTER FOR RETURN ADDRESS: Set your printer to the desired modes for printing the return address. SET PRINTER FOR MAIN ADDRESS: Modify your printer settings from those used for printing the return address to those desired for printing the main address. Do not use the printer reset string to clear the settings used for the return address, as this will cause the label length setting to be lost. -  0 |12   ZDT VERS 1.3 DEFAULTS Default CFG file name (FILENAME).......... 0) Default datafile name (DUU:FILENAME.TYP).. 1) Character used to terminate data fields... 2)  A'4B(C)D*E+F,G-H.I/J0K1L2+M3N4O5P6R7  ZDT VERS 1.3 Printer Initialization A Printer init string length byte.... A) h B C D E F G H I J K Printer initialization string.... B-K) h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h, h L Printer dinit string length byte... L) h M N O P R Printer de-initialization string. M-R) h, h, h, h, h YES NONO YES ONOFFc  ZDT VERS 1.3 DEFAULTS  NAME OF DEFAULT CFG FILE: ZCNFG will look for this configuration filename if no configuration filename is specified on the command line. Enter the name as 'FILENAME' NAME OF DEFAULT DATAFILE: ZDT will look for this datafile if no datafile name is specified on the command line. Enter the name as 'FILENAME.TYP' CHARACTER USED TO TERMINATE DATA FIELDS: This character is used to terminate each data field. If the standout in your system doesn't highlight spaces, this character will indicate the end of each datafield.  ZDT VERS 1.3 PRINTER INITIALIZATION  Each printer initialization string is displayed as a list of hex digits. Each hex digit may be changed by entering its menu character. First byte is length (in bytes) of string. INITIALIZE PRINTER: Enter the initialization string for your printer. This string is sent at the beginning of each printing session. DE-INITIALIZE PRINTER: Enter the de-initialization string for your printer. This string is sent at the end of each printing session.