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LIST Version 6.4a
September 21, 1988
(c) Copyright Vernon D. Buerg 1983-88
All rights reserved
T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S
__________________________________________________________________________
Description of Use ................................................... 1
Introduction .................................................... 1
Command line format ............................................. 1
Installation .................................................... 1
How to use LIST ...................................................... 2
Commands and Keys .................................................... 4
Cursor keys ..................................................... 4
Letter keys ..................................................... 4
Control- keys ................................................... 5
F- function keys ................................................ 5
Alt- keys ....................................................... 6
Scrolling ............................................................ 8
Positioning to Lines ................................................. 9
Displaying multiple files ............................................ 10
Marking and Extracting Lines ......................................... 11
Display Format ....................................................... 12
Status Line Format ............................................... 12
Command Line Format .............................................. 13
Screen Colors ........................................................ 14
Scanning for text .................................................... 15
Filtering ............................................................ 16
Hi-bit Filter ................................................... 16
Star Filter ..................................................... 16
Junk Filter ..................................................... 16
Hex Format Filter ............................................... 16
DOS considerations ................................................... 17
File Sharing .................................................... 17
Invoking DOS Commands ........................................... 17
Screen Saving ................................................... 17
Cloning Procedure .................................................... 18
Modifying LIST ....................................................... 19
Locations of clonable values .................................... 19
Reassigning keys ................................................ 20
Routine ID values ............................................... 21
Restrictions ......................................................... 23
Contents 1 LIST User's Guide
Description of Use
______________________________________________________________________________
Introduction
You use LIST to display files on your monitor, line by line
with the aid of scrolling, positioning and filtering commands.
Command line format
The command line format is:
LIST [filespec...filespec] [/S][/J][/7][/8][/*][/W][/H][/L]
where filespec is one or more names of files and the optional /
switches are:
/S indicates viewing a piped or redirected file
/J sets Junk filter on
/7 sets 7-bit display
/8 sets 8-bit display
/* sets star filter on
/W sets Wrap on
/H sets Hex dump mode
/L sets pre-Loading on
The command line switch character is normally a slash, "/",
but LIST will use whatever character that is defined to DOS
as the command line switch character, e.g. a dash, "-".
Installation
Copy LIST.COM to your working disk, and into the directory
that is most convenient.
You may rename the program file to any convenient name, such
as L.COM, READ.COM, etc.
To print the documentation, set your printer for six lines per
inch, and 10 characters per inch. Then, use the DOS PRINT
command. For example,
PRINT LIST.DOC
The documentation file is marked with | before new and changed
lines.
LIST User's Guide Page 1
How to use LIST
______________________________________________________________________________
Using LIST is fairly straightforward. You type the command
LIST, at the DOS prompt, followed by the name(s) of the files
that you want to see. For example: LIST CONFIG.SYS would
display the file CONFIG.SYS.
Once the file is displayed on your screen, you may use the
cursor positioning keys to move around and see different parts
of the file. For example, when LIST first starts, you see the
first 23 lines of the file. To see the next 23 lines, or page,
press the PgDn key. The PgUp key moves you back one page and
shows you the previous 23 lines. The up-arrow and down-arrow
keys move it one line at a time. When you are finished, press
the ESCape key and you are returned to the DOS prompt.
The "filename" is optional. If omitted, you are prompted to
enter a filename. You may include drive, path, and wild cards
in the file name. The first file which matches that name is
displayed. After the file is displayed, the next file which
matches the "filename" may be displayed, too.
You may also use LIST to display piped or redirected files.
If you are unfamiliar with these, you may skip to the next page.
To display a redirected file, use a < (less than symbol)
before the name of the file that was redirected and add the /S
parameter to the LIST command. For example, the output of the
DIR command can be written to a file called XYZ, and then LIST
can be instructed to read that file.
dir a: >xyz
list <xyz /s
To display a piped file, omit the filename, but supply the
/S.
dir a: | list /s
Or, to LIST a file within an ARC archive:
arc /p arcname.arc filename.ext | list /s
- or -
arce arcname filename.ext /p | list /S
Because files contain different kinds of data, there are
several commands to tell LIST how to display the data. The
process that LIST uses to make the file data readable is called
filtering. The filters in LIST can:
o replace non-text and control characters with blanks
o expand TAB characters
o display line drawing characters
o change 8-bit (W*) data to readable 7-bit text
o display the hexidecimal values for each character
o remove "junk", such as control codes and backspaces
LIST was designed to display ASCII files. That is, files
which contain text, and not binary or control codes. Text
characters usually range from a value of 32 to 127. To view
Page 2 LIST User's Guide
How to use LIST
______________________________________________________________________________
binary files (COM, EXE, etc), the alt-H (hex dump display)
command is available.
Characters below 32 (a blank) are replaced with a funny
character to indicate that a non-displayable character has been
encountered. This character is an upside-down question mark.
Characters above 127 may be valid graphic characters, and may be
displayed if the '8' command is in effect. To insure that
characters above ASCII value 127 are not displayed, use the '7'
command.
The top line of the display gives the file name, current
right scroll offset, and the FILE's creation date and time.
Optionally, a ruler may be displayed on the top line by using
the alt-R keys.
The file is displayed with one logical record on each
display line: usually 80 characters. A logical record ends in a
linefeed and may be up to 910 characters long. If a record
exceeds 80 characters, you may view the portion beyond the 80
columns by using the scroll right command, or by using the Wrap
feature. The Wrap (W) command toggles ON or OFF the wrapping of
lines longer than 80 characters. With Wrap on, lines are
displayed in their entirety, 80 characters per display line.
The scroll left (arrow) and right (arrow) functions are disabled
when Wrap is ON.
The file may be PRINTed as it it displayed. The P command
toggles the printer on or off. When first entered, the P
command causes the current screen to be printed. As new lines
are displayed, they too are printed. Printing may be stopped by
entering another P command. The PrtSc key may also be used, but
the title and prompt lines will be printed with the lines of the
file. Empty lines cause a line to be skipped on the printer.
The letter P is displayed on the bottom command line while
printing. See the section on extracting lines for other
methods.
LIST User's Guide Page 3
Commands and Keys
______________________________________________________________________________
Cursor keys
Cursor key Function
----------- -----------------------------------------------
left arrow scroll left 10 columns
right arrow scroll right 10 columns
up arrow up one (previous) line
down arrow down one (next) line
Enter continue to next page
END position to end of file (bottom)
ESCape Exit program unconditionally
HOME restart from first line (top)
PgUp scroll up one page, 23 lines
PgDn scroll down one page, 23 lines
Letter keys
Letter(s) Default Function
--------- ------- ----------------------------------------
A find next occurrence of 'text' (Again)
B skip to end of file (Bottom)
C off toggles Continuous scrolling
D scroll Down one page
F Find 'text' regardless of case
G Get new filename/filespec (also alt-F)
H or ? Help, show command list
K off toggle Keyboard flush; if on, commands
may be queued up by holding a key down
L scroll Left 10 columns
M on toggle test for display retrace, if on
the display is faster but may flicker;
not applicable to monochrome monitors
N down one (Next) line
P off toggle Printer on or off
Q Quit, display next file, or exit if only
one file is being viewed
R scroll Right 10 columns
S Scan for exact text match, case dependent
T restart from first line (Top)
U scroll Up one page (23 lines)
W off toggle Wrap of lines over 80 chars
X terminate, clear screen and eXit to DOS
Z like ctl-PgUp, displays previous file
7 off turn off high bit (non-graphics only)
8 on leave high bit on (graphics)
* off toggles special * document filtering
+ position a given number of lines forwards
- position a given number of lines backwards
\text Find any case 'text' going forwards
/text Scan exact case 'text' going forwards
` or ^ Find any case 'text' going backwards
' or v Find exact case 'text' going backwards
Page 4 LIST User's Guide
Commands and Keys
______________________________________________________________________________
Control- keys
Control key Function
----------- ---------------------------------------------------
ctl-HOME positions to a specific line number
ctl-PgUp display previous file (review)
ctl-PgDn display next file (or exit if only one file)
ctl-left-arrow reset horizontal scroll position to column 1
ctl-A scroll full left
ctl-C next page
ctl-D scroll right
ctl-E former line
ctl-N display next file
ctl-R former page
ctl-S scroll left
ctl-U display previous file
ctl-W former line
ctl-X next line
ctl-Z next line
F- function keys
Function key Function
------------ ---------------------------------------------------
F1 Help - display summary of commands
F3 Find next occurrence of text after Scan or Find
F9 Find previous occurrence of text after Scan or Find
F10 Exit to DOS with clear screen and cursor last line
F2 change background color for Find/Scan text
F4 change foreground color for Find/Scan text
F5 change background color for main body of display
F6 change foreground color for main body of display
F7 change background color for top and bottom lines
F8 change foreground color for top and bottom lines
LIST User's Guide Page 5
Commands and Keys
______________________________________________________________________________
Alt- keys
The Alt- key commands are entered by pressing the Alt key at the
same time as you press one of the following letter keys:
alt- letter Function
----------- ---------------------------------------------------
alt-A toggle on if you are using APXCOREA; off (default)
if using DesqView or DoubleDos
alt-B mark bottom line
alt-C clone LIST.COM, change colors or options permanently,
in a new copy of the LIST.COM program file
alt-D toggle dump mode: if no lines are marked, the current
screen only is written to the specified file; if lines
are marked, they are written to the dump file.
alt-E toggle 25/43 line display (does test for EGA). If the
actual EGA lines is not 25 or 43, don't use alt-E
alt-F prompt for new Filespec or filename to display
entering a leading asterisk (*) may be obscured
by some console enhancers or utilities, so enter
two asterisks, e.g. **.doc
alt-G Shell to DOS, invoke COMMAND.COM, requires 96k or more.
Use the DOS EXIT command to return to LIST.
alt-H toggles hex dump formatted display
alt-J toggle adding line feed to lone carriage returns
and remove backspaces, overlaying previous characters
alt-L toggles preloading of files; default is OFF
When the file is pre-loaded, the number of the
last line number becomes known.
alt-M mark top line; marked lines may be printed or written
to the alt-D dump file.
alt-N toggles screen saving feature; with screen saving
disabled, the minimum memory required is about 38k
alt-O like alt-D, writes marked lines to a file using the
filename from the previous alt-D command
alt-R toggles display of a ruler on the top line
alt-S toggles file Sharing option, when off
files remain open until program termination
alt-T toggles expansion of TAB control characters, the
tab columns are a multiple of 8, i.e. 1,9,17, etc.
The default is to expand TABs. See DEBUG section.
alt-U unmark lines; line marks are removed
Page 6 LIST User's Guide
Commands and Keys
______________________________________________________________________________
alt-W toggles split screen; when ON, the top half of
the screen is frozen. Further scrolling occurs
only in the bottom half of the screen (window)
until the alt-W keys are used again.
alt-Y repositions the file to the last "active" line;
that is a line positioned to by Find/Scan, or
by alt-M/alt-B marking of lines.
alt-X exits to DOS and displays the original screen
(unless screen saving has been disabled)
LIST User's Guide Page 7
Scrolling
______________________________________________________________________________
You view different parts of the file by scrolling. That is,
you use the cursor positioning keys up, down, left and right to
move the display one increment in that direction. For example,
press the down arrow key to move the display one line in the
file, i.e. display the next line in the file.
The PgDn and PgUp cursor keys move the display on full
screen in either direction.
Rather than press the up and down keys once for each line,
you may use continuous scrolling. Use the C key to toggle
continuous scrolling on or off. The default is off. When
toggled on, pressing the up or down arrow keys results in a
moving display. For example, when you press the down arrow, the
next line of the file is displayed automatically every few
moments. It is like holding down the arrow key. To stop the
continuous scroll, press the space bar.
The speed of the continuous scroll can be adjusted by
pressing the + (plus) or - (minus) key while the display is
moving. The plus key makes the display move faster, and the
minus key makes it move slower. You can save the speed value by
using the cloning command (see Alt-C).
Summary of scrolling commands:
right arrow - move display right 10 columns
left arrow - move display left 10 columns
down arrow - display next line of file
up arrow - display previous line of file
PgUp key - display previous "page", 23 (or 41) lines back
PgDn key - display next "page", 23 (or 41) lines ahead
C key - turns continuous scrolling on or off
spacebar - or any key, interrupts continuous scrolling
+ (plus) - makes continuous scroll incrementally faster
- (minus) - makes continuous scroll slower
Page 8 LIST User's Guide
Positioning to Lines
______________________________________________________________________________
Each displayable line of the file is assigned a line number.
The first line is assigned line number 1. The highest allowable
line number is 16 million. In order to determine the last line
number, the entire file must be read. For this reason, the
first time that the END (bottom) command is issued, it will take
longer to process. This is not necessary if the file has been
completely read (see the alt-L preloading option).
If the Wrap option is in effect, there is one line number
required for each 80 bytes of the file's records. Thus, the
line number does not represent the actual number of lines in the
file.
If the hex dump option is in effect, there is one line
number required for each 16 bytes of the file. For example, an
80-byte file will be displayed as 5 lines.
You may position to a specific line number by using the
c-Home, Ctrl key and Home key, or the # key. When c-Home is
entered, you are prompted for the line number. Enter the 1 to 5
digit line number. The display will now begin with that line
number at the top of the screen.
To position forward or backward, you may use the + (plus),
or - (minus) keys. You are prompted to enter the number of
lines to be skipped. The display resumes at the line number
shown on the top (status) line, plus or minus the number of
lines that you specified.
When you change a filter option, such as Wrap, the line
numbering changes. An attempt is made to retain the same file
position, but the file may be repositioned at the top.
Summary of positioning commands:
ctrl-HOME, or # - prompts for exact line number to display
+ (plus) - prompts for the number of lines to skip
for positioning further ahead in the file
- (minus) - prompts for the number of lines to skip
for positioning to an earlier line
LIST User's Guide Page 9
Displaying multiple files
______________________________________________________________________________
You can display more than one file by supplying wildcards in
the file name. For example, LIST *.DOC will display all files
with an extension of DOC.
To display the next file, you use the Q or ctrl-PgDn
command. When the last file has been displayed, you can exit
LIST by using the X, F10, ESCape, or alt-X commands, depending
on how you want the screen to look when LIST ends.
To display the previous file, you use the ctrl-PgUp (control
and PgUp keys together). LIST can keep track of up to 20 files
at one time. The line number for each file is also remembered.
Another way to LIST more than one file is to use the alt-F
command. Alt-F asks you for a new file name, and you may enter
a simple file name, or one that includes wild cards. These new
file names are added to the table of filenames that LIST keeps.
Thus, you can use alt-F for several different filenames, and use
the ctrl-PgDn and ctrl-PgUp commands to move among them.
Summary of file review commands:
ctrl-PgUp - display previous file
ctrl-PgDn - display next file
alt-F - prompt for new filename or filespec to display
ESCape - exit to DOS
Q - display next file; if none, exit to DOS
leaving the last page on the screen
X - exit to DOS with a blank screen
F10 - exit to DOS with a blank screen
alt-X - exit to DOS and display the screen that was
present when LIST was invoked
Page 10 LIST User's Guide
Marking and Extracting Lines
______________________________________________________________________________
There are two ways that lines can be extracted from a file:
o with the P (print) command, and
o with the alt-D (dump data) command.
The lines to be extracted are either the current lines on
the screen, or lines that you have marked with the alt-M and
alt-B commands.
To mark lines, you use either the alt-M or alt-B commands.
The alt-M command marks the top line on the screen, and alt-B
marks the bottom line on the screen. You can use either or both
commands to mark the starting and ending lines (in the range of
lines to be extracted). The marked lines are displayed in
reverse video.
After you have marked a range of lines, you use the P
(print) command to print all of the marked lines. Or, you can
use the alt-D (dump data) command to write those lines to a
file. The alt-D command asks you for a file name. If the file
does not exist, a new one is created. If the file already
exists, the extracted lines are added (appended) to the file.
For example, you would like to have LIST filter out all of
the junk in a file, and then write a new file. To do this, you
might enter the following sequence of commands:
list TESTDATA ... display your TESTDATA file
alt-J ... filters out the junk
alt-M ... marks line 1 (top line)
END ... positions to end of file
alt-B ... marks the bottom line
(last line)
alt-D ... dumps data to a file
TESTDATE.NEW ... you enter the new file name
alt-X ... quit and return to DOS
Once you have marked a range of lines, use of alt-M or alt-B
does not reset the entire line range. The first or last marked
line may change, but both do not change. Using alt-M again
expands or contracts the range appropriately. If the new line
for alt-M/alt-B is before the top mark, the top mark is moved.
If the new line is after the bottom mark, the bottom mark is
changed. If the new line is within the currently marked range,
alt-M moves the top mark - contracts the range - and alt-B moves
the bottom mark.
Use the alt-U command to unmark lines, especially after
alt-D (dump) to be sure.
LIST User's Guide Page 11
Display Format
______________________________________________________________________________
The monitor display is defined in terms of lines and
columns. A typical monitor can display 25 lines of 80 columns
each. LIST attempts to use the number of lines and columns for
the monitor mode in use. For example, if the monitor is in 40
column mode, LIST displays only 40 characters per line. And, if
the monitor is set for other than 25 lines, such as 35 or 43,
LIST uses that number of lines.
If you use the alt-E command to change EGA modes, the EGA
palette, cursor, and other settings are set to DOS default
values. LIST does not preserve fonts or palettes.
The top line of the display is called the Status line. The
bottom line is called the Command line. The remaining lines are
called the primary display window, and are usually lines two
through 24.
Status Line Format
The Status line has the following format:
LIST lllll nnnnnnn +sss mm/dd/yy hh:mm - filename
where,
'LIST' is the name of this program
'lllllll' is the line number of the first line in the
display window (usually on line 2)
'nnnnnnn' is the line number of the last record, if known
'+sss' if displayed, this is the Scroll amount, in
multiples of 10, corresponding to the number
of columns that the display has been shifted
to the right to view records longer than 80
'mm/dd/yy' is the file's creation date (not today's date)
'hh:mm' is the file's creation time (not today's time)
Note: The date and time shown on the top line is NOT the
current date. It is the date and time that the file was
created.
Page 12 LIST User's Guide
Display Format
______________________________________________________________________________
Command Line Format
The Command line has the following format:
command message _________ Toggles: hbkmpswtalj Keys: X=exit ?=Help
-----------
where,
'command' indicates the current process:
'Command' function prompt; you are being asked to enter
a command; enter the letter, or press the keys
for the action to be performed
'Reading ' the file data is being read
'Filter ' the file data is being formatted for display
'Looking ' the Scan/Find text is being searched for
'Scan ' you are being asked to enter text to locate
'Find ' in the file, up to 31 characters may be entered
'# lines?' you are being asked to enter a 1 to 5 digit
number that is the amount of lines to skip
'Line #? ' you are being asked to enter a 1 to 5 digit
line number to which the display is to be
positioned
'message' may be one of:
'*** Text not found ***'
the Scan/Text was not found in the file
' *** Top of file ***'
the first line of the file is being displayed
' *** End-of-file ***'
the last line of the file is being displayed
Toggles: indicate status of toggles, lower case means OFF, upper
case means the option is ON.
'H' indicates that the hex Dump display option is in use
'b' the 'b' is replaced by a 7, 8, or * depending
on which of those options is in effect
'K' indicates that the Keyboard flush option is in use
'M' indicates that tests for monitor retrace are not made
'P' indicates that Print is in use
'C' toggles continuous scrolling
'W' indicates that the Wrap mode is in effect
'T' indicates that TAB characters are expanded
'A' indicates APXCORE interface, 'a' for TV/DV/DD
'L' indicates that the pre-loading option is on
'J' indicates that line feeds are added to lone carriage
return control characters, and backspaces are handled
LIST User's Guide Page 13
Screen Colors
______________________________________________________________________________
The screen's lines may be in any of three different colors:
o the 'special' color for the top status line and the
bottom command line
o the 'normal' color for the file's text windows
o the 'bright' color for lines with Find/Scan text,
and for the upside-down question mark in 7-bit mode
There is a pair of function keys assigned to each color.
You use these function keys at any time to change the background
and foreground colors temporarily, or use the alt-C cloning
command to make the colors permanent. Alt-C requires that the
LIST.COM program file be on the current drive and in the current
directory unless you are using DOS version 3.3 or later. With
DOS 3.3, the program file may have any name and may reside in
any subdirectory.
The border is not changed. The foreground color applies to
the color of the characters.
The color attributes may be changed by using these function keys:
For the main body of text:
F5 - background color
F6 - foreground color
For the top and bottom lines:
F7 - background color
F8 - foreground color
For the line with Find/Scan text:
F2 - background color
F4 - foreground
Once you have decided upon the colors, use the alt-C key
combination to change the LIST.COM program file.
Page 14 LIST User's Guide
Scanning for text
______________________________________________________________________________
You may use Find (\ or F) to search for text regardless of
the case, or you may use Scan (/ or S) to find an exact match.
The search begins at the top line displayed and proceeds in a
forward direction until the end of file. You may start a search
that goes backwards rather than forwards by using the ` (left
quote) key instead of Find (\), or by using ' (right quote)
instead of Scan (/).
To scan for a character string, type a slash (/) followed by
one or more (up to 31) characters. The Scan text, but not the
slash, is displayed on the command line. The Scan is case
sensitive. That is, lower case Scan text will only match lower
case file text.
While the program is searching for the text, the bottom
display line is changed to say "Scanning". Pressing ANY key
while the search is in progress will terminate the search and
display the message 'Text not found' on the bottom line.
If the text is found, the line containing it is displayed as
a high-intensity line (bright color) in the middle of the screen
depending on the value of the Find Row (see cloning section).
If the text is NOT found, the command line (25) is changed
to say '*** text not found ***', and the display remains
unchanged.
To find the next occurrence of the same text, use the A)gain
command, or press the F3 key. To find the previous occurrence,
press the F9 key.
If the PCED keyboard enhancement program is installed, the
up/down cursor keys may be used to recall and edit previously
entered Scan/Find text.
In a shared file environment, if the file changes while
being listed, the file position may become invalid. Use the
HOME command to insure proper file synchronization, or use the
alt-S command again.
If the display has been scrolled right or left so that the
"found" text is not visible, you will see an upside-down
question mark in the first column. This is the same symbol that
is displayed on a blank line while changing the Find/Scan
colors. It is there so that you can tell that the line is
marked.
Summary of scanning commands:
/ Scan for text with exact match
v or ' Scan for text going backwards
\ Find text with case insensitive search
^ or ` Find case insensitive text going backwards
F3 Find next occurrence of text
F9 Find previous occurrence of text
LIST User's Guide Page 15
Filtering
______________________________________________________________________________
Filtering is the term used to describe the process that LIST
uses to format file data for displaying on a monitor. After
data is read from a file, it is filtered. The method of
filtering depends upon the options in effect.
For a typical ASCII text file, the filter removes carriage
return and line feed characters, and expands TAB characters.
Hi-bit Filter
The 7, 8, and * (asterisk) commands determine whether
characters above ASCII-127 are displayed. If the hi-bit option
is off (7 command), the filter strips the high order bit from
each character. If the hi-bit option is on (8 command), all
characters, including graphic characters above ASCII-127, are
displayed.
Star Filter
The star (* or asterisk) command displays only ASCII
characters below 128 (x'80'), but treats the special characters
x'8A' and x'8D' as line-feed and carriage-return control
characters. Any other characters above 127 are treated as
spaces, and control codes below ASCII-26 are replaced by blanks.
The Wrap option causes the filtering to insure that no line
exceeds the width of the monitor, e.g. 80 characters.
Junk Filter
The alt-J command toggles the "junk" filter which insures
that carriage returns in the file also result in a new line.
Also, backspace characters result in "backing up" the display by
one position. This allows more readability of files that use
backspacing to emphasize, or over-write, characters.
Hex Format Filter
The hex dump option (alt-H) causes the filtering to reformat
the file data into a DEBUG-like display format. The largest
file that can be displayed in Hex is 1 million bytes.
An attempt is made to retain the file position when
switching from normal to hex-dump display, but due to filtering
changing record lengths, the hex display may begin before the
current record.
NOTE: The EOF control character is ignored in this version.
Page 16 LIST User's Guide
DOS considerations
______________________________________________________________________________
File Sharing
LIST uses two techniques for allowing you to share files
with other processes, such as programs running under
multi-tasking systems, in other windows, or on networks.
The first technique is called "file closing" and is enabled
by the alt-S commands. This forces LIST to close the viewed
file unless it needs to read from the file. If enough memory is
available, the entire file may be loaded once and thus leave the
file free for exclusive access by other processes.
The second technique is called "file sharing". It is a
function of DOS and requires DOS version 3.0 or later. LIST
opens the viewed files with a DENY NONE request. This allows
other processes to read and write to the file if they do not
request exclusive use of the file. If a file is not available
to LIST because it is locked by another process, you will
receive the error message "File not found" or "Access denied".
There is no command to enable or disable this method of file
sharing. It is implicit with the use of DOS version 3.
Invoking DOS Commands
If the "goto DOS" option is enabled, you may invoke DOS
commands by using the alt-G command. LIST reserves about 60k of
memory for its own use. This increases LIST's memory
requirements to approximately 96k when using alt-G. The
remaining memory is available to the DOS commands.
After you have finished entering DOS commands, use the DOS
EXIT command to return to LIST.
To disable the "goto DOS" function, you must use DEBUG to
alter the option byte described in the section about cloning.
With it disabled, LIST requires less memory, about 66K.
Screen Saving
If the screen saving option is enabled, LIST saves the
contents of the current display screen when it starts. You can
restore the original screen by exiting LIST with the alt-X
command.
Screen saving requires approximately 10k more memory. This
is sufficient to save 60 lines of 80 characters (EGA 8x6 mode).
See the section about cloning for information about enabling and
disabling the screen saving feature.
LIST User's Guide Page 17
Cloning Procedure
______________________________________________________________________________
The screen colors, the display retrace testing (M), the file
closing (C) and ruler (alt-R) options may be permanently set in
the program by using the alt-C cloning function.
For cloning to take effect, the program should be called
LIST.COM and on the current drive and in the current directory.
There are two versions of the LIST program file. One is the
normal full program. The other, which contains an 'S' as the
last letter of the file name, is a slightly smaller file that
excludes the Help screen. You may use either COM file for
cloning. After cloning, you may continue viewing the file.
The clonable options (command toggles) are:
M = Mono monitor, affects retrace testing. If you see
"snow" on your color monitor, turn off this
option
alt-S = file(s) are shared
W = Wrap long lines
8/7/* = display all 256 values, or 7-bit, or special case
K = flush Keyboard each time a command is read
alt-A = set on if using Apxcore, off if using Double Dos
or TopView, or DesqView
alt-H = hex dump display, like the DEBUG format
alt-J = toggle "junk" filter, add LF to CR, fix backspaces
alt-L = set on to force preloading (reading) of the
entire file before any lines are displayed,
Default is OFF.
alt-N = toggles screen saving (see alt-X) feature
alt-R = toggle columnar ruler on top line
alt-T = toggle expansion of TAB characters
Note: Be sure you have no other copies of LIST.COM which are
accessible (because of a filepath type of utility).
Page 18 LIST User's Guide
Modifying LIST
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Locations of clonable values
An alternative to cloning is to use DEBUG to make permanent
changes. Here is a list of key items and their addresses:
0127 - special lines 1 and 25 colors, default is 01 (blue)
Refer to a technical reference guide for the
attribute values for the colors that you want.
0129 - normal lines 2 thru 24 colors, default is 02 (green)
012B - bright color for Find/Scan, default is 0F (bright white)
012D - clonable options;
MRSJ WHK* M = mono, retrace testing if off, x'01'
R = ruler, x'02'
S = shared, x'04'
J = add LF to lone CR, process backspaces,
if on, x'08'; default is off
W = wrap mode, x'10'
H = hi-bit on, x'20'
K = kybd flush, x'40'
* = special document filtering, x'80'
012E - more clonable options, not all are indicated:
.PAT DGV. P = Preload file if on, x'02', default is off
A = Apxcore if on, TV/DD/DV if off, x'04,
default is for Topview/Double DOS use
T = if on (default), expand TABs, x'08'
D = hex display mode if on, x'10'
G = if on, alt-G goto DOS is Disabled, x'20'
V = if on, screen save/restore is Disabled
and 9K less memory is used/required, x'40'
By specifying the bit value, the option is enabled. For
example, to enable Shared and Retrace, specify a hex value of
the sum, or 01+04 = 05.
012F - row less one at which found text is displayed, 1 byte
the default is 08 which displays found text on line 9
0131 - scroll offset value, default is 10 (x'0A'), one byte
0133 - scroll starting value, default is 0 (x'00'), one byte
0135 - tab increment, must be power of 2, default is 8
0137 - tab mask, subtract tab incr from FFFFh,default is FFF8
0139 - beep tone, default is 512 (hex 0200)
When the Find/Scan command is used, the next line which
contains that text is highlighted using the 'bright' color, and
is placed in row 9 of the screen. You can change the row by
altering the byte at location 12F which is normally '08', one
less than the row.
0368 - WHAT eye-catcher
036C - WHAT keys/function table (see below)
LIST User's Guide Page 19
Modifying LIST
______________________________________________________________________________
Reassigning keys
This information is offered to those of you who wish to modify
LIST in special ways. You do not need this information to use
LIST.
LIST performs a function for every character that can be entered
at the command line prompt. There are 128 regular characters
and 131 extended characters. The regular characters are
numbered from 0 to 127, and they include the letters A-Z, a-z,
the numbers, and the rest of the usual single characters found
on your keyboard. The extended characters represent special
function keys and combinations of keys, such as F1, alt-X,
ctrl-A, and the cursor positioning keys.
The WHAT table in LIST has a one byte entry for each of the
characters. This byte is a number from 0 to 57 that represents
the identification of a routine that performs a function.
For example,
- the ESCape key has a value of 27 (hex 1B) and its value in
the WHAT table is 16 (10 hex). Routine number 16 is called
"Done". The "Done" routine exits to DOS.
- the Q key has a value of 81 (51 hex) with a routine value of
15 for the "Close" routine. The "Close" routine ends
viewing of the current file and tries to display the next
file, i.e. wildcards used for the filename. There is also a
lower case letter q, so be sure to change both entries.
To change the function that a command character performs, you
change the value in the WHAT table for the routine that the
character invokes.
For example, to change the ESCape key to act like the Q key, you
change the routine value for ESCape from 16 (10 hex) to a 15 (0F
hex).
To find the location of the routine value in the WHAT table,
first determine the value of the character, e.g. ESCape is 27
(1B hex), and then add that to the location of the WHAT table
(36C hex); or, 1B + 36C = 387 hex. Finally, use DEBUG to change
the byte at that location (387 hex) from a 10 hex to a 0F hex.
For example,
debug list64a.com ; use appropriate file name
-e 387 0f ; change ESC to routine 15
-w ; old data is 10
-q
Page 20 LIST User's Guide
Modifying LIST
______________________________________________________________________________
Routine ID values
Value Key(s) Title Description of function performed
----- --------- ---------- ------------------------------------------
0 Beeper Error, undefined command
1 alt-A AltA Toggle APXCORE/DD/TV interface
2 alt-E AltE Toggle EGA 43-line mode
3 alt-F AltF Get new filespec
4 alt-J AltJ Toggle Junk filter
5 alt-L AltL Toggle pre-Load
6 alt-T AltT Toggle TABs expansion
7 alt-W AltW Toggle Window
8 alt-X AltX Exit to DOS, restore screen
9 U/up Back Position to previous line
10 End Bottom Position to end of file
11 F5 ChgBack Change top/bottom line background color
12 F6 ChgFore Change top/bottom line foreground color
13 c-home CHome Position to specified line number
14 alt-C Clone Rewrite LIST.COM with new options
15 Q Close Quit current file, display next file
16 ESC F10 Done Exit to DOS
17 N down Down1 Position to next line
18 X DoneX Exit to DOS, clear screen
19 alt-H DumpHex Toggle Hex display mode
20 8 Eight Leave hi-bit
21 \ Find Search for text, any case matches
22 F2 FindBack Change Find/Scan background color
23 F4 FindFore Change Find/Scan foreground color
24 alt-M Flash Toggle monitor rescan testing
25 K Flush Toggle keyboard flush (type ahead)
26 alt-G GotoDOS Invoke DOS command (shell)
27 L left Left Scroll left 10 columns
28 - MinusNum Position back by number of lines
29 enter NxtPage Display next page
30 + PlusNum Position forward by number of lines
31 P Print Print current screen or marked lines
32 F1 H ? Help Display Help screen
33 F3 ReScan Search for next occurance of text
34 R right Right Scroll display right 10 columns
35 alt-R Ruler Display ruler marks on top line
36 / Scan Search for text, same case
37 F9 ScanBack Search for previous occurance of text
38 c-left Scroll0 Reset scroll to column 1, full left
39 F7 SetBack Change normal line background color
40 F8 SetFore Change normal line foreground color
41 7 Seven Strip hi-bit
42 C Share Toggle closing of files
43 * Star Toggle special * filter
44 Home Top Position to top of file
45 up Up1 Position back one line
46 W Wrapper Toggle display of wide lines
47 alt-D WriteFile Write marked lines to a file
48 alt-M MarkLines Mark top line of display
49 alt-U UnmarkLines Unmark lines
50 alt-B MarkBottom Mark bottom line of display
LIST User's Guide Page 21
Modifying LIST
______________________________________________________________________________
Routine ID values
Value Key(s) Title Description of function performed
----- --------- ---------- ------------------------------------------
51 ctrl-pgup Review Display previous file
52 ^ RevFind Like Find but initiates search backwards
53 v RevScan Like Scan but initiates search backwards
54 alt-N AltN Toggle screen saving (alt-X) function
55 C Smooth Toggle continuous scrolling
56 alt-Y AltY Bookmark, reposition to last "active" line
57 alt-O WriteFile Write marked lines to previous alt-D file
Page 22 LIST User's Guide
Restrictions
______________________________________________________________________________
Written by Vernon Buerg for the IBM PC using DOS 2.0 or later,
through DOS 3.3. For personal use only; may not be sold.
o The program requires about 48K of memory. If more memory is
available, it is used to store more of the file in memory.
At least 80K is required to use the DOS shell. Add 9K if
the screen saving option is enabled (default).
o The line number is currently limited to 16 million lines.
o The file size is limited to 16 million bytes for ASCII
files, and to 4 million bytes for hex-dump files.
o PC DOS Version 2.0 or later is required. DOS version 3.0 or
later is required for file sharing.
o ANSI.SYS is NOT required.
APX Core, DesqView, TopView, Double DOS, and IBM are all copy-
righted, trademarked, and all that.
LIST is supplied for personal, private use. Feel free to
distribute LIST given these restrictions:
o the program shall be supplied in its original, unmodified
form, which includes this documentation;
o no fee is charged;
o for-profit use without a license is prohibited;
o the program may not be included - or bundled - with other
goods or services. Exceptions may be granted upon written
request only. This applies to clubs and distributors, too.
If you are using LIST and find it of value, your gift in any
amount ($15 suggested) will be greatly appreciated. Please make
checks payable in U.S. dollars to Vernon D. Buerg. Canadian and
non-U.S. checks are not acceptable.
For use by corporations and other institutions, please contact
me for a licensing arrangement. More information is supplied in
the file LICENSE. Customizing, licensing of the source, and
other special licensing are available upon request. Purchase
orders and invoicing are acceptable.
Vernon D. Buerg
139 White Oak Circle
Petaluma, CA 94952
Data: (707) 778-8944 VOR 24-hour bulletin board
- or - (707) 778-8841 MB 24-hour bulletin board
Compuserve: 70007,1212
LIST User's Guide Page 23
Index-1 LIST User's Guide
__________________________________________________________________________
/*,command line,star filter .. 1, 18
/7,command line,7-bit option . 1, 18
/8,command line,8-bit option . 1
/H,command line,hex option ... 1
/J,command line,junk filter .. 1
/L,command line,preload option 1
/S,command line,piping option 1, 2
/W,command line,wrap option .. 1
Alt- keys .................... 6
Alt-A,APXCORE option ......... 6, 18, 21
Alt-B,mark bottom line ....... 6, 7, 11, 21
Alt-C,clone new LIST.COM ..... 6, 8, 14, 18, 21
Alt-D,Write marked lines ..... 6, 11, 21, 22
Alt-E,toggle 25/43 lines ..... 6, 12, 21
Alt-F,enter new filename ..... 4, 6, 10, 21
Alt-G,go to DOS .............. 1, 6, 17, 19, 21
Alt-H,toggle hex display ..... 3, 6, 16, 18, 21
Alt-J,toggle junk filter ..... 6, 11, 16, 18, 21
Alt-L,toggle file preloading . 6, 9, 18, 21
Alt-M,mark top line .......... 6, 7, 11, 21
Alt-N,toggle screen saving ... 6, 18, 22
Alt-O,write marked lines ..... 6, 22
Alt-R,toggle ruler display ... 3, 6, 18, 21
Alt-S,toggle file sharing .... 6, 15, 17, 18
Alt-T,toggle TAB expansion ... 6, 18, 21
Alt-U,unmark lines ........... 6, 11, 21
Alt-W,freeze top window ...... 7, 21
Alt-X,exit to DOS ............ 1, 7, 10, 11, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22
Alt-Y,reposition to last line 7, 22
Cloning ...................... 8, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19
Colors ....................... 6, 14, 15, 18, 19
Command line format .......... 1, 13
Command line,option switches . 1, 3, 12, 13, 14, 15
Continuous,scrolling ......... 4, 8, 13, 22
Control- keys ................ 5
Cursor keys .................. 4, 15
DEBUG,changing options ....... 6, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20
Exit to DOS .................. 4, 5, 10, 21
F- function keys ............. 5
File Sharing ................. 17, 23
Find,text .................... 4, 5, 7, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23
Hex dump,display mode ........ 1, 3, 6, 13, 16, 18
Hex Format Filter ............ 16
Hi-bit Filter ................ 16
Hi-bit,filter ................ 16, 19, 21
Installation ................. 1
Introduction ................. 1
Invoking DOS Commands ........ 17
Junk Filter .................. 16, 21
Junk,filter .................. 1, 2, 11, 16, 18, 21
Letter keys .................. 4
License,information .......... 23
LISTS.COM,small version ...... 1
Piped,piping files ........... 1, 2
Print,files or lines ......... 1, 11, 13, 21
Scan,for text ................ 4, 5, 7, 13, 14, 15, 19, 21, 22
LIST User's Guide Index-2
__________________________________________________________________________
Screen saving,option ......... 6, 7, 17, 18, 22, 23
Shell,to DOS ................. 1, 6, 21, 23
Star Filter .................. 16
Star,filter .................. 1, 16, 21
Status Line Format ........... 12
Switches,command line ........ 1
TAB,control character ........ 2, 6, 13, 16, 18, 19