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Almathera Ten Pack 3: CDPD 3
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Almathera Ten on Ten - Disc 3: CDPD3.iso
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727
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format
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format.doc
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1995-03-18
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(New)Format
August 31, 1992
Written by Dave Schreiber
This program is Copyright 1992 by Dave Schreiber. All Rights Reserved.
This program may not be sold, although a small charge for shipping,
handling, and media may be charged.
This program is a replacement for the AmigaDOS Format command. For the
Workbench user, it sports a more friendly interface, and allows greater
control over formatting options.
First, a disclaimer:
The purpose of this program is to erase the contents of floppy disks, hard
drives, and other forms of temporary and permanent computer storage. The
author, Dave Schreiber, will not be held responsible for any data lost
through the (correct or incorrect) use of this program, nor will he be held
responsible for any damages (financial or otherwise) resulting from the use
of this program.
These instructions don't go into what formatting a disk means, why you
needs to do it, the options available, etc. For this information, I'd
suggest reading the manual that came with you Amiga or your Workbench 2.04
(or later) upgrade.
CLI Usage:
From the CLI, this program is almost identical to the AmigaDOS Format
command. The only change is that a new switch, NOVERIFY, has been added.
When given, this switch prevents NewFormat from verifying that each
cylinder has been formatted correctly.
Workbench Usage:
There are one of two ways to use NewFormat from Workbench. The first is to
select the drive or drives that you want to format, then double click on
the NewFormat icon while holding down the shift key. You can also put
NewFormat in the System directory on your Workbench disk or boot partition.
This will cause Workbench to use it in place of the default Format command
when you choose the "Format Disk..." item from the Icons menu.
Once you start NewFormat, you will notice that the Workbench interface is
almost completely different from the interface of the old Format command.
You are first presented with a window that lets you enter the new name of
the disk and set every formatting option that you can enter from the CLI;
the defaults are the same defaults as the old Format command uses. If you
decide that you don't want to format the disk, you can choose the
Cancel button (which will move you on to the next disk, if any), or the
close gadget (which will quit the program). If you want to continue once
you've chosen the name and other options, you can select the OK button.
This will bring up a requester that asks if you're sure that you want to
format the disk. If you answer "Yes" to this, the formatting procedure
starts.
There are two ways that NewFormat keeps you informed of the status of the
format while it is occurring. The first is a box that displayed the same
"Formatting cylinder xxx, xxx to go" message as does the old Format
command. Below that is a bar gauge that displays graphically how much of
the format has been completed. A bar fills the box from left to right; when
the box is full, the format is complete. When it is half full, it is half
complete, etc.
At any time during the formatting procedure you may select the "Stop"
button to abort the format.
That's it! If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to get
in touch with me at the address below.
Dave Schreiber
1234 Collins Lane
San Jose, CA 95129
e-mail (until 6/19/93): davids@cats.ucsc.edu