home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Loadstar 128 11
/
q11.d81
/
t.comp ii boot
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
2022-08-28
|
5KB
|
106 lines
P A I N T C O M P A N I O N I I
by Rick Ferreira and Bill Foster
That's right. It's deja vu all over again. We not only published PAINT
128 on LOADSTAR 128 #8, we also published PAINT COMPANION on LOADSTAR 128
#9. Now before you start spouting sentences with the word "rut" used in
several inventive ways, let me explain.
PAINT COMPANION gave you the ability to use PRINT SHOP (r), PRINTMASTER
(r), COMPUTER EYES (r) and DOODLE (r) graphics in BASIC 8 paint programs,
which PAINT 128 was. These formats are the standards of the "hi-res" mode
which allows you to turn single pixels on and off for very detailed
pictures.
However, in the past few years, Geos (r) has also entered the hi-res
market and is very popular. In addition, many serious artists prefer the
"multi-color" mode which allows much more color at the expense of losing
some of the detail. The KOALA format has traditionally been the standard
for the multi-color format. What PAINT COMPANION II does is allow you to
use GeoPAINT graphics as well as multi-color graphics with the new PAINT II
program, found on this disk.
We didn't have room to put both of the PAINT COMPANIONs together in one
program although that would have been a good idea. We recommend that you
make up an 80-column graphics disk with PAINT II and the two companions on
it and you'll be on your way to great 80-column artistry, using practically
every 40-column art format known to man.
LOADSTAR is thankful to Rick Ferreira, Bob Foster and Richard Heckart
for supplying us with these conversion utilities so we can pass them on to
you. Rick and Bob have put out a product called ANTE UP which has every
conversion they could think of in it, as well as a few special features for
advanced converting. If you find that you want or need more than the
converters we've published, you can contact them at:
Starfollower Productions
4224 Bakman
North Hollywood, CA 91602
Now let's see how PAINT COMPANION II works. When you boot it up it has
a little menu of the two modules. Nothing on this side of LOADSTAR 128 #11
returns to LOADSTAR since there isn't room on this side for our operating
system. To get back to our menu, just reboot from Side One. You can,
however, load these programs from the menu.
Both converters start the same way, with a title screen that you can
skip by pressing a key. Then you choose your drive configuration -- whether
you want drive 8 or drive 9 as the source, and drive 8 or 9 as the
destination. If you have one drive you'll have to do some disk swapping.
GEOS CONVERSION
---- ----------
This is the simpler of the two. When prompted for a filename (you can
press F1 for the directory if you don't know the name exactly) enter the
filename IN ALL CAPS. You may have to rename the GEOPAINT files from GEOS
in order to convert them. This is not a quirk of GEOCONVERT -- GEOS chose
to use regular ASCII filenames rather than PETASCII and we've all suffered
for it ever since.
There is a help screen you can call up by pressing H so don't bother
memorizing anything. If you press RETURN without entering anything at the
prompts, that will take you back to a previous screen. If you have 64K of
video RAM (as in a C128D) you'll get a slightly larger conversion.
KOALA CONVERSION
----- ----------
After setting up your drive configuration there is a menu that allows
you to convert (K), reset your drives (ESCape), or quit (Q). The menus
resemble those for the GEOS conversion and the same keys do the same thing,
in general. In order to view the KOALA picture before it's converted you'll
have to switch your monitor over to the 40-column mode and press F7. Press
any key and switch back to return to PAINT COMPANION II.
KOALA conversions are a full 200 scan lines tall if you have 64K of
video RAM, but only 176 lines are visible if you have 16K.
TECHNICAL NOTES
--------- -----
Converting from the multi-color mode to BASIC 8 mode is trickier than
from the hi-res mode. As a result you will find that the less "color-dense"
a KOALA picture is, the more faithful the conversion. A picture that is
"color-dense" will have many character areas with four different colors in
them. There is nothing that can be done about this, other than removing
some of the color-density from the picture with KOALA before converting.
The 80-column screen uses different colors than the standard 40-column
screen uses. I'm sure you've noticed this before. You may want to change
whole colors with KOALA before you convert if the colors are totally
inappropriate when changed to 80-columns colors.
LOADSTAR hopes you find the art programs on this side of the disk easy
to use and inspiring. If you have any questions or comments about computer
art on the C-128, let us know.
FT
**** End of Text ****