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2022-08-28
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T H E P H I L A T E L I S T
by Barbara Schulak
Philately -- the collection and study of postage stamps. It's not
exactly a word that trips off the tongue. Short I, short A, accent on the
second syllable. I think stamp collectors made up that name just to
intrigue people in hotel lobbies who overhear them talking shop. But I'm
wrong, the Encyclopedia Britannica says a Frenchman by the name of Herpin
made it up. From the Greek, it means "love of untaxed items", and I think
we can all agree with that. Stamps, which first appeared in 1840, meant
that the letter was coming free of charge; the tax had been paid. It could
have been worse -- the original name for the study of stamps was
"timbromania".
The Encyclopedia has pages and pages of interesting information about
stamps and a good argument is made for collecting them. Back in 1959 (the
date of my Encyclopedia) the "One-Penny Magenta" from British Guiana was
worth $100,000. But LOADSTAR's mission is to help, not to preach. THE
PHILATELIST is a database in the Schulak/Cook tradition that will help you
organize your stamp collection with the help of your hi-tech computer. I
imagine a 19th Century philatelist would have given their eyeteeth -- or at
least a British "Two-Penny Blue" -- for the power and ease this program
provides.
The database looks and works the same as last issue's ON DECK program.
The main menu allows you to work with files that you create, and also has a
DISK UTILITIES option to provide you with DOS commands. There is a sample
file of stamps on this issue called "duck stamps" that you can load and
view. From the main menu choose LOAD FILE and enter "duck stamps" or "duc*"
and a SEQuential file of 60 stamps will be loaded. Then choose EDIT FILE
and you'll see the first record. You flip through the 60 records by using
the Function Keys:
F1 - next record
F2 - previous record
F3 - jump 10 records forward
F4 - jump 10 records back
F5 - jump 100 records forward
F6 - jump 100 records back
Each record has the following information about its stamp:
CATALOG # - This can be your own system or a standard stamp numbering
system.
YEAR - Most stamps have a year they're known by.
DESCRIPTION - However you want to name the stamp(s). For best results, be
consistent in your nomenclature.
TYPE - Used, Unused, Mint, Miniature, Coil, etc. Again, be consistent.
QUANTITY - The number of a particular stamp you have. 999 is the maximum
this field will hold.
CONDITION - Philatelists will know what to put here.
VALUE - The most important field of all. I'm afraid this field has a
maximum of $99,999.00. Sorry, serious philatelists.
From the EDIT mode you can:
EDIT - Change or enter a record's information.
FLAG - You can "flag" any record for whatever reason you want. A checkmark
will appear next to the record number. Later, you can search for flagged
items or print just the flagged items. The flags are saved when you save a
file, so the record stays flagged until you unflag it.
SEARCH - This allows you to find any record that matches what you enter.
The fields that you can search by are the CATALOG #, the YEAR, the TYPE, the
DESCRIPTION, and the FLAG.
GOTO - Jump directly to any record #. Just press G, the number and RETURN.
To start your own file, choose CREATE/EXTEND FILE from the main menu,
then enter the number of records you'll need. You can always extend the
file if you find you need more. NOTE: There is no provision for reducing
the file, or deleting, inserting or sorting records. If you sell a stamp,
you can blank out that record or edit over it with another stamp.
To make entering a lot of data easier, especially if some of the fields
are the same, choose SET DEFAULTS from the main menu. This allows you to
tell the program BEFORE you start entering data to automatically fill
certain fields with the data you want. The fields supported are: CATEGORY
NUMBER, YEAR, TYPE, QUANTITY, CONDITION, and FLAG.
Choose PRINT FILE from the main menu to print your records in a neat,
compact form. You can print all of the records in a file, or choose
according to YEAR, DESCRIPTION, TYPE, FLAGGED or UNFLAGGED. A value total
will be printed after the listing. This will be the total value of the
stamps you actually have, according to the QUANTITY and VALUE fields.
The currently chosen drive is displayed on the main menu screen. Make
sure it's set to the drive you want before you do a LOAD, SAVE or one of the
disk functions.
I've heard that philately is a fascinating hobby -- I'm a book man
myself -- and Barbara and I hope that THE PHILATELIST helps you get started
or continue in the field.
FT
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