Artifact f815eca19f37716ce49513b35f457dddb44256ae6c3e709d9ecf47dfa5f3c6b7:
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psl-1983/3-1/doc/nmode/nm-selfdoc.ibm
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— Add Reduce 3.0 to the historical section of the archive, and some more
files relating to version sof PSL from the early 1980s. Thanks are due to
Paul McJones and Nelson Beebe for these, as well as to all the original
authors.git-svn-id: https://svn.code.sf.net/p/reduce-algebra/code/historical@5328 2bfe0521-f11c-4a00-b80e-6202646ff360 (user: arthurcnorman@users.sourceforge.net, size: 5034) [annotate] [blame] [check-ins using] [more...]
,MOD - R 44X (11 April 1983) <PSL.NMODE-DOC>NM-SELFDOC.ibm PLA 97_LAS 80 0_FIR 2_INT 1 6.0_TYP 160 163 162 193_INP 12 101_MAR 2 ,END ,PRO 201 OUT 160_202 OUT 163_203 OUT 162_204 OUT 193 205 INP 12 101_206 INP 12 102 ,END ,DEFINE UNIT SPACE FUNCTION ,END 201/NMODE Manual (Help) Page 9-1 202/9. Help 201/NMODE has a great deal of internal documentation. There are two basic commands, the Apropos command and the Help Dispatch command. The Apropos command can be started by typing a "+" on the key pad at the far right hand side of the hp9836 keyboard or by typing M-X Apropos. The Help Dispatch command can be started by typing C-?, M-/, or M-?. The Help Dispatch command tells you what function is connected to a given key or key combination. The function names are often descriptive, so you can sometimes find out which key does what with the Help Dispatch command. To find out the function of a key or key combination, type M-?, then type the keys exactly as if you wanted NMODE to act on them. The Apropos command basically looks up command names containing a given word or phrase, or relating to a given topic. When you have started it, it will ask you for the word or phrase you are looking for in a command name (like "Move" or "Text" or "Remove", for instance). It will then temporarily cover up your text and show you a list of commands that match the phrase you typed in. At this point you can move up and down the list with the normal NMODE move commands, or you can look at the documentation for a particular command by typing V (for view). This temporarily covers up the list of commands while showing documentation for the command that you choose. Among other things this documentation tells you what key calls the command. You can get back to the list of commands by typing "Q" (for quit) or C-M-L. You can then get a more specific list of commands by typing "F" (for filter) and another phrase relevant to the command(s) you want to find. You can get back from the list of commands to your original text by typing "Q" (for quit). Here is a set of Apropos strings that covers many classes of NMODE commands, since there are strong conventions for naming the standard NMODE commands. By giving you a feel for the naming conventions, this set should also serve to aid you in developing a technique for picking Apropos strings. character, line, word, sentence, paragraph, region, page, buffer, screen, window, bounds, file, dir, beginning, end, case, mode, forward, backward, next, previous, up, down, search, kill, delete, mark, fill, indent, change. There is also a convention for how command names start for certain common kinds of operations: many commands start with one of the words "Edit", "View", "Insert", "List", or "What" "Move" "Mark". Note that the ability to apply filters allows you to search for commands which contain a set of strings, even if you don't know the order of the strings in the command name. If you find the list of commands containing or otherwise tied to "word", you can then filter the list to find the sublist that is also tied to "kill" and to "back" (in two filter operations), without knowing that the operation being searched for is kill-backward-word-command, rather than backward-kill-word-command or some other permutation. Because topics and action types and modes are also searched for, it is 201/Page 9-2 NMODE Manual (Help) possible to find broader classes of commands than would be possible from names alone. "Remove", for instance, is given as an action type for both kill commands and delete commands, so one can search for both at once by searching for "remove" and other specifying words.