                               Walking Fingers
                                 Version 1.0
                             Copyright (c) 1993 
                               by David Geffen


        Walking Fingers is  a small  program to  handle small  (up to
        30k) text files.

        It may easily  be used  as a  phone/address book,  todo list,
        little black book or as your personal Yellow Pages.

        The user-interface is  extremely friendly  and inviting.   It
        has a  great look  and feel  and does  exactly what  you need
        without hassle, arguments and persuasion -

            (Do you want to delete?) yes
            (Are you sure?) yes
            (This could result in loss of data) yeah, I know
            (Well then, this is your last chance) yes, delete
            (Say please)

        You  may search for any entries in any file by giving Walking
        Fingers  some hints.  Say you have a phone book file and need
        to find  the number of John Smith.   More than likely, you've
        got about 385  John Smiths.   The  John Smith  you're looking
        for, however, lives in Fairway Avenue (or Street, or was that
        Farway Street or  Fair Avenue  Lane...) Just  enter something
        like "jo  smi fa" (without  the "), press  Search (that's the
        button with the fingers  that  do  the  walking)  and  you'll
        probably find the elusive Mr.  Smith.

        Walking Fingers  reads any text  file.  The  only criteria is
        that  an entry  end with  not one,  but two  carriage returns
        (\n).  A typical phone book might look like this:
    
            Big Betty
            (613) 543 1234
            Sweet Things
            Suite 911
    
            John Smith
            (714) 123 4567
            Faraway Place
            CA. 60001
	
            etc.

        Text  in the edit  window may be  scrolled, inserted, deleted
        and  otherwise manipulated.  No serious editing functions are
        provided.     Clipboard  functions  are,   of  course,  fully
        supported.

        Help  is, in this version, still somewhat meagre, but will be
        improved with time.

        If you  need to find a tidbit  of information, like now, then
        there's nothing to beat it.

        David Geffen.
