Edith Manual Kurzels 19th May 1994 KURZELS were introduced in Tom Quellenberg's Shareware Text Editor QED, and have since be adopted in other ATARI based packages. Kurzels prove most useful for LaTeX source editing. A KURZEL consists of an abbreviation and a body. When the abbreviation is typed in a text window, followed by ESCAPE, it is expanded into the full body. If the special character ~ appears in the body, this is where the cursor will be placed afterwards. EXAMPLES 1. Business. kurzel: us body: Johnson, Blake and Hammersmith Ltd. No need to remember your company's name. Simply type 'us' followed by ESCAPE to insert your name into the text. 2. The C programming language. kurzel: main body: void main(int argc, const char* argv[]) kurzel: itoa body: itoa(~, s, 10) Here a kurzel serves to remember things a programmer should not need to worry about. 3. The LaTeX document formatting language. kurzel: ds body: \documentstyle[din_a4, times, epsf]{~} Instead of having to type the whole LaTeX header \documentstyle[din_a4, times, epsf]{article} the user will only have to type ds article EDITING KURZELS is easy. Select an abbreviation using the mouse and the scroll bar, or create a new abbreviation using the ADD KURZEL button. Then type the body in the field at the bottom of the dialog. ** An abbreviation can be at most 8 characters long. ** Click on the SORT button after adding a number of kurzels. The abbreviations will then be sorted alphabetically. It is then wise to save the kurzels to a file by clicking the SAVE button and typing a file name. The kurzels in the file DEFAULT.KRZ will be automatically installed the next time EDITH is started. ** The ESCAPE key also serves to removes blanks left to the cursor. See the printed manual for more information. Edith Manual Kurzels 19th May 1994