Û Û ÛÛÛÛÛ Û ÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛ Û Û ÛÛÛÛÛ Û Û Û Û Û Û Û ÛÛ ÛÛ Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û ÛÛÛÛ Û Û Û Û Û Û ÛÛÛÛ Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û ÛÛ ÛÛ Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û ÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛ Û Û ÛÛÛÛÛ to the KwikWrite Tutorial Before you begin this tutorial, you must make sure the line length for the editor is set at 79. To do this, press the CTRL key down with one finger, and while you are holding it down, press the L key once. Then release both keys. You will be prompted at the bottom of the screen to enter line length. Enter the number 79 using the number keys at the top of the keyboard, and press the ENTER key. Also, make sure the cursor pad is NOT in numeric mode. Now we are ready to go! Locate the "PgDn" key to the right of the keyboard, and press it TWICE. KwikWrite Editor ---------------- This tutorial will help you learn about the KwikWrite editor. First we learn about cursor movement. Locate the arrow keys on the keypad to the right of the keyboard. Using the arrow keys, move the blinking cursor around on the screen. Press the "7", "Home" key and the cursor will go to left of the screen. Press it again, and it will move to the top left of the screen. Move the cursor to a line with text on it and press the "1", "End" key. The cursor will jump to the end of the line. Locate the ".", "Del" key below the keypad. The following word has too many s's... missspelled Place the blinking cursor on one of the s's and press the "Del" key once. The "Del" key deletes one character at a time. Now locate the "PgDn" key on the numeric pad, and press it twice to page down to the next lesson screen. Tutorial, page 2 Locate the "0", "Ins" key on the numeric pad. This time in my text I left out a word... I left a word. Move the cursor to the "a" in "I left a word". Press the "Ins" key. Notice the "INSERT" message at the top of the screen. Type the word "out ", and press the Ins key. This will turn the insert mode OFF. The "Ins" key toggles the insert mode on and off. This time, I have too many words in my text... I have too too many words. Place the cursor in the space before the word "too". Locate the "Ctrl" key on the left side of the keyboard. Using the CTRL key like a shift key, hold down the Ctrl key, and press "W" once. This causes one word (to the next blank) to be deleted. Press the "PgDn" key twice to go to the next screen. Tutorial, page 3. The highlighted help line at the bottom of the screen may be changed using the CTRL-K command. Use this command to change the help line several times. Change the Help Line until it reads "Esc-Exit, etc." These are Function Key commands. The function keys are located to the left of the keyboard. Pressing the function key F1 will allow you to review some "help screens". After reading this paragraph, press the F1 key. Browse through some of the help screens, then return by pressing the Esc key. Go to it! The help screens come in handy when you forget what a command means. The Help Screens, plus the Help Lines will aid you as you learn to use the editor. We have already learned about CTRL-W in this tutorial. Another helpful CTRL command is CTRL-D, which deletes text to the right of the cursor. Place the cursor on the & in the next sentence, and press CTRL-D. The Ctrl key is used like a shift key. & the rest of this line is junk. Press the PgDn key twice to continue the tutorial. Tutorial, page 4 To end edit, use the "Esc" key located at the upper left of the keyboard. READ THIS BEFORE DOING ANYTHING. You will press the "Esc" key, and the following notice will appear at the bottom of the screen: Save the Document (Y/N):Yes Answer by press "N" for No. Then press the Esc key to return to the original document (this tutorial.) Generally, when using KwikWrite, you will create a document, then save it using the F1 "Save" function command. When you save a document, you will be asked to specify if it is to be PRINTED. If you go directly to printing, you will be transferred to the PRINT module (KWPR) after the document has been saved. To get an existing document from disk, and put it in the editor, use the F5 "Files" function key. If text is already in the Editor, the new document will be appended to the end of the current workspace. To "start over" with a new document you would first use the F8 key to clear the current workspace, and then get the file you wish to edit. Press "PgDn" twice... Tutorial, page 5 OTHER HELPFUL FACTS ABOUT THE EDITOR: 1. You may scroll up or down one line a a time by placing the cursor at the top or bottom of a screen and pressing the up or down arrow. 2. Control commands we did not cover in this tutorial (see manual for a fuller explanation of these commands): CTRL-A - Causes letters to be UPPERCASE CTRL-C - Copy, no insert (overlay copy) CTRL-F - Fills the text within the margins up to the next blank line or line beginning with a dot "." or "@". CTRL-R - Replace text CTRL-S - Search for text CTRL-T - Set Tabs CTRL-Y - Delete a line CTRL-Z - Causes letters to be lowercase. Press the PgDn key twice... Tutorial, Page 6 FUNCTION KEY COMMANDS: Function keys are located on the left of the keyboard. Here is a brief description of their meaning. Esc- Exit: Ends the Editor F1-Help: Displays Help. F2-Delete: Deletes info to right of cursor F3-Top: Moves to the top of the workspace. (May not be top of file) F4-Bottom: Scrolls to the last line of a buffer (may not be bottom of file) F5-Files: List files or get a file from disk F6-Center - Centers Text on the screen (see also .cen) F7-Exit/Print - Saves File and Exits program or prints document F8-Clear: Clears workspace (Does not clear copy buffer). F9-Mark: Used to mark blocks for copy (See manual). F10-Copy: Used in conjuction with F9-Mark to copy text. See also Ctrl-C. CTRL-F1 - Shell to DOS CTRL-F3 - Goto top of file CTRL-F4 - Goto bottom of file Please press the PgDn key twice... Tutorial, page 7 TUTORIALS IN THE MANUAL:Please review the tutorials in the manual. They will give you specific exercises to illustrate most of the editor commands. To end this tutorial: 1. Press the Esc key 2. Answer "N" to "Save document" 3. Answer "Y" to Exit KW