3. Get the golfer's score sheet. This is where you see each golfers performance in nine tables and charts. You see putt and stroke averages for each hole. The double diamond flag marks the holes where you should not press your opponents. See your Personal Best scores here. This choice in the menu provides something unique and special to the golfer. Here you can see the hole-by-hole performance of each player in the golfers roster. There are nine displays for showing the players putting performance and an additional nine displays for showing the players scoring performance. Each of the nine displays can be printed by holding one of the Shift keys down and then pressing the PrtSc key. Five of the displays are tables, three are bar charts and one is a graph. PC-GOLF keeps your gross scores and putts for each hole on your home course. You can keep several hundred rounds of scores and putts for each hole on your course. Each time you enter scores or putts into the data bank, the new values are tested against the previous lows. The lowest of these two scores, for each hole, is saved in the data bank. This lets you see your personal best scores and putts for each hole. PC-GOLF also keeps track of your last twenty gross scores and your last twenty putting scores. From this you can see your average gross score and putting score for, up to twenty rounds. PC-GOLF also keeps track of your all-time-low gross score and putting score. Your scores are shown as gross scores, as averages and as the popular plus/minus average. For example; rounds of ninety, eighty four and eighty eight would be seen as 90, 84, 88 in the gross score form. These scores would be seen as the sum of the three scores divided by three, or 87.3, in the average score format. Scores for individual holes can be shown in plus/minus form, where a bogie is a plus one and a birdie is a minus one. Extending this, a double bogie is plus two and an eagle is minus two. The major advantage of this form is that all scores displayed this way are shown relative to par. After all, that's what golf is all about. Trying to make par, or better, on as many of the holes as you can. The plus/minus displays show you how you are doing with respect to par. In the case of putts, where par is always two, a three putt is plus one and a one putt is minus one. The plus/minus displays show your putts and scores relative to par. This is a clear view of hole-by-hole performance. It provides real visibility so you can easily pinpoint the most likely holes for improving your game. Now, a few words about the nine displays. The displays show either your gross scores or putts. You make this choice from the score sheet menu. Hole Handicap sequence table. With this display, you can see your scores in sequence according to the level of difficulty of each hole. Average scores and plus/minus average scores are shown. You can see right away how you do on the most difficult and least difficult holes. Plus/Minus sequence table. With this display, you can see the players scores in sequence according to plus/minus averages. Average scores and plus/minus average scores are shown. You can see right away which holes you score the lowest on and the holes where your scores are the highest. Average Scores. With this display you can see your average score for for every hole on your home course. You can compare the average score on every hole to par for that hole. A special grouping of average scores is shown for the par three, par four and par five holes. You can tell at a glance whether you score best on the par three, par four or par five holes. Potpourri. This displays a collection of scores. The gross scores for up to the last twenty rounds and the average of those scores. Your lowest score of all your rounds to date is also displayed. You get an overall picture of your past performance from this display. Personal Best. With this display you can see the lowest scores you have made on each hole on your home course. You see the number of rounds used to reach these scores and your low score total is displayed. As of the date of the display, this is your personal best score for each hole. If you put it all together, for eighteen holes, this is your finest round. Bar Charts. There are three bar charts showing your scores and putts in the plus/minus average form. The vertical range of the charts is from -1 to +4. This covers average scores from birdie to quadruple bogey. The horizontal range of the charts is from 1 to 18. This covers each hole on your course. For putts, the vertical range covers everything from a one putt to a four putt. Average Scores Bar Chart. With this display you can see your average score for each hole on your home course in the plus/minus form. The double-diamond flag shows any holes that you should not start presses on. If a hole has been flagged use discretion in pressing an opponent. Hole Handicap Bar Chart. With this display you can see the effect that difficulty level has on your scores. You can readily see how you score on the most difficult and the least difficult holes on your course. Low-to High Score Bar Chart. With this display you see your scores in low score to high score sequence. You can easily see the holes where you make the lowest scores and the holes where you make the highest scores. The holes that are the best candidates for improvement of your game are apparent in this display. The Trend Chart. This shows a graph of the players last 20 gross scores or putts. However, it can be used as soon as you tally at least one round. The vertical range of the chart is 20 strokes. If any score is 20 or more strokes higher than the lowest score, then that score is shown as the low score plus 19. END 24  in the data bank, but no putting scores. Nancy Lewis has BB ALLOT-V