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483 lines
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483 lines
32 KiB
HTML
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<meta http-equiv="Content-Language" content="en-us">
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<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
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<meta name="GENERATOR" content="Microsoft FrontPage 4.0">
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<meta name="ProgId" content="FrontPage.Editor.Document">
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<title>faddenSoft CiderPress Tutorial</title>
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<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#000000">
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<h1>CiderPress Tutorial</h1>
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<p>Thank you for giving CiderPress a try! We hope you find it useful and
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easy to use. This page uses minimal formatting to be printer-friendly.</p>
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<p>This tutorial will get you started working with CiderPress. You will
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need to <a href="cp-samples.zip"> download the sample files</a> if you want to follow along.
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These are stored in a ZIP archive because historically some browsers have
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enjoyed corrupting SHK archives. ZIP archives can be unpacked with <a href="http://www.winzip.com/">WinZip</a>,
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or under WinXP just open the "Zip folder" and copy the data out. </p>
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<p>This tutorial assumes that you are already familiar with using a computer and
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with Microsoft Windows.</p>
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<h2>Basics</h2>
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<p>Start by installing CiderPress if you haven't yet. There aren't really
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any options to set, so just let it do its thing.</p>
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<p>You should create a "scratch folder" to put tutorial files in. Open
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your "My Documents" folder, and create a new folder called "cpt"
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(CiderPress Tutorial). To keep things simple, put the two
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sample files (cp.sample1.bxy and cp.sample2.sdk) in this folder. If you
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are using Windows' default "hide extensions of known types" feature,
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these files will show up as "cp.sample1" and "cp.sample2"
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after CiderPress is installed.</p>
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<p>Launch CiderPress. The easiest way to do this is to click on Start,
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then Programs, then the CiderPress group, and finally on the CiderPress entry.</p>
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<p>Glance through the menus and toolbar buttons. As you select items from
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the menu or move the mouse over a toolbar button, a description will appear on
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the "status bar" at the bottom of the screen. Most of the items
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are grayed out, because you don't have a file open.</p>
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<p>Let's fix that. Click on the "File" menu and select
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"Open...". A standard Windows dialog appears. Change to
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the folder where the sample files are, click on "cp.sample1",
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and then click on the "Open" button. Your display will look
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something like this:</p>
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<p><img border="0" src="cp-sample1.gif" width="320" height="184"></p>
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<p>If you've used ShrinkIt on the Apple II, this display should look
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familiar. If you haven't, you're looking at ProDOS files stored in a
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ShrinkIt archive. The columns show the filename, some file type
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information, and other useful stuff. The little yellow rectangle next to
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"sample.text" means it has a comment.</p>
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<p>You can change the sort order of the files by clicking on the column headers
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(e.g. click on "Size" to sort by size). Click a second time on
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the same header to reverse the sort order. You can restore the original
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archive sort order by clicking on the "Edit" menu, then
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"Sort", and "By original order".</p>
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<p>Let's take a look at what we have in the archive. Double-click on
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"sample.text", a simple text file. This opens the File Viewer
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window:</p>
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<p><img border="0" src="cp-sampletext.gif" width="320" height="220"></p>
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<p>The title bar tells you the name of the file you're looking at, and specifies
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the format converter that was used. In this case, "[Converted Text]" means
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that the carriage returns found at the end of each line of the text file were
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converted to Windows "CRLF" format, and any "high ASCII"
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characters were stripped out.</p>
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<p>You can click on the "Comment" button on the left to view the
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comment instead of the file contents. Clicking on the "Raw"
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button changes to an un-converted view (no change will be visible under
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Win2K/XP), and clicking on the "Hex" button changes to a hex
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dump. The "Best" button switches back to Converted Text.
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You can also select modes from the pop-up menu.</p>
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<p>Click "Done" to close the file viewer. Let's try this a
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different way. Select all files in the archive by clicking on
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"Edit" and then "Select all". Right click on one of
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the highlighted file names to bring up a short menu of commands. Click on
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"View...". The File Viewer is back, but this time the "Next" button is
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enabled. Click on it to advance to the next file, and again to see the
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third file. Move back and forth. One of the files is the text file
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we looked at earlier, another is a hi-res graphic image of a "double Bessel
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function", and the third is an AppleWorks word processing document.</p>
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<p>Use the "Next" and "Prev" buttons to find the AppleWorks
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document ("SAMPLE.AWP"). Try resizing the window, and watch how
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the margins, centering, and right justification work. Now switch to the
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hi-res image. Using the pop-up menu, change the format conversion from
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"Hi-Res / Color" to "Hi-Res / B&W". Notice how the
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color fringes disappear, leaving a sharper image. Some graphics look
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better in black & white than in color.</p>
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<p>When you're done,
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press the "Done" button to close the window. (NOTE for Windows
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98 users: right-justified text may not display correctly when the window is
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resized. This appears to be a bug in Win98. You can cut & paste
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from the file viewer window into Word or WordPad and see the correct text.)</p>
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<h2>Extracting Files</h2>
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<p>Adding files to and extracting files from Apple II archives is a little more
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complicated than just moving files around. When adding files, it may be
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useful to restore the ProDOS file type information. When extracting, it
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may be necessary to convert the data into a different format for it to be useful
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under Windows.</p>
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<p>We're going to extract and add the files twice. The first time we will
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preserve the original files exactly, the second time we will convert them to a
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format useful in Windows.</p>
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<p>Let's begin by extracting the files. Click on "Actions" and
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then "Extract...". This brings up a dialog with lots of options:</p>
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<p><img border="0" src="cp-extract.gif" width="455" height="418"></p>
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<p>The first thing we need to do is choose where the files will go. The
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folder listed at the top of the screen is probably not the one we want, so lets change
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it. Click on the folder icon in the upper-right corner, next to the
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filename entry field. This brings up the "Choose folder"
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dialog. Navigate through the folders until the "cpt" folder you
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created earlier is highlighted, and click "Select". (If you
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created "cpt" under "My Documents", don't be surprised if
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the name shown starts something like "C:\Documents and
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Settings\UserName\". This is normal for Win2K and WinXP.)</p>
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<p>In the "Files to extract" box, select "Extract all
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files". Make sure both checkboxes in the "miscellaneous"
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section are unchecked. Finally, click on the large button near the bottom
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that says "Configure to preserve Apple II formats". This will
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configure the remaining options so that files extracted can be added to a new
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archive that is as close as possible to the original.</p>
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<p>Once everything is set up as described (it should match the options shown in
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the picture above), click the "Extract" button. On a
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fast machine, you'll see little more than a flash as the files are extracted.</p>
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<p>If you open the "cpt" folder in Windows Explorer (open My Documents
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from the desktop or Windows Start menu, then open "cpt"), you will see three new files:</p>
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<ul>
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<li>DBL.BESSEL.PIC#062000</li>
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<li>SAMPLE.AWP#1ac0fd</li>
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<li>sample.text#04000</li>
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</ul>
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<p>The junk starting with "#" that was added to the filename is a file
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attribute preservation sequence. The first two digits are the ProDOS file type,
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the next four are the ProDOS aux type. For DBL.BESSEL.PIC, it's $06
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("BIN") and $2000 (the typical load location of a hi-res image).
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None of the files has a filetype that Windows recognizes, which makes sense:
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none of the files is in a format Windows likes.</p>
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<p>You might think that "sample.text" is a text file, and Windows
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likes text files, but it's not that simple. Rename "sample.text#04000"
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to "sample.text#04000.txt". Now Windows recognizes it as a text
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file. Double-click on it. If you have Windows
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"Notepad" as your default text viewer, you will probably notice that
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the file doesn't look right. Instead of line breaks there are funny little
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rectangles. Because we told CiderPress to preserve the original file
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formats, the carriage returns in the original file were left
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unmodified. Double-clicking on the other files will most likely not yield
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anything useful, because they're in formats that only an Apple II can readily
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handle.</p>
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<p>We don't have to stand for that, however. Go back to CiderPress, and
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click on "Actions" and "Extract..." again. This time,
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click on the filename in the edit box, and hit the right arrow key until you're
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all the way at the right of the filename. We're going to extract into a
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sub-folder called "win", so type "win" at the end of the
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name. (It should now look something like "C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\My
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Documents\cpt\win".) There's no need to create the folder ahead of
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time, CiderPress will create it for us.</p>
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<p>Click on the large button labeled "Configure for easy access in
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Windows". Make sure "Extract all files" is selected, and
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leave the rest untouched.</p>
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<p>Click the "Extract" button. Stuff happens, probably faster
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than you can see it. Open the
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"cpt" folder in Windows Explorer again, and then open the new "win"
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folder. Inside, you will find:</p>
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<ul>
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<li>DBL.BESSEL.PIC.bmp</li>
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<li>SAMPLE.AWP.rtf</li>
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<li>sample.text.TXT</li>
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</ul>
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<p>(Again, if you have "known extensions" hidden, you won't see any of
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the ".xxx" shown above.)</p>
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<p>Double-clicking on the first launches the default Windows bitmap editor,
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where you can view the double-Bessel function in all its glory.
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Double-clicking the second launches the default Windows Rich Text Format editor,
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usually Windows WordPad or Microsoft Word. Double-clicking on the third
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opens the text file, nicely formatted for easy viewing.</p>
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<h2>Adding Files</h2>
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<p>Now that we've extracted some files, let's try adding them back into an
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archive.</p>
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<p>Click on "File" and then "New" and move over to
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"ShrinkIt archive". Create
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a new archive called "test.shk" in the "cpt" folder.
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Creating or opening an archive causes the currently open one to be closed, so
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"cp.sample1.bxy" disappears and "test.shk" takes its place.</p>
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<p>Click on "Actions" and then "Add files...". This
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brings up the Add Files dialog.</p>
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<p><img border="0" src="cp-add.gif" width="446" height="438"></p>
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<p>Leave the "File attribute preservation" setting on "Use file
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attribute preservation tags".
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This tells CiderPress to look for the "#062000" stuff, but not to get
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excited if it's not there. The remaining fields aren't important for what
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we're doing now, so leave them alone.</p>
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<p>Select the three files with the funny "#062000" stuff in the
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names. You can either click on the first and then shift-click on the last,
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or click on the first and then control-click on the other two. When all
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three have been selected, click "Accept". (You may notice a file
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with a name like "CPtmp_12345" in the folder. This is a temporary file used
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when ShrinkIt archives are opened, and can be ignored.)</p>
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<p>The files are added in a flash. Double-click on them to verify that
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they are all intact. Note that the file types and modification dates match
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the originals.</p>
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<p>Now lets add the second, converted set. Click "Actions" then
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"Add files...". Make sure "Include subfolders" is
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checked and "Strip folder names" is not checked. Click on
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"win" once (don't double-click it, or the folder will open) and then
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click "Accept". This adds everything in the "win"
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folder to the archive.</p>
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<p>You will end up with three new files, each prefixed with
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"win:". Your archive should look something like this:</p>
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<p><img border="0" src="cp-postadd.gif" width="480" height="276"></p>
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<p>The file types of the three you just added are all "NON", and double-clicking on them in the
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CiderPress file list is
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disappointing. This is because these files have crossed over to the Dark
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Side (i.e. they're in Windows formats now), and the File Viewer is only able to display Apple II formats. Once
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you have converted files into Windows BMP or RTF files, it's more appropriate to
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store them in a ZIP archive than a ShrinkIt archive.</p>
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<h2>Preservation or Accessibility</h2>
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<p>Generally speaking, when extracting files you can either choose to preserve
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the original format or choose to put them in a format easily accessible in
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Windows. CiderPress does not
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know how to un-convert BMP or RTF documents back to hi-res or AppleWorks format,
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so you should use one approach if you're planning to add the files back into an
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archive for use on an Apple II, and the other approach if you want to include
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them in Windows documents.</p>
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<p>Let's try an experiment. In the CiderPress file listing for the "test.shk"
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we created above, click on "DBL.BESSEL.PIC". Click
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"Actions" then "Extract...", and make sure the extraction
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path is still set to the "win" sub-folder of our "cpt"
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folder. Hit "Configure for easy access in Windows" and then check the
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box labeled "Add file attribute preservation". Make sure the button
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in "Files to extract" is set to "Extract 1 selected file".</p>
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<p>Click "Extract". You might expect to end up with "DBL.BESSEL.PIC#062000.bmp",
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but instead you get a warning about overwriting "DBL.BESSEL.PIC.bmp".
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Hit "Cancel" to cancel the extraction.</p>
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<p>Why didn't a file attribute preservation sequence get added to the filename?
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Because we have file converters turned on, and those change it to Windows
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format. Once the file is converted to a BMP, it's no longer an Apple II
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file, and trying to preserve the "BIN" file type is no longer appropriate. The situation is similar for BASIC programs
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converted to text listings and AppleWorks word processor documents converted to
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RTF. If we added SAMPLE.AWP.rtf with an "AWP" file type, and
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then tried to load the file in AppleWorks, we'd be greatly disappointed.</p>
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<p>We're done with this set of files, so select all files ("Edit" then
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"Select all", or hit Ctrl-A), click on "Actions", then
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"Delete...", and hit "OK" when asked to confirm the
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deletion. Go to "File" and select
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"Close". The empty archive is automatically removed.</p>
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<p>It's worth mentioning at this point that archives are not handled the same
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way word processing documents are. You can't make a set of changes, undo
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them, do some other things, and then save the results. (Technically
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speaking, it's possible, but CiderPress doesn't work that way.) Any change you
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make immediately modifies the archive, and there is no "undo".</p>
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<h2>Opening Archives Differently</h2>
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<p>The ".BXY" extension is used for a ShrinkIt archive with a Binary
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II header. CiderPress is capable of opening both ShrinkIt and Binary II
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archives, so how does it decide which to open?</p>
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<p>CiderPress tries to guess what you want, but it's easy to make your choice
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explicit. Click "File",
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then "Open...", and look at the "Files of type"
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selector. Click on it and change the setting to "Binary
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II". Double-click on "cp.sample1", which is a .BXY file.</p>
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<p>This time, when the file opens, you see only one entry. "SAMPLE.SHK"
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is the ShrinkIt archive embedded inside the Binary II file. If you want to
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convert a .BXY to a .SHK, all you have to do is open the archive as Binary II
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and then extract the ShrinkIt archive. CiderPress does not have the
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ability to write to Binary II archives, which is why the title bar now also says
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"(read only)".</p>
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<p>ShrinkIt archives are often found on disk images or inside other ShrinkIt
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archives, so CiderPress provides a quick way of opening them.
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Double-click on SAMPLE.SHK and watch as a new copy of CiderPress is launched. A
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copy of SAMPLE.SHK was written into the system temp folder, and the new
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CiderPress window opened it automatically. The file will be deleted when
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the second window is closed, which is why the new window is also marked
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"(read only)". Go ahead and close the second window before
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continuing.</p>
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<h2>Opening Disk Images</h2>
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<p>Disk images are very different from ShrinkIt archives. They come in
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many different file formats, can be written with sectors scrambled in different
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orders, and can be in different filesystem formats (DOS, ProDOS, etc.).
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With most programs you have to know a fair bit about a disk image before you can
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access it, possibly having to convert it from one format to another, but with
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CiderPress that's not necessary.</p>
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<p>Click "File" then "Open...", select "Disk
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Images" in the "Files of type" selector, and double-click
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cp.sample2. The disk image opens, and about 35 files are
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displayed. Notice that in the "Format" column, some files are
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listed as "ProDOS" and some as "DOS". This is because
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the disk image is of an 800K ProDOS volume with a 200K DOS 3.3 volume embedded
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in it. The title bar of the window now shows that this is a disk image of
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a ProDOS volume called "/CP.TEST".</p>
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<blockquote>
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<p>(For those interested in technical details: CiderPress passed
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"cp.sample2.sdk" to the "DiskImg" library and asked it to
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open the file. DiskImg opened the file, figured out that it was a
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compressed ShrinkIt disk archive, and unpacked it to a buffer in memory.
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The disk structure was scanned, and DiskImg determined that it was a ProDOS
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volume in ProDOS sector order. It then examined the structure of every
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file on the disk, and determined that there was an embedded volume. This
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second volume was then opened, scanned, and found to be a DOS 3.3 disk in
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ProDOS sector order. The contents of the DOS volume were scanned. Control
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then returned to the CiderPress application, which took the list of files and
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displayed them in the window. Don't try that on an empty stomach!)</p>
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</blockquote>
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<p>The files are shown in a "flat" list, though the real disk has most
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of the files in folders. For example, "Graphics:WORLD.MAP.PIC"
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is actually a file called "WORLD.MAP.PIC" in a folder called
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"Graphics". The files in the DOS 3.3 sub-volume aren't actually
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visible from ProDOS, so CiderPress prepends "_DOS001:" to make the
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separation clear.</p>
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<p>Try double-clicking on some files to view them. You should probably
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start by double-clicking on "ReadMe",. a file in TeachText format that
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describes the contents of the disk. Try some BASIC programs like
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"STARTUP" in the ProDOS area or "ANIMALS" in the DOS area.
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Use the conversion selector to turn color highlights on and off.</p>
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<p>You may notice that some of the files appear to be compressed -- the
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"Ratio" column isn't 100%. This is because the files are
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"sparse". ProDOS and DOS 3.3 have the ability to store empty
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disk blocks without using lots of disk space. The difference between
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"Size" and "Packed" represents the space saved by using
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sparse blocks.</p>
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<p>If you double-click on "TestFiles:SPARSE", you will get an error
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message from the File Viewer indicating that the file is too large. The
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file is actually 16MB, but because it's almost entirely sparse blocks it only
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occupies about 1.5KB. If you
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want, you can view this file by increasing the file viewer limit. Click on "Edit", then
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"Preferences...", then on the "File Viewer" tab. The
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"Viewer file size limit" can be set in 1K increments. There are
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a number of other configurable items in here, including settings that let you
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default hi-res and double-hi-res graphics to black and white. Click on the "Help" button or use the question mark icon
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in the window title bar to get more information about specific things.
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Click on "Cancel" to close the dialog.</p>
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<h2>Adding and Extracting Disk Images</h2>
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<p>Click on the "File" menu, then "Open...", change
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"Files of type" to "ShrinkIt
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Archives", and open "cp.sample2". You should see a
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single entry, for an 800K disk image. (If you want, double-click on the
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entry to pop open a second instance of CiderPress with the disk image contents
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in it. Close it when you're done.)</p>
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<p>Click on "Actions" and "Extract...". Set the
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extract folder to "cpt", and click "Configure for easy access in
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Windows". Note that "Extract disks as .2MG" is
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checked. Click "Extract".</p>
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<p>If you open the "cpt" folder with Windows Explorer, you will find a new file called
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"CP.TEST.2mg" (or just "CP.TEST" if extensions aren't being
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shown). Depending on how your file associations are
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configured, you should be able to double-click this file and launch the default
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2MG application (which is probably an Apple II emulator or CiderPress; file
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associations can be set from within CiderPress by clicking "Edit",
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"Preferences", and then the "Associations..." button).</p>
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<p>That was easy enough. Now let's try adding the disk image to an
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archive. Click on the "File" menu then "New -> ShrinkIt archive", and create a new archive called "mydisk.shk" in the
|
|
"cpt" folder. Click on the "Actions" menu then
|
|
"Add disk image...". Navigate to the "cpt" folder if
|
|
you're not there already, click on "CP.TEST", and click
|
|
"Open". The disk image is added.</p>
|
|
<p>Let's try a different way. Extract the disk image you just added (still
|
|
working in "mydisk.shk), but this time click on "Configure to preserve
|
|
Apple II formats.". Click "Extract" to create
|
|
"CP.TEST#000640i". (The "640" is the number of
|
|
blocks in hexadecimal, and the "i" indicates that it's a disk
|
|
image.) This file is a ProDOS-ordered sector image; if you check the
|
|
"Add type extension" box before extraction, it will be given a
|
|
".PO" extension and can be opened with the default
|
|
".PO" viewer (usually CiderPress or an Apple II emulator).</p>
|
|
<p>Let's add it back to the archive. We could use the "Add
|
|
disks" menu item, but we have another option. Click on "Actions"
|
|
and then "Add files...". Make sure the "File attribute preservation" setting is on "Use file
|
|
attribute preservation tags",
|
|
click on "CP.TEST#000640i", and click "Accept".
|
|
When asked if you want to overwrite the file, click "Yes".</p>
|
|
<p>Nothing appears to happen, but you've actually just replaced the disk image
|
|
that was in the archive with the new one. You were able to add the disk image
|
|
with the "Add files" dialog because of the file attribute preservation
|
|
strings (the "#000640i" part). If you had set "File
|
|
attribute preservation" to "Ignore file attribute preservation flags", you would
|
|
have added a file called "CP.TEST#000640i" instead of a disk image
|
|
called "CP.TEST".</p>
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|
<h2>Creating and Adding Files to Disk Images</h2>
|
|
<p>Working with disk images is a little different than working with ShrinkIt
|
|
archives. Filenames have limited lengths and may only contain certain
|
|
characters, file lengths are limited, and on non-ProDOS volumes the selection of
|
|
file types will be limited. On the plus side, disk images can be used
|
|
directly by Apple II emulators.</p>
|
|
<p>Let's start by creating a disk image. Click on the "File"
|
|
menu, then "New -> Disk image...". This opens the Create Disk
|
|
Image dialog.</p>
|
|
<p><img border="0" src="cp-createdisk.gif" width="519" height="353"></p>
|
|
<p>Leave the values set to the defaults and click "OK" to create a
|
|
140K ProDOS image. When the "save" dialog comes up, type "testdisk"
|
|
into the "file name" field. Leave the file type set to
|
|
"DOS-ordered image (*.do)". Click "Save".</p>
|
|
<p>Your brand-new ProDOS disk will open automatically. The disk has one
|
|
entry for the volume directory, called ":NEW.DISK". Let's add
|
|
some files.</p>
|
|
<p>Click "Actions" then "Add files...". Select the
|
|
three files with "#123456" stuff in the filenames (DBL.BESSEL.PIC#062000,
|
|
SAMPLE.AWP#1ac0fd, and sample.text#040000.txt) by clicking on the first one and
|
|
control-clicking on the other two. Make sure "use file attribute
|
|
preservation tags" is set.</p>
|
|
<p>You will notice that the "Text conversion" options are now
|
|
available. The files we're adding are from an Apple II, so we don't want
|
|
to mess with them. Click on "Don't convert text files".
|
|
Now click "Accept" to add the files. You should be back in the
|
|
CiderPress file listing, with four files on the screen (the volume directory and
|
|
the three files you just added). Double-click on them to verify that
|
|
they're all okay.</p>
|
|
<p>You may notice that only "sample.awp" is in lower case.
|
|
That's because, by default, CiderPress adds files to ProDOS disks in upper-case
|
|
only. If you use a version of ProDOS 8 older than v1.8, you will get
|
|
errors on disks with lower-case names. (You can change this behavior from
|
|
the disk images preferences screen.) So why is "sample.awp" in
|
|
lower case? Because AppleWorks files have lower-case flags in their
|
|
"aux type" field. If CiderPress sees a file with type AWP, ADB,
|
|
or ASP, the flags in the aux type are used.</p>
|
|
<p>One nifty thing about ProDOS disks is that you can tuck files into
|
|
subdirectories (usually called "folders" in Apple-speak). Let's
|
|
create one now. You have to tell CiderPress which directory the new
|
|
subdirectory will appear in, so start by clicking on the volume directory
|
|
(":NEW.DISK"). Click on "Actions" then "Create
|
|
subdirectory...". Type "My Stuff" as the name. Click
|
|
"OK". A new subdirectory, called "MY.STUFF",
|
|
appears. (If lower case were enabled, it would have been added as "My
|
|
Stuff" instead.)</p>
|
|
<p>Suppose we want to add more files. Where do they go? In the
|
|
volume directory, or in MY.STUFF? Let's find out. Click on a blank
|
|
area of the window so that nothing is highlighted. (You may still see a
|
|
thin dashed line around one entry; that's okay.) Click on
|
|
"Actions" then "Add files...". You will see a dialog
|
|
that asks you to pick the location.</p>
|
|
<p><img border="0" src="cp-selectloc.gif" width="336" height="478"></p>
|
|
<p>As you can see, you are able to add files to the volume directory or the
|
|
folder you created. As noted in the "tip" at the bottom, you can
|
|
avoid seeing this dialog by clicking on the target subdirectory before you
|
|
select "Add files...".</p>
|
|
<p>We don't really want to add anything here, so click "Cancel".
|
|
Close the disk image by selecting "Close" from the "File"
|
|
menu. Let's create another image, this time a DOS 3.3 disk. From
|
|
"File", select "New -> Disk image...".</p>
|
|
<p>Click on the "DOS 3.3" button in the upper left. The ProDOS
|
|
volume name entry field is greyed out, the DOS 3.3 options in the upper right
|
|
corner become active, and our choice of sizes is now limited to just 140K
|
|
disks. Leave the defaults alone and click "OK". Click on
|
|
"testdisk.do" (the disk we recently created) and click
|
|
"Save". When asked if you want to replace the existing file,
|
|
click "Yes".</p>
|
|
<p>Now we have open an empty DOS 3.3 disk image. Let's add a file.
|
|
Click "Actions" then "Add files...". Open up the
|
|
"win" folder inside "cpt", and select "sample.text"
|
|
(or "sample.text.TXT"). Click "Accept".</p>
|
|
<p>The file has been added, but something is strange. Our text file has
|
|
type $F2. The reason this happened is because CiderPress didn't see it as
|
|
an Apple II file, and gave it a file type of NON. However, there is no
|
|
direct equivalent to NON for DOS 3.3. Instead, CiderPress used the DOS
|
|
file type 'S'. There's no ProDOS equivalent to 'S', so CiderPress displays
|
|
it as $F2. Because DOS 3.3 'S' files don't have an explicit file length,
|
|
the length is rounded off to 512 (two DOS sectors).</p>
|
|
<p>Yuck. Fortunately there's a simple way around this. Click
|
|
"Actions" and "Add files..." again. This time, click
|
|
the "Use tags and guess type from extension" button. This tells
|
|
CiderPress that we want it to guess the type of the file from the filename
|
|
extension. Since we're adding a text file to a DOS disk, we also want it
|
|
to convert from Windows format (low ASCII, CRLF) to DOS 3.3 format (high ASCII,
|
|
CR), so click on the "Convert text files by file type" button.</p>
|
|
<p><img border="0" src="cp-dosadd.gif" width="480" height="401"></p>
|
|
<p>Click on "sample.text" again, and click "Accept".
|
|
When it asks you if you want to replace the previous file, say
|
|
"Yes". You should now have a text file with a reasonable
|
|
length. If you double-click on it and view it in hex dump mode, you'll see
|
|
that it's in "high ASCII" with carriage returns, as all good DOS 3.3
|
|
text files should be.</p>
|
|
<p>Select "Close" from the "File" menu to close the disk
|
|
image.</p>
|
|
<h2>Wrapping Up</h2>
|
|
<p>CiderPress is a powerful tool with lots of features. Start with the
|
|
default settings and quick configuration buttons. The additional flexibility is there if you need
|
|
it. Click the "Help" button on a screen for detailed help on
|
|
that screen, or select "Help" then "Contents..." to start
|
|
from the beginning. In many screens you can click on a question mark
|
|
button in the title bar and then click on a button to get more information on
|
|
that button.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p><a href="../index.htm">Return to CiderPress site</a></p>
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|
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