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250d1043e3
The original version of CiderPress used a WinHelp help file, built with an application called HelpMatic Pro. This app used a proprietary format, and had no facility for exporting to "raw" HPJ + RTF files, so I decompiled the HLP and imported it into HelpScribble. Using HelpScribble, I cleaned up the help file formatting a little, fixed up the table of contents, and exported as "raw" HtmlHelp (HHP, HHK, HHC, and a whole bunch of HTML). I also split the pop-up help text, which isn't supported by HelpScribble, into a separate text file that Microsoft's HTML Help Workshop understands. I'm checking in the files that HTML Help Workshop needs to generate a CHM, so anyone can update the help text. I'm also checking in the CHM file, rather than adding the help workshop to the build, so that it's not necessary to download and configure the help workshop to build CiderPress. This change adds all of the updated help, but only updates the Help and question mark button actions for one specific dialog. A subsequent change will update the rest of the dialogs. This change is essentially upgrading us from a totally obsolete help system to a nearly-obsolete help system, but the systems are similar enough to make this a useful half-step on the way to something else. The code will centralize help activation in a pair of functions in the main app class, so any future improvements should be more limited in scope. This also adds a build step to copy the CHM to the execution directory.
25 lines
2.2 KiB
HTML
25 lines
2.2 KiB
HTML
<HTML><HEAD>
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<TITLE>List - Format</TITLE>
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<OBJECT TYPE="application/x-oleobject" CLASSID="clsid:1e2a7bd0-dab9-11d0-b93a-00c04fc99f9e">
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<PARAM NAME="Keyword" VALUE="compression">
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<PARAM NAME="Keyword" VALUE="format">
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</OBJECT>
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<META NAME="AUTHOR" CONTENT="Copyright (C) 2014 by CiderPress authors">
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<META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="HelpScribble 7.8.8">
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<STYLE> span { display: inline-block; }</STYLE>
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</HEAD>
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<BODY BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" TEXT="#000000" LINK="#0000FF" VLINK="#800080" ALINK="#FF0000">
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="4">List - Format</FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2"> </FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">For ShrinkIt archives, this describes the compression format used. Possible values are described <A HREF="t69.htm">here</A>.</FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2"> </FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">For Binary II archives, this holds a guess at whether the file is stored uncompressed or "squeezed". There is no 100% reliable way to determine if a file stored in Binary II was squeezed, so a quick examination of the file contents is used to determine the status.</FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2"> </FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">For disk archives, the name of the file system is shown. This is done to emphasize that files with the same file type may be structurally different on different file systems. For example, DOS text files use ASCII characters with the high bit set, while ProDOS text files leave the high bit unset.</FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2"> </FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">It's also useful on mixed-filesystem disks, such as ProSel "Uni-DOS" 800K disks that have a 200K DOS 3.3 filesystem embedded in an 800K ProDOS volume.</FONT></P>
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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;">
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</P>
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</BODY></HTML>
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