Category : Word Processors
Archive   : OUTLIN20.ZIP
Filename : OUTLINE.MNU

 
Output of file : OUTLINE.MNU contained in archive : OUTLIN20.ZIP
*F\File~*
*S\Struc~*
*B\Block~*
*E\Entry~*
*L\Line~*
*H\Hide~*
*65\Query~Search for text starting at the cursor
*66\Repl~Replace one text with another, search starting at the cursor
*39\Undel~Recall the last deleted structure from the delete buffer
*O\Order~*
*V\View~*
F25\Save+exit~Save the edit session to disk and return to DOS
F26\New~Save the edit session to disk and begin editing a new file
F27\Quit~Quit edit session and abandon all changes
F28\Update~Save the edit session to disk and continue editing
F29\Print~Print the edit session in its present view
F30\Export~Export the edit session in its present view to a disk file
F31\Import~Import a text file on disk into the edit session
F32\Text~Toggle the document being edited between text and outline formats
F33\Reformat~Reformat all text throughout the entire edit buffer
S34\Promote~Promote the current structure up a level
S35\Demote~Demote the current structure down a level
S36\Write~Write the current structure in its present view to a disk file
S37\Print~Print the current structure in its present view
S38\Delete~Delete the current structure, moving it to the delete buffer
S39\Undelete~Recall the last deleted structure from the delete buffer
B40\Promote~Promote the current block up a level
B41\Demote~Demote the current block down a level
B42\Begin~Mark the current line as the beginning of the block
B43\End~Mark the current line as the end of the block
B44\Write~Write the current block in its present view to a disk file
B45\Print~Print the current block in its present view to a disk file
B46\Copy~Copy the current block to the location of the line with the cursor
B47\Move~Move the current block to the location of the line with the cursor
B48\Hide~Hide the begin and end marks and highlight defining the block
B49\Delete~Delete the current block, moving it to the delete buffer
E50\Promote~Promote the current entry up a level
E51\Demote~Demote the current entry down a level
E52\Reformat~Reformat all lines in the entry/paragraph following the cursor
E53\Extend~Extend the current entry with a blank continuation line
L54\Above~Add a new line above the current line
L55\Below~Add a new continuation line below the current line
L56\Label~Toggle a label on / off the current line
L57\Delete~Delete the current line, moving it to the delete buffer
H58\Depth~Specify maximum depth of outline to be seen
H59\Increase~Increase by 1 the maximum depth seen
H60\dEcrease~Decrease by 1 the maximum depth seen
H61\ContLines~Toggle display of all continuation lines into/out of view
H62\RootView~Toggle display of all antecedents from root to top line in view
H63\ParentToTop~Move parent of current line to top; set depth to current line
H64\NodeToTop~Move current line to top; set depth to that of current line
O68\Ascending~Sort siblings of current line in ascending alphabetical order
O69\Descending~Sort siblings of current line in descending alphabetical order
O67\Next~Search for the next occurrence of Query or Replace string
V70\Decimal~Toggle labels on all lines between the decimal and classical format
V71\Margin~Toggle margin of all continuation lines: flush left or under label
V72\Tab~Specify the number of characters between fixed tab positions
V73\Level~Specify the number of spaces to indent for each level
V74\Width~Specify width of the line for display on the screen as a max column
V75\Screen~Specify the rightmost column for display on the screen
V76\Bottom~Specify the bottom row for display on the screen


  3 Responses to “Category : Word Processors
Archive   : OUTLIN20.ZIP
Filename : OUTLINE.MNU

  1. Very nice! Thank you for this wonderful archive. I wonder why I found it only now. Long live the BBS file archives!

  2. This is so awesome! 😀 I’d be cool if you could download an entire archive of this at once, though.

  3. But one thing that puzzles me is the “mtswslnkmcjklsdlsbdmMICROSOFT” string. There is an article about it here. It is definitely worth a read: http://www.os2museum.com/wp/mtswslnk/