perm filename HOW[1,ALS] blob sn#538899 filedate 1980-10-08 generic text, type C, neo UTF8
COMMENT ⊗   VALID 00109 PAGES
C REC  PAGE   DESCRIPTION
C00001 00001
C00010 00002	   	HOW	A condensed reference file of useful system programs.
C00015 00003	Supplementary Information
C00017 00004		HELP	An on-line program called by typing HELP.
C00024 00005		PRUNE	PRUNE.DAT    One line descriptions of files
C00028 00006	Equipment
C00031 00007	Basic system commands
C00040 00008		Teletype Commands
C00041 00009		DMINT and DMUSE 	Info for beginners on DataMedia
C00044 00010	Useful system features
C00045 00011		FINGER	Locates people or tells when they last ran.  Jan.'78
C00052 00012		RSL	Service Level Reservations
C00053 00013		COOL	Summarizes temperature & computer uptime.  Jan. 1978
C00057 00014		SOB	Son of Bureaucracy (computer time accounting) Jan. 1978
C00061 00015		BUREAU	Computer time accounting (old style)	Oct. 1975
C00068 00016		LESCAL	Calendar-maker.		Dec. 1974
C00069 00017		FREEFO	Text macro processor		March 1973
C00070 00018		KWIC	Keyword in context program	Dec. 1973
C00077 00019		XGPTYP	Converts XGP file to text form		Dec. 1975
C00078 00020	Editors
C00079 00021	    Text Editors
C00081 00022		E	The page and display oriented basic editor.
C00085 00023		SOS	Line numbering basic editor for teletype usage.
C00087 00024	    Graphic Editors
C00091 00025		GEOMED	A graphics editor.
C00094 00026	    Font Editors
C00101 00027	Document Compilers
C00102 00028		POX	Formatting document compiler for use with the XGP.
C00106 00029		PUB	Publication compiler to achieve book format.
C00108 00030		PUBMAC	Macros for generation of tables of contents etc.
C00110 00031		TEX	A system for Technical Editing by Donald E. Knuth
C00113 00032		MAXTEX	TEX preloaded version and macros.
C00117 00033	Built-in Editors
C00118 00034		ILISP
C00119 00035		AID
C00120 00036		BASIC
C00121 00037	Programming Languages
C00127 00038	    Machine Languages
C00128 00039		FAIL	A fast one-pass assembly language
C00132 00040		MACRO	An older 2-pass assemblier with good macro facilities
C00133 00041		MIDAS	MIT's assembler for the PDP-10
C00135 00042		PALX	PDP-11 assembler
C00136 00043		MIX
C00137 00044	    Algebraic Languages
C00138 00045		SAIL	The standard AI lab. ALGOL based languague
C00139 00046	        PASCAL  An ALGOL-60 based languague developed by N. Wirth.
C00142 00047		BASIC
C00143 00048		AID
C00145 00049		WISE
C00146 00050		FORTRAN 40
C00147 00051	    LISP languages List Processing Languages
C00149 00052		MACLISP Standard AI Lab Lisp programming language.
C00156 00053		LISP 1.6 Stanford AI Lab Lisp 1.6 System
C00157 00054		MLISP Meta-notation LISP programming language
C00159 00055		MLISP2 LISP derivative programming language.
C00161 00056		ILISP UC Irvine Lisp
C00162 00057		RLISP REDUCE Lisp
C00169 00058	Programming aids
C00170 00059		@ ATSIGN prepares a (compiler-like) cross-reference listing
C00172 00060	ARPAnet programs
C00174 00061		HOST and HOSTAB		Examine the ARPAnet host table
C00177 00062		TELNET	Communicate with an ARPAnet host
C00179 00063		SUPDUP	Communicate with an ARPAnet host via SUPDUP display protocol
C00181 00064		IMSSS	Communicate with IMSSS
C00184 00065		FTP	File Transfer Program to transfer files over ARPAnet
C00186 00066		HOSTAT	Report status of hosts on the ARPAnet
C00187 00067		IMPSTA	Report status of ARPAnet connections at SAIL
C00189 00068		TALK	Link to users at other hosts on the ARPAnet
C00191 00069		WHO	Report who is logged in on another host on ARPAnet
C00192 00070		TIMES	Report on times from the network time servers
C00193 00071		DFTP and DCSTAT		Hack the CCA Datacomputer
C00195 00072		DDHACK	To control DD displays from remote ARPA hosts
C00198 00073	Debugging Aids
C00200 00074		RAID	An interactive debugging aid (also FRAID).
C00206 00075	Conversion Programs
C00210 00076	File duplicating programs
C00213 00077		COPY
C00224 00078		SPOOL, XSPOOL, QSPOOL and UNSPOOL, [LIST] and [XSPL]
C00234 00079		TENDMP
C00235 00080		6TO10
C00236 00081	Communication Programs
C00239 00082		MAIL
C00240 00083		FTP	EFTP
C00241 00084	Demonstration programs
C00247 00085		Chess
C00248 00086		Checkers
C00249 00087		Go
C00250 00088		KALAH	Modern version of WARI, an ancient  African game
C00255 00089	Recreation Programs
C00256 00090		ADVENTURE
C00257 00091		(EYEWASH)
C00258 00092		PARRY	A model paranoid			Sept. 1977
C00259 00093		CRYPTO	A bookkeeping program for use in solving puzzles.
C00260 00094	USEFUL SUBROUTINES
C00261 00095		OUTDPY	SAIL callable subroutine to display text
C00265 00096	UNSORTED
C00266 00097		BUZZ	Terminal test					1967
C00267 00098		DOCTOR	Eliza						1968
C00268 00099		P2P	Paper tape puncher			1973?
C00269 00100		A2E	ASCII to EBCDIC code conversion			Jan. 1973
C00270 00101		SHUFFL	Operating System test program
C00271 00102		CHACK & AMOEBA	III display hacks			1969
C00272 00103		BILLBD	Billboard printer				Nov. 1966
C00273 00104	PRUNE.DAT[3,2] as of March 2 1978  (copy 1 to extract lines for redistrbution)
C00284 00105	DIR[1,3] as of 23-FEB-78 0931 (copy for extracting lines for distribution)
C00367 00106	DIR[UP,DOC] as of 08-MAR-78  1549 (for extraction and distribution of entries)
C00390 00107	DIR [S,DOC] (copy for extraction of listings as pages are completed)
C00395 00108	MAIL to others re. HOW
C00405 00109
C00410 ENDMK
C⊗;
   	HOW	A condensed reference file of useful system programs.

Currently maintained by ALS

Supplementary information available:
    HELP <topic><cr>    Monitor command to find help on given topic.
    READ <topic><cr>	Monitor command to read a documentation file
			file on given topic, using the display editor E.
    PRUNE.DAT[3,2]      File containing one-line descriptions of some help
			topics.
    MONCOM.BH[S,DOC]    Online version of the latest edition of the
			Monitor Command Manual (SAILON-54.6, August 1978),
			describes all monitor commands and the programs
			they run.  The printed manual is available from
			publication services.
    MONCOM.UPD[S,DOC]   Updates to the Monitor Command Manual.
    UUO.ME[S,DOC]       Online version of the latest edition of the UUO
			Manual (3rd edition, SAILON-55.5, November 1977).
    UUO.UPD[S,DOC]      Updates to the UUO Manual, includes all new UUOs.


To use:  Type READ HOW<cr> then αFtopicαP (in E) ("α" means CONTROL) where
	 "topic" is the name of the program or topic you wish to enquire
	 about.  You can look at the HOW directory on page 1 for a list of
	 the possible programs and topics.

To exit: You will be in E so you may switch to another file, or exit with αE.

This file describes some of the many useful programs that are available on
the system and gives a few basic commands for using these programs.

The entries each occupy a separate page of fewer than 100 lines.  The
first line of each page is arranged so that the directory of HOW,
maintained automatically by E, forms a useful index and so that a ⊗FNAME⊗P
command may be used to locate any desired entry.

The entries should conform to the following format:

1) A first line, indented by a single TAB, to contain the program name,  a
second TAB and a very short  description (total line length not to  exceed
68 characters).  DO NOT mention names of other programs on this line!  If
there is room, put the last revision date on this line, otherwise put this
information with the name of the maintainer, below.

2) The name of the author or the person currently maintaining the program.

3) References to supplementary information, on-line files, manual etc..

4) Calling and exiting commands

5) The explanatory text itself.

If you wrote, maintain, or even know about some program or facility that
should be described in this file, please prepare a one page draft and mail
it to ALS.  It might be wise to advise ALS of your intentions to avoid
duplication of effort.

The author of each page has primary responsibility for maintaining the
information.  Please report all errors or omissions to him and/or to ALS.

If you find an error or omission and it is not corrected in a reasonable
period of time, please add a signed addendum to the original page.

Please do not make other corrections without informing ALS.
Supplementary Information

			    The New HOW File.

We are starting to  put togather a  new document aid  that will reside  on
UP,DOC, accessable by typing  READ HOW.  The  aim is to  have one page  in
this document on every  generally useful and  generally available file  on
the AI computer.  The start of this file is being kept on 1,ALS until  its
format has been finalized and until  there are enought completed pages  to
make it of use to others.

Contributers are asked to read page 2  of HOW[1,ALS] to get the flavor  of
what we are attempting to do and for our first stab as to desired  format.
Also look at the directory on page 1 and at some of the other pages to get
a feel for what is desired.

	HELP	An on-line program called by typing HELP.

    The Help  program provides  minimal on-line  documentation for  system
programs and facilities.

    To use type HELP name<carriage return>  where name is the name of  the
program or facility that you are inquiring about.

    Type HELP with no file name for further information.

HELP.BH[UP,DOC] contains the following:

The HELP program is intended to provide short, minimal documentation
for system programs and facilities.  For the most part, such help
is provided in the form of short text files which are typed by the
HELP program,, but the program is also capable of running other
programs and of executing monitor commands a la DO.

The command "HELP name" looks for a file on the [3,2] area with
filename NAME and an extension matching one of those listed below.
The first (should be only!) such file found in the UFD is processed
in accordance with its extension:

<null>	type as text
TXT	type as text
DMP	run via SWAP UUO
CMD	type into input buffer to be executed as commands
DPY	like CMD, but user must be at a DD or III
LNK	read ASCII name from file and use as new HELP argument

In reading ASCII files (all but DMP), TV/E directories and SOS line
numbers are ignored.  The user must be logged in to use a CMD or DPY
HELPer.  Also, since those typically have side effects like writing
files, each contains a warning message which is typed out before
the commands are executed; the user must confirm by typing Y that he
really wants the HELPer executed.  The format of a CMD or DPY helper
is <warning>⊗<commands>, e.g.:
	This HELPer produces a such-and-such listing on the XGP.
	Please type Y to confirm: ⊗XSPOOL SUCH-AND-SUCH
If the first character of the HELPer is ⊗, it is executed without
waiting for confirmation.

Note that DMP files can be executed not-logged-in; writers of DMP
files on [3,2] should bear that in mind when writing their programs.

In scanning a LNK file, letters and digits are accumulated up to a
non-alphameric or the sixth character.  The resulting name is then
treated as if it had been typed by the user.  Thus two HELP arguments
can refer to the same text file and there is only one copy to update
if the program being documented changes.

HELP files should mention filenames of other documentation when
available.  Remember that the user may not know the syntax of the
TYPE command, so instead of
	For more information: TYPE MUMBLE.FOO[UP,DOC].
you should use an unambiguous notation like
	For more information, type "TYPE MUMBLE.FOO[UP,DOC]".
(Remember also that the user may be at an uppercase-only, standard ASCII
terminal!)  If you write a DMP file with effects other than typing something
on the user's terminal, it is a good idea for your program to ask for
confirmation first.

A PRUNE.DAT file exists for [3,2]; also, PRUNE has been modified so that
for [3,2] only it sorts the file by filename first rather than extension
first.  Writers of HELPers should add descriptions to the PRUNE.DAT file.
(The command "HELP HELPER" types the filename and use fields only of the
PRUNE.DAT file.)

If there is no HELP file on the topic specified by the user, the HELP
program looks for files with that name and any extension on [UP,DOC],
[S,DOC], and [AIM,DOC] in that order.  The full name of the first such
file found, if any, is typed, with a suggestion that the user might
want to read that file.  The file itself is not typed out, on the
theory that users of HELP are looking for short help rather than full
documentation.  Thus, if you can think of nothing to say about your
program other than the location of the full documentation, you need
not bother.  For utility programs, though, you can usually think of
some short and sweet paragraph which will get the user through the
most common uses of your program.

[xxx,DOC] files with extension UPD are not listed as described in the
previous paragraph, except that if both NAME.EXT and NAME.UPD are found
on the same PPN, both are mentioned.

If the HELP command is given at a display terminal, and there is no
HELP file for the given topic but there is a [xxx,DOC] file, then
the command R E;<file>/R is loaded into the line editor buffer.
	PRUNE	PRUNE.DAT    One line descriptions of files

To use: type R PRUNE
To reference PRUNE.DAT files: type READ PRUNE.DAT[<desired ppn>]

PRUNE is a program available on the system which help a user keep track of
his files.  PRUNE can  be used to  makes a file,  PRUNE.DAT, which has  an
entry for each  file.  The  entries contain  the file  name, extension,  a
programmer field and a description  field.  Prune has commands for  making
these entries, finding specified entries and for pruning your disk area of
unwanted files.

PRUNE.DAT files exist for  some of the system  file areas and contain  one
line descriptions of the files located in these areas.  In particular, see
those on [UP,DOC],  [S,DOC], [1,3] and  [3,2].  Use  READ PRUNE.DAT[<ppn>]
and not R PRUNE to read these,  unless you are responsible for some of the
entries and want to change them.

PRUNE.DAT[3,2] has one-line descriptions for the following monitor commands:
The current state of this list can be seen by typing RUN MONCOM[3,2].

Monitor Commands:  SU-AI WAITS 9.10/Y  Assembled 08/28/80

@       COPY    DSKSIZ  FLUSH   LOGOUT  PUMPKI  SETTIM  UNDELE  
A       CORE    DT      FORK    MAIL    QSPOOL  SETUW   UNPROT  
ACCESS  CREATE  DTN     FTP     MAKE    R       SETUWP  UNPUMP  
ADVANC  CREF    DUMP    G       NODE    RCV     SLEVEL  UNREAP  
ALIAS   CSTART  E       GET     NOE     READ    SPOOL   UNSPOO  
ASSIGN  CTYSET  ECC     GRIPE   NOEDIT  REAP    SSAVE   VE      
ATTACH  D       ED      HALT    NOEIT   REASSI  START   VERIFY  
BACKSP  DAYTIM  EDDT    HELLO   NS      REENTE  SUPDUP  W       
BATCH   DDT     EDIT    HELP    OFIND   REMIND  SYSTAT  WHE     
BEEP    DE      EFIND   HOST    OTN     RENAME  TALK    WHEN    
BOOK    DEASSI  ELFQFI  HOT     P2LOAD  RER     TECO    WHERE   
C       DEBUG   ENABLE  K       PDETAC  RERUN   TELNET  WHO     
CANCEL  DECIDE  EOT     KATTAC  PJOB    RESET   TEST    XGPLIS  
CCONTI  DELETE  EREAD   KILL    PLAN    RESOUR  TIME    XPART   
CD      DETACH  ETV     KJOB    PLIST   RESTOR  TLIST   XSPOOL  
CDETAC  DFIND   EVENT   KLOG    POX     RETRY   TN      ZERO    
CETV    DI      EXECUT  L       PPPN    REWIND  TRANSF  
CFORK   DIAL    FI      LATER   PREPAR  RSL     TRY     
CKMAIL  DIRECT  FILES   LISP    PRO     RUN     TTY     
CLRUW   DISABL  FIND    LOAD    PROCES  S       TURKEY  
CLRUWP  DO      FINGER  LOCATE  PROVE   SAVE    TYPE    
COMPIL  DQAVG   FINISH  LOG     PTTY    SD      UDPUFD  
CONTIN  DRD     FIXIML  LOGIN   PUB     SEND    UFD     
Equipment

The following equipment is currently in use.

1 Digital Equipment Corporation KL10 and KA10
(36 bit words).

 262k words of 1 microsecond DEC core (MG10),
131k words of 1 microsecond Ampex core.

1 Ampex disc file (3330-11 type), 6 spindles
(capacity: 7.8 x 10↑9 bits).

 4 Dectape drives, 2 mag tape drives (7 track),
line printer, Calcomp plotter, Xerox Graphics Printer.

 58 Data Disc displays, 6 III displays, 3 IMLAC displays,
10 Datamedia displays, 15 Teletype terminals, 5 TI terminals.

 DEC PDP-11/45 and SPS-41 with 8k words (16 bit) of core
and 197k words of Intel MOS memory.

Communications processor: BBN TIP (Honeywell DDP-316) connected to the ARPA
Network.

Special equipment: Audio input and output systems, hand-eye equipment
(4 TV cameras, 2 arms), remote-controlled cart.
.end

Basic system commands

Reference: Monitor Command Manual, SAILON-54.6, November 1977
	on line as MONCOM.BH[S,DOC]  latest corrections in MOMCOM.UPD[S,DOC].

All commands to the system monitor end with <carriage return>.

Computer accounts are designated by PROJECT and USER initials (one to three
letters each).  E.g. "1,BAR" refers to project 1 of user BAR.  File names
are of the form SAMPLE.SAI[1,BAR], where the name SAMPLE may be up to six
letters long, the extension SAI may be up to three letters and is usually
used to designate the class of file (e.g.  "SAI" means that this is a
program written in the SAIL programming language).  If the account
designation is omitted ([1,BAR] in the example), your own account is presumed.

COMMAND			EFFECT

L BAR		Logs you in, as project 1 (by default), user BAR.  If there is
		a password on this account (as there must be for remote login),
		you will be asked for it, but your answer will not be printed.

L 2/BAR		Logs you in as project 2, user BAR.
		To change a password, log in with "%" in place of "/".

K		Kills your job (logs you off).

RCV		Starts reading messages in your "mail box".  For a list of
		alternative commands, say "?" when it asks for a command.

ET∂		Enters your mail file with E, allowing you to read it, or to
		write into it or rearrange it as you will.

MAIL LES	Initiates a message to user LES.  It first requests a subject,
		then the text of the message.  The message is terminated with
		a <meta><control>LF if you are on a display terminal or a
		<control>Z character (i.e. hold down the CONTROL key and
		type "Z") if you are on a non-display terminal.

⊗XMAIL LES	An alternate method of sending mail while in E.  For details
		see the ⊗? file while in E or type ET? to the system monitor
		to enter this file directly.

DIR		Lists the names of all files in your account directory.

DIR *.SAI[*,REG]  Lists the names of all files that have an SAI extension
		in any account belonging to user REG ("*" means "any").

TYPE SAMPLE.SAI	Types out the file SAMPLE.SAI stored under your account.

CET LIST	Creates an empty text file called LIST and lets you insert 
		text using the E editor.
		If you are a complete beginner, learn how to use E by typing 
		HELP ETEACH and following directions.  You can hardly be a
		complete beginner if you are reading this, but never mind.

ET LIST		Enters the (previously created) file LIST with E.
		
CREATE LIST	Creates an empty text file called LIST and lets you insert
		text using the SOS editor.  See the SOS Manual for editing
		commands.

ED LIST.OLD	Starts SOS editing an existing file called LIST.OLD.

COPY PEOPLE←JERKS.OLD	Makes a copy of the file JERKS.OLD in a new file
		called PEOPLE.

RENAME PEOPLE←JERKS.OLD	  Changes the name of JERKS.OLD to PEOPLE.

DELETE PEOPLE,*.OLD	Deletes the file PEOPLE and all files with extension OLD.

PPSAVE			Makes a file copy of the current state of the system 
			displayed screen. Useful in case one wants to save some
			typed out information.
--------------
To stop any program that is running, type CALL if on a display terminal or type
<control>C twice (i.e. push down the key marked "Control" and hit "C" twice) if
you are on a non-display terminal.  To make a program stop typing out without
halting, type  <control>BREAK if on a display terminal or <control>O if on a
non-display terminal.  <control>CLEAR restores typing.

For more complete information on commands, see the Monitor Command Manual
(SAILON-54.6) August 1978.

PRUNE.DAT[3,2] listings
ALIAS 	      	      	Command to change default directory used for disk files
ASSIGN	      	      	Command to acquire use of non-sharable device
ATTACH	      	      	Command to attach terminal to a detached job
DIR   	      	      	Command to list file directories
DSKSIZ	      	JBR   	Program to tell user his disk allocation and usage.
KJOB  	LNK   	      	Command to log out of system (same as HELP LOGOUT)
LOGIN 	      	      	Command to log into system
LOGOUT	      	      	Program to log out of system (same as HELP KJOB)
TALK  	      	      	Command to communicate with other users

DIRED  DMP   1  3   14.7 14-FEB-78 1902 000 105SGK DIRED  23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
.sect  Miscellaneous Useful Programs
CALLIT DMP   1  3    431 03-MAR-74 1334 000   1 BH CALLIT 02-FEB-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
DO     DMP   1  3    6.5 22-NOV-76 0122 000   1 ME DO     09-DEC-76  04-DEC-76 P805 
LOGRUN DMP   1  3    284 07-APR-74 1714 000   1 BH LOGRUN 09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
PERUSE DMP   1  3    1.9 24-MAR-75 1327 000 NETTVR PERUSE 08-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
PPSAV  DMP   1  3    560 08-SEP-76 1554 000   1 ME PPSAV  09-DEC-76  19-SEP-76 P764>
PTYJOB DMP   1  3    2.1 14-JUN-76 0152 000   1JBR PTYJOB 09-DEC-76  27-JUN-76 P712>
batch
.sect Controling the World
.ssect1 System Control
RSL    DMP   1  3    9.5 07-JUL-76 1937 000 ACTREG RSL    09-DEC-76  18-JUL-76 P725>
.ssect1 Device Control
ADS    DMP   1  3    728 06-DEC-73 2119 000   1 BH ADS    01-DEC-76  10-MAY-76 P692>
MAP    DMP   1  3    679 22-SEP-75 2307 000   1 BH MAP    09-DEC-76  10-MAY-76 P692>
	Teletype Commands
	DMINT and DMUSE 	Info for beginners on DataMedia

Page 2 of DMINT is reproduced herewith.

     This is the file DMINT[INF,CSD] at the Stanford AI Lab (SU-AI).  This
is a file intended to help you to learn the AI system.  We assume that you
are  using  a  DataMedia   terminal.   This  file  contains   introductory
information about the terminal itself, how  to connect to the system,  how
to disconnect, and some  other basic information about  the AI system  and
its documentation.  The file is intended to be read in hard-copy mode by a
novice.  It can be  read on-line by anyone  who knows very basic  editting
commands.  A companion file called DMUSE[INF,CSD] is intended to teach the
use of  the  E  editor.   That  file  is  intended  to  be  read  on-line.
Instructions which  are sufficient  to allow  use of  DMUSE are  contained
herein.

     It is hoped that these documents  will be useful for the raw  novice,
one who has never dealt with a time-shared computer before.  Consequently,
they will sometimes  be painfully slow  for the user  who only wants  that
portion of the  information which is  peculiar to the  AI system.  On  the
other hand, the document has been prepared  by folks who are far from  raw
novices, so we often  make unwarranted assumptions  about the meanings  of
some terms and instructions.  Suggestions for improvement of either  DMINT
or DMUSE should be sent to Denny Brown.
Useful system features
	FINGER	Locates people or tells when they last ran.  Jan.'78

Programmer:	LES
Source file:	FINGER.SAI[F,ACT]

			NETWORK FINGER
A FINGER command containing %<site name> will now attempt to finger people
at other Arpanet sites.  It does this by connecting to the FINGER socket
at the specified site and passing the rest of whatever you typed (before
and after the "%<site name>" to the host.  If that host supports Network
Finger, then you get whatever they return.

For example, "FING TK%AI" tells you about Tom Knight at MIT-AI and
"FING %SRI" tells you about everyone who is running on SRI-KL.  At this
writing, only the following sites respond to a network FINGER:
all MIT ITS sites (ai, mc, ml, dm), sri-kl, sri-ka, and office-1.
More will be joining shortly.

Normally only one site can be specified in a single FINGER command, but if
you would like to waste some time, say "FING %*" and it will tell you
about everyone out there.

			DOMESTIC FINGER
The system command "FING" shows data on all jobs, in order by programmer
initials.  The "IDLE" column shows the time, in minutes, since the given
job was last in the RUN queue.  If the job is currently in the STOP or
NULL queues, a "." follows.

If there is a digit in the next column, it represents the number of extra
Data Disc channels that belong to this job.

Finally, the "Terminal" part shows the location of the owner (the terminal
that last typed something at this job).  "detached", of course means just
that.  "disowned" means that the terminal that last owned this line has
released it.  "TV" means that this is a television (Data Disc) terminal
that is displaying the channel currently.  "tv" means that the terminal
that owns this job isn't looking at it.

If terminals other than the owner are viewing this job's main channel,
then they are listed on subsequent lines, with the job field blank.  If
you want to know the TTY# rather than the physical terminal, use WHERE or
WHO rather than FINGER.

			   POINTING THE FINGER
The command "FING <people list>" shows data only on the specified people.
For example, "FING JMC,DAVE,WILL" requests information on programmer JMC
and anyone whose first or last name begins with "DAVE" or "WILL".
String matching uses the following precedence:
  1) exact match on programmer initials,
  2) exact match on friendly or last names,
  3) match on leading characters of friendly or last names.
If a given string matches more than one person at a given level, it
reports "ambiguous" and lists their names.

If only one person is specified and he is not logged in, it normally tells
when he last logged out and shows his plan file, if any, but this can be
suppressed with switches (see below).

			FILE LISTS
Arguments in the FINGER command are separated by commas and/or spaces.
An argument of the form "@<file name>" causes that file to be read.
Files can include references to other files, ad nauseum.  In files,
everything to the right of a semicolon on a given line is ignored,
so that comments can be put there.

The default file extension is "DIS" and the default PPN is "[P,DOC]".
Thus if you say "FING @H", it will first look for a file in you area
called "H".  If that doesn't exist, it will next try "H.DIS" in your
area and, if necessary, "H.DIS[P,DOC]", the latter being the list of
hand-eye people which is kept in [P,DOC] along with other group lists
(see SAIL Telephone Directory).

			SWITCHES
Normally, if only one person is specified in the FINGER command and he is
not logged in, the time of his last logout and plan file, if any, are
given.  This printout can be suppressed by using the "-LOGOUT" or "-PLAN"

You can force printing of last logout or plan files even for lists of
people by using the "/LOGOUT" or "/PLAN" switches, which can also be
abbreviated to one letter.  Thus "FING @VB/L" lists everyone on the
volleyball list who is logged in and, for the rest,  the time of their
last logout.

			DOCUMENTATION
The command "FINGER ?" will cause this description to be printed out.
	RSL	Service Level Reservations

Programmer:	Jim Stein; modified by REG & LES
Documentation:	Monitor Manual appendix (SAILON 54)

Used to reserve service level and certain devices, as described in a Monitor
Manual appendix.
	COOL	Summarizes temperature & computer uptime.  Jan. 1978

Programmer:	LES
Source files:	COOL.SAI[T,ACT]

COOL retrieves and summarizes temperature and computer uptime history.
Source files are maintained by the THERMO phantom and exist from
1 January 1978 to date.

COOL asks for the date range, which can take many forms, e.g.
  23	   (the last occurrence of that date, this month or last)
  Feb	   (entire month of February or, if in February, month to date),
  78	   (all of 1978),
  2:5 Jan  (2nd through 5th of January inclusive),
  0 or <null>  (today),
  -1	   (yesterday, -2 for day before, etc.).
Any combination of <date>:<date> can be used, with at least 3 letters of
the month given.  COOL will try to do something sensible even if you leave
some elements unspecified, such as the year.

You can use one-line commands, e.g. "R COOL;-6:0" retrieves data for
the last seven days.

				OUTPUT
COOL normally lists the system downtime and availability (%).  Next, the
number of system reloads is given, if any, as well as the mean time
between reloads, the total number of service breaks, and mean time between
service breaks.  A "break" is defined as either a reload or a pause.
Only pauses longer than 2 minutes can be detected and some up to 12
minutes may escape detection.

Next, it lists the high and low temperatures and the times at which they
occurred, and the mean temperature.  Temperatures are given both in
Celsius and Fahrenheit and are normally outside air temperatures, but can
be switched to the computer room temperature (see below).

				SWITCHES
Switches may be added to the end of the command line, preceded by "/".
Switches may be abbreviated to as little as one letter.
  /INSIDE    gives computer room temperatures rather than outside,
  /BREAKS    gives detailed listings on all service breaks (reloads or pauses),
  /-BREAKS    suppresses all information on breaks, including the summary,
  /SPOOL     both displays and Spools the requested information,
  /XSPOOL    both displays and Xspools,
  /FILE      puts a copy in a file, after asking you for the file name.
  /TIME=<interval>  lists temperatures at the specified interval, which
	     defaults to 10 minutes (the minimum).  For example, "/T=2:00"
	     lists temperatures at 2 hour intervals.  Intervals greater than
	     24 hours cause only the temperature at midnight to be listed.
If you use more than one of the SPOOL, XSPOOL, or FILE switches, it will
use the last one given.

	SOB	Son of Bureaucracy (computer time accounting) Jan. 1978

Programmer:	LES
Source File:	SOB.SAI[F,ACT]

To get a summary of computer usage by project, just type <carriage
return>.  This lists projects in order of decreasing "doubloons" (a
linear function of computer cost components on a somewhat arbitrary
scale).

In calculating this cost, "B time" charges (weekday mornings and
evenings, weekend afternoons) are reduced by a factor of 2 and "C time"
is reduced a factor of 3.  The doubloon cost is also shown as a percentage
of overall computer utilization (excluding system services such as
spooling, accounting, and news service).

Next, the number of logins is given and the percentage of A time, B time,
and C time, based on the doubloon calculation with no discounting.
The last three items are the average core size, CPU utilization (CPU time/
job time), and load average while computing.

There are three possible commands: GROUP, PN, and MOST.  All commands and
switches may be abbreviated so long as they are unambiguous (one letter
will do).  Cases are ignored.  The default command, described above, is
equivalent to GROUP without an argument.  If an argument is given, then it
is matched against the leading characters of the various group names to
select one (e.g. the command "g hand" will retrieve data on the Hand-eye
project).

The PN command with a programmer ID as an argument will get data on that
individual alone.  Without an agument, it exhaustively lists the accounting
data in order by PN, omitting null entries.

The MOST command without an argument lists the 20 heaviest users.  An
integer argument causes that many of the heaviest users to be listed.

			SWITCHES
The /DETAIL switch has effect only on the GROUP command and causes data
for individuals in each group to be listed in order of decreasing cost.
The /FILE switch will subsequently ask for a name and direct output there.
/SPOOL and /XSPOOL do what you would expect.

The /RAW switch is mostly for debugging and causes raw accounting data to
be printed together with a (rough) explanatory heading.
	BUREAU	Computer time accounting (old style)	Oct. 1975

Programmer:	LES
Source File:	BUREAU.SAI[F,ACT]

To find out how much computer time has been  used by any given group
in the period 1971-77, say
.R BUREAUCRACY		(actually, just "R BUREAU" will do).
The program will ask for  dates, PPN lists, and output form.   If you
give  null   responses  (CR)  to  all   requests,  the  program  will
automatically show a summary of computer utilization by  project from
the beginning of the current year through yesterday.

Data covered include number of PPNs, number of logins, job hours, CPU
minutes, core  K minutes, and "Doubloons"  (an approximate measure of
overall cost on  an arbitrary scale).   The entries  are in order  of
decreasing doubloons, except that "All others" is always last.

			DATES

Alternatively, you can  "roll your own".   The raw data is  stored by
PPN for each month over the past year and for each year back to 1971.
When it asks  for dates,  you can say something like "Jul:Oct", which
may or may not work.  If  the current date is December, this gives
you data  for the  current year.   If the current  date is  May, last
year's data is used.  If you say that in July, August,  or September,
it will simply complain.  It doesn't hurt to ask.

If you say just "May" then you get data for the last instance of that
month only.   If you say  ":May" you get data  from 1 January through
May.  If you say 72 or  1972, you get data for that entire year.   If
You mention the  current year, or if you just  hit <carriage return>,
you get year-to-date data.

			PPNs

When the program asks for PPNs, you can say something like:

Bureaucrats:JMC,LES,TW; Bad guys:REG,[SPL,SYS]; Classes: [206],[225]
which will gather data on three groups, separated by ";". Labels (one
or more  words ending in ":") may appear  anywhere in the group list.
If you omit labels,  the groups will be  named "Group 1", "Group  2",
etc.

More generally, the following elements may appear in PPN lists:

group label:pn,[pj],[pj,pn],[*,pn],[pj,*],@file,@@,/SUMMARY

Nothing need be capitalized.  [pj] is of course equivalent  to [pj,*]
and pn means [*,pn].  If a given PPN qualifies for membership in more
than one group, then [pj,pn]  takes precedence over [pj,*], which  in
turn outranks [*,pn].  If you  mention exactly the same thing in more
than  one group the  program will grumble, but  will ignore conflicts
and continue.

Now about the "@file" gizmo: This lets  you compose a horrendous list
as a  text file and gobble it into the middle  of the line.  The file
name may contain a PPN.  Any TV/E directory or SOS line  numbers will
be ignored.   While the on-line  response is restricted to  one line,
the  text file may  contain many  lines.  It  will be read  as if the
carriage returns don't exist. You can go indirect any number of times
and  any  number  of  levels,  though  string  space  may  freak  out
eventually.

The "@@"  form says "go read  the telephone list".   This will assign
everyone to  groups on the basis of project affiliations given in our
telephone directory.   Individuals who are  in more than one  project
are  arbitrarily pushed into  the first  one on  their list.   People
without a listed project are dumped into "Miscellaneous".  Of course,
this  still  leaves a  few  "outlaws"  who  are  not on  any  of  our
authorized  user lists.   You can precede  the "@@" with  one or more
group  lists of  your  own,  which  will  take  precedence  over  the
directory groupings.

			OUTPUT

After the  data  is generated,  the program  repeatedly  asks for  an
output specification of one of the following kinds:
 <blank>		type a summary
 *			type detailed listing
 S			spool a summary
 S*			spool details
 <file>			save summary in file
 <file>*		save details in file.
 .			loop back to respecify PPNs and dates.

On reruns, the null reply to PPN and  Date questions means "just like
last time".  Thus,  you can easily ask for data from a different time
period with the same  cast of characters, or  for the same time  with
another group.
	LESCAL	Calendar-maker.		Dec. 1974

A program for printing or typing calendars in any of 63 formats.  To run, say
"R LESCAL" and answer the questions.

Documentation:	self-documented, with a sprinkling of political commentary.
Programmer:	LES
Source file:	LESCAL.MAC[CSP,SYS] (written in MACRO-10 before FAIL was invented).
	FREEFO	Text macro processor		March 1973

Programmer:	LES
Source file:	FREEFO.LES[UP,DOC]
Documentation:	FREEFO.LES[UP,DOC]

Freeforol is a text macro processor that can be used to generate form
letters  and other fill-in-the-blanks text.  If you say  R FREEFO, it
types a "*" and expects a keyboard input of the form
    <source file list>
or
    <destination file>←<source file list>
where the  <source  file list>  consists of  one or  more file  names
separated  by  commas.    These  must  be  text  files  and  will  be
effectively concatenated in the order given.

	KWIC	Keyword in context program	Dec. 1973

Programmer:	LES
Source file:	KWIC.SAI[S,LES]

This program can be used to produce a concordance, index, word count, or
word list for any given text file.  To run, say "R KWIC".  The simplest
command that it understands is:

*<source file name>

This  causes the  source file  to  be scanned  for  words, which  are
compared with  an internal dictionary of common  words.  Any that are
not in the dictionary are  considered to be "keywords".  The  program
produces  an output  file,  in this  case  called <source>.KWC,  that
contains  an alphabetized  list of  keywords, one per  line, together
with the local context and a reference to the page  and line on which
they  occur.  It  also  lists  the  number  of  occurrences  of  each
dictionary word.  A typical output might begin as follows.

                       Concordance of SIGNUP[W,LES]                        
                    275 keywords, 961 dictionary words                     

                                47 a
                                 5 about
Page Line                          ------
  5   22                 A roll of adhesive tape or electrical tape.  
                                 6 after
Page Line                          ------
  1   30  August 16 at noon in the AI Conference Room.  
                                 2 air(s)(ed)(ing)
                                 3 all
Page Line                          ------
  3   15         If you come to an ambiguous fork in the trail, preferably 
                                 1 among
  ......

Numbers appearing  just to  the left  of center  are word counts  for
dictionary  words (with  various suffixes), while  the page  and line
numbers point to the locations of keywords in the  original document.
Line numbers are counted from the top  of the page.  SOS line numbers
(if  any) are ignored, as are TV/E  directory pages,  though the page
numbering includes  the directory.   Words  beginning with  different
letters of the alphabet are placed on different output pages.

			General Command Format

The more general command format is:

*[<output file>←]<source file>[/ONLY | /ALL][/INDEX | /COUNT | /LIST]

where bracketed  elements are optional  and alternative  switches are
separated by "|".  Both source and output files must be on the disk.

All  switches may  be abbreviated  to one letter.   The  /ONLY switch
causes only keywords to be  listed in the output file (i.e.  omitting
counts of dictionary  words).  The /ALL switch  causes the dictionary
to  be ignored,  so  ALL words  are treated  as keywords.  (Beware: a
concordance produced  with the ALL  switch on  is typically about  10
times the size of the original document.

The /INDEX  switch causes  the context to  be omitted and  produces a
three-column listing of words and their original locations (page  and
line) or number of occurrences (dictionary words).  The /COUNT switch
causes word  counts only to be generated  for keywords and produces a
four-column listing of  these counts.   The /LIST  switch produces  a
raw,  seething word  list (i.e.  an  alphabetized list  of all  words
used), one  per line, with no header information, and all on one long
page.

			 Scanning Procedure

KWIC treats as a word any alphanumeric string beginning with a letter
and  possibly containing "'", "-",  or "/", but nothing  else.  Thus,
things beginning with digits are ignored.  Words hyphenated over line
boundaries are reassembled.

In order to provide as much context as possible for each keyword, the
text is "dejustified" within each paragraph, so that redundant spaces
between words are removed and successive lines are concatenated, with
a <space> replacing  the <CRLF>. A new paragraph  is assumed to begin
whenever there is  a blank  line, a  <TAB> in  column 1,  or a  <form
feed>.
	XGPTYP	Converts XGP file to text form		Dec. 1975

Programmer:	REG; modified by HJS & LES
Source file:	XGPTYP.SAI[CSP,SYS]

XGPTYP converts an XGP file into a straight text representation of the
various XGP commands.  Handy for debugging document compilers.  It prompts
for a source file name.  The default source file extension is "XGP".
Output goes either to a destination file or, if none is given, to your TTY.

Editors
    Text Editors

    Editors consist of two general types, basic text editors that make  it
possible to create  and modify  texts of all  sorts, and  the second  type
consisting of  speciallized  editors which  handle  formatting,  indexing,
pagination, and similar details.

General Editors
	General Editors
		E	The page and display oriented basic editor.
		SOS	Line numbering basic editor for teletype usage.
		TECO	Original MIT-DEC editor with many exotic features.
		TV	Earlier version of E

	E	The page and display oriented basic editor.

Currently maintained by ALS and ME.

Documentation
	ESSENTIAL E  a hard-copy Computer Science Report N0. STAN-CS-80-796

For other documentation, type
	HELP E
	READ E  for complete documentation
	HELP ETEACH  for a self-teaching manual
	<META><CONTROL>?  while using E
	READ EINIT.CMD[1,3] for some useful E macros

To use
	Type ET NAME where NAME is the name of file to be edited.
	Type CET NAME if file NAME is to be originally created.
To exit
	Type <META><CONTROL>E

    E is a page-oriented editor designed for use with a display  terminal.
It brings one page of the text into core, as requested, and it displays  a
portion of  this page  as if  through a  window.  A  line pointer  and  an
underscoring cursor mark  the position  in the  text where  editing is  to
occur.  Special commands allow you  to go from page  to page, to move  the
window up or down on the page and  to move the line pointer and cursor  as
desired.

    E achieves its speed (1) by using  the system line editor, (2) by only
changing the core copy of the text  on the completion of a line edit,  and
(3) by updating the disk copy of the page only on the completion of a page
edit (automatically effected by moving to another page).

    Type  HELP ETEACH  if you  are unacquainted  with  this  editor.   An
abridged manual will be copied into  your file area and displayed to  you.
This manual is designed for self teaching and it leads you by simple steps
to a basic understanding  of the editor  so that you  can then procede  on
your own,  with  occasional references  to  the complete  manual  via  the
question mark command, as noted below.

    Many users of E  find it convenient  to have a  copy of the  hard-copy
manual ESSENTIAL E (Report No.  STAN-CS-80-796) available to refresh their
memories concerning details that they use but seldom.

    A  complete  manual  on  this  editor  is  available  on-line  and  is
referenced while using  the editor  by typing <CONTROL>?.   Return to  the
file that you had been editing is via the command <CONTROL>H.
	SOS	Line numbering basic editor for teletype usage.

Currently maintained by LES.

For other documentation, type
	HELP SOS
	READ SOS.LES[UP,DOC]

To use
	Type ED NAME where NAME is the name of the file to be edited.

    SOS is a line-number oriented editor for text files.  It features  two
flavors of intraline editing (for  Teletypes and displays), string  search
and substitution, hyphenless text justification, and other glories.

    SOS provides the ability to insert, delete, modify, and print lines of
text.  While most  commands are  line-number oriented,  string search  and
substitution commands are available.  The entire text with line numbers is
brought into core.

    Graphic Editors
	GEOMED	A graphics editor.
	SUDS
	MS
GEOMED OLD   1  3   19.1 20-MAY-74 0407 000 GEMBGB GEOMED 26-JAN-78 09-OCT-76 P774>
	GEOMED	A graphics editor.

    GEOMED is implemented in PDP-10 machine code and is composed of  about
250 subroutines.  These  subroutines are  SAIL and  LISP accessible.  When
load in a SAIL  core image, the GEOMED  subroutines are called GEOMES  for
"Geometric Modeling Embedded  in SAIL";  when loaded with  LISP, they  are
referred to as  GEOMEL, "Geometric Modeling  Embedded in LISP".   Strictly
defined, the  name  "GEOMED"  refers to  the  interactive  editor  itself;
however the reader  is warned that  the named "GEOMED"  may also refer  to
GEOMEL, GEOMES, MESGEM, the data structures, the command languages, and so
on.

    As a graphics language, GEOMED is all semantics with no syntax of  its
own. The subroutines  take from one  to four arguments,  return one or  no
values, and usually have considerable side effects on the data structures.
Unless otherwise noted, all arguments and values are integers; subroutines
executed only for effect tend to return integer value zero.

    The GEOMED  data  structure  is  implemented  as  twelve  word  blocks
containing pointers  and  data  in  the  fashion  usual  to  graphics  and
simulation. The twelve word blocks are called "nodes".  Nodes are referred
to by their actual  machine address in  the user core  image, which is  an
integer called  a "link".   Subroutines that  take nodes  as arguments  or
return nodes as values  pass links rather than  the nodes themselves.   In
SAIL, the user core image can be accessed as a special array named MEMORY;
in LISP, the core  image is accessible  in the last  resort by the  SUBRs:
EXAMINE and DEPOSIT.

A COMPLETE MANUAL exists on-line as GEOMEN.BGB[UP,DOC].

    Font Editors

FONTS: COMBIN DDFONT EDFONT F FCOPY FMUNGE FONT FSCALE PIX TVFONT UFC[XGP,SYS]

Local font wizards include BH, DON, LES, REF, and TVR.
REF is responsible for this explanation.

References:
    TVFONT.BGB[UP,DOC]
    R PIX then ?
    COMBIN[3,2]
    EDFONT.TVR[UP,DOC]
    FMUNGE.REF[UP,DOC]
    F.TVR[UP,DOC]
    FCOPY[3,2]
    DDFONT[3,2]
    UFC.REG[UP,DOC]
    FORMAT.DOC[XGP,SYS]
    FONT.BH[UP,DOC]

	The XGP has the capability for outputing text in many different
character sets or "FONTS".  Several programs exist on the system for creating,
examining and modifying fonts.  These programs (and several other FONT
oriented programs) are described in this section.  A glossary of font
"terms" follows at the end of the section.

	There are essentially two different ways to create a font, either
by inputing a "picture" of the font through a TV camera, or by describing
the pixels of each glyph.  To input a font through a camera, try using the
programs TVFONT or PIX.  TVFONT is described in TVFONT.BGB[UP,DOC], and
PIX is "self documenting".  That is, one can say "R PIX" to the monitor,
and "?" to PIX for documentation.  Local experts on these programs include
TVR, RWW, and HPM.  Good luck.  You'll need it.

	Font creation through glyph description is essentially similar to
font modification, only starting from scratch.  There are currently three
font editors available on the system, EDFONT (documentation
EDFONT.TVR[UP,DOC]) for doing interactive font modification, FMUNGE,
(documented on FMUNGE.REF[UP,DOC]) a system for reading and writing font
files in text format, and editing them with ETV, and F (F.TVR[UP,DOC]).
Local experts on EDFONT include TVR and DON, on FMUNGE, REF.  F is a
program for doing everything and anything to font descriptions.
Unfortunately, its documentation is basically unintelligible, its use,
unwieldy.

	These last three programs, and several others, can also be used to
modify "font characteristics", such as font height and various character
kerns.  For example, COMBIN (COMBIN[3,2]) can be used to "mix" two fonts
together, and FONT (FONT.BH[UP,DOC) to set the global characteristics of a
font.  TVR is the local expert on COMBIN; BH on FONT.

	And, finally, a useful program for modifying fonts is FSCALE
(documented on FSCALE.DON[UP,DOC]).  FSCALE is useful for creating larger
and smaller versions of a particular font, through a uniform scaling
algorithm.  See DON for help.

	SAIL is not, of course, the only system with an XGP.  Fonts from
other sites, such as ISI, CMU and MIT, can be converted to SAIL format
using the program FCOPY (documented on FCOPY[3,2]).  FCOPY will also
produce samples of a font on the XGP.  For viewing a font on a data disc
run DDFONT (DDFONT[3,2]).  TVR is the FCOPY wizard; consult TVR or DON for
help with DDFONT.

	After you've created or modified your font, you can compile it
with the program UFC.DMP[XGP,SYS].  UFC.REG[UP,DOC] explains what
compiling a font means, and why it's good for you.  Unfortunately, the
error messages UFC produces are obscure, and there is no current wizard.

	The format of font files is detailed in FORMAT.DOC[XGP,SYS].  Most
of these programs accept .FNT as the default extension for font files;
most will also look on [XGP,SYS] for fonts.  [XGP,SYS] is where the
"system" fonts reside; some people, of course, have their own font
collections.

Glossary:

FONT		A collection of raster described characters for printing
		text on the XGP.

GLYPH		An individual character, or character description in a font.

PIXEL		1/200 of an inch square, the resolution of the XGP.  
		Each "1" bit in a glyph description correspondes to 
		darkening one pixel.

FONT HEIGHT	The number of pixel lines allowed for a line of type in this
		font.  The name of a font is usually a good approximation to its
		height.  Thus, NGR30.FNT[XGP,SYS] has a font height of 32 pixel
		lines.

LEFT KERN	The overlap that this character makes with the previous character.
		Useful for getting italic characters to run together.  Usually
		set to zero.
Document Compilers
	PUB	Publication editor to achieve book format.
	PUBMAC	Macros for generation of tables of contents etc.
	POX	Formatting editor for use with the XGP.
	POX	Formatting document compiler for use with the XGP.

Maintained by REM

Reference POX.XGP[UP,DOC]  (suitable for XSPOOLing)
	Latest up-date info on POX.LOG[1,REM], not recommended for the
 		novice.
also read the HELP POX file.

    POX is  a program  for making  documents that  take advantage  of  the
special features  available  on the  Xerox  Graphics Printer  (XGP).   The
special features  that POX  provides are  mainly font  switching and  text
justification.  (There are some other features, but a novice user need not
be concerned with them at present.)

    POX takes a file as input and produces an output file that is suitable
for spooling  with  the XGP  spooler  (XSPOOL command).   The  input  file
contains instructions to  POX and  the text  of the  document.  POX  takes
character sequences as commands.  Each  command sequence is preceded by  a
character, called the Escape Character.   The first character in the  file
(ignoring TV directories  and SOS  line numbers) is  taken by  POX as  the
escape character.  Thus, the  user gets to  specify the escape  character.
The escape character can be arbitrary, but reason dictates that it  should
be some character that appears infrequently (or not at all) in the text of
the document.  Common choices for the escape character is \ or $.  In  the
remainder of this document, the character \ represents the current  Escape
Character.

    To run POX, use the system command R POX.  POX wants to see a  command
of the form:  <OUTPUT FILE>←<INPUT FILE>.   If the <OUTPUT  FILE> term  is
omitted then the output file  will have the same  name as the input  file,
and ".XGP" extension.   If the extension  is omitted on  the output  file,
".XGP" will be used.

    If all is well with the input file, POX will run and produce an output
file suitable for XSPOOLing.  POX will load the appropriate XSPOOL command
into your line editor, so all you have  to do is type return to spool  the
file.

	PUB	Publication compiler to achieve book format.

    PUB  is  an  advanced  text  justifier  and  page  formatter  intended
primarily for  use by  programmers.  It  can automatically  number  pages,
sections, figures, footnotes, etc.  and  can print their numbers in  roman
numerals as  well as  in digit  or  letter form.   It can  generate  cross
references, tables of contents, and indexes.  Page layout is flexible, and
allows  multiple   column   output.   Line   formatting   includes   tabs,
underlining,  superscripts,  subscripts,  centering,  and   justification.
Macros programmed in a  SAIL-like string-processing language can  generate
text to be printed in the document.  The output of the compiler is a  file
which can  be  printed  on  the  terminal, on  the  line  printer,  or  on
microfilm.

    A complete manual exists for this editor and can be consulted  on-line
by typing READ PUB.TES[S,DOC]
	PUBMAC	Macros for generation of tables of contents etc.

.<<     TWO COLUMN FORMAT       by L. Earnest           February 1975
.
.This is a description of how to use the PUB macros in BASKER.PUB[SUB,SYS].
.These macros set up one- or two-column formats with Section, Subsection, and
.Subsubsection numbering and automatic Table of Contents generation.
.
.                       Heading
.First, your file should specify the device.  If it is "DEVICE XGP", then
.you must specify both a Font 1, which should be lightface,
.and Font 3, which should be boldface.  For example, if you say
. REQUIRE "BASKER.PUB[SUB,SYS]" SOURCE_FILE;
.you will get the three Baskerville fonts, with Font 2 being italic.
.
.                       One-sided Documents
.For documents that will be printed on only one side of the paper, the
.Section name will appear in the top left of each page and the page number
.in the top right.
.
.                       Two-sided Documents
.For documents that will be printed on both sides of the paper, even numbered
.(left) pages will have the page number in the upper left corner, followed by the
.the Section name.  Odd numbered (right) pages will have the Subsection name
.(if any) in the top left and the page number in top right.
	TEX	A system for Technical Editing by Donald E. Knuth
 
Maintained by D.E. Knuth

Reference	TEX and METAFONT by D.E.Knuth, Digital Press (1979),
		available at the bookstore.
		
TEX is a new document compiler developed by D. E. Knuth here at the
lab. The standard version is obtainable by typing "r tex" to the monitor;
our version assumes to some extent that the very next thing
you type is "\input <file><CR>" (note that it's \ not /). This makes
TEX look at <file>.TEX on your area, or failing that to look at <file>.TEX
on system area [1,3]. Your output will be on <file>.XGP and it can be
spooled with "xs <file>/head/ntn=33"; omit "/head" if you don't want the
fine print atop each page telling you the date and time of spooling.

If you use other fonts besides the ones declared in the file BASIC.TEX[1,3],
TEX will expect to find .TFX files for them on the same area as the font.
These files can be generated using the TFXGEN program.  Say "read tfx"
for more information.  Important:  This version of TEX has thirteen font
files preloaded, so any additional fonts should be assigned font codes
other than "@adfgjlmquxz?".

The user manual is A. I. Memo No. 317 ( = CS Report No. 675); it is currently
out of print, so newcomers will need to buy the one mentioned above.
There's no on-line or line-printer version, but you might be able to
figure out how to read manual.tex[tex,dek].

The SAIL program contains extensive documentation about the implementation;
it's not merely "commented code". See file TEXSYS.SAI[tex,dek] and the
files it references.
	MAXTEX	TEX preloaded version and macros.

Mantained by Max Diaz (no account; uses [m,jls]).

Suplementary information:

    DOCMAC.TEX[m,jls]      On-line documentation
    TESMAC.TEX[m,jls]      Example and test-deck
    KERMAC.TEX[m,jls]      Basic set of macros
    PAPMAC.TEX[m,jls]      Macros for papers and documents
    MATMAC.TEX[m,jls]      Macros for math
    CODMAC.TEX[m,jls]      Macros for non-justified text
    ESPMAC.TEX[m,jls]      Macros for text in spanish
    LETMAC.TEX[m,jls]      Macros for letters (meant to be copied)
    MAKTEX.CMD[m,jls]      Monitor commands  to  generate a TEX  preloaded
			   version

MAXTEX is  a preloaded  version of  TEX: it  has information  on 42  fonts
(named abc...z ABC...L<>@;).  Otherwise, it  is used just as the  ordinary
TEX in the  system. MAXTEX  is in  area [1,3] (so  you need  only type  "r
maxtex" to the monitor).

The macros,  however, furnish  many more  facilities than  those found  on
BASIC.TEX.  These include handling of chapters, sections, etc.;  automatic
table of  contents (as  well as  plates and  figures); several  styles  of
pages,  with   different  headings;   comments,  annotations,   footnotes;
paragraphing macros (enumerate, itemize, display, indent, etc.); and  many
more.  Documentation is somewhat frugal at the moment; it appears in  file
DOCMAC in the form of general descritions.  Brief comments appear in every
macro file  (KER,  PAP, MAT,  COD,  ESP,  LET) before  each  macro;  else,
references to the TEX manual are given.

For many applications, MAXTEX together with the macros furnishes a dialect
that permits you to forget largely about boxes and glue and totally  about
\output routines.  Furthermore,  many of  the routines  are structured  to
make reshaping easy (e. g.  headlines, page styles, running-heads,  fonts,
formats), for slightly  more involved  applications, or  to customize  the
style.
Built-in Editors
	ILISP
	AID
	BASIC
Programming Languages
.sect Algebraic languages
.ssect1 ALGOL - like languages
.ssect2 SAIL
.reference(Symbolic languages, SAIL)
SAIL   DMP   1  3   25.9 07-DEC-76 1906 005   1JFR COPY   09-DEC-76  08-DEC-76 T23  
PROFIL DMP   1  3    7.1 07-DEC-76 2329 005   1JFR PROFIL 09-DEC-76  08-DEC-76 T23  
INDENT DMP   1  3    8.3 29-JUL-72 1610 000 SLSDCS        24-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
SAILDP DMP   1  3   46.9 07-DEC-76 1111 005   1JFR SAILDP 08-DEC-76  08-DEC-76 T23  
SEGFND DMP   1  3    5.3 20-OCT-74 1613 000   SRHT SEGFND 06-JAN-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.ssect2 PASCAL
PASCAL DMP   1  3   20.6 29-MAY-76 0811 000   P TM COPY   21-NOV-76  14-JUN-76 P707>
.ssect1 Mathematical languages
.ssect2 Fortran
F40    DMP   1  3   10.1 09-JUL-76 2255 005   1EJG COPY   09-DEC-76  25-JUL-76 P731>
.ssect2 Interactive desk calculators
AID    DMP   1  3   10.1 07-NOV-75 1710 000 ACTREG AID    09-DEC-76  25-NOV-75 P609>
BASIC  DMP   1  3   12.6 17-MAR-73 0320 000 ACTREG BASIC  06-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
WISE   DMP   1  3    6.9 24-FEB-72 1044 000   2RES        09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.sect Symbolic languages
.ssect1(LISP and LISP derivatives)
BCOMPL DMP   1  3  111.0 22-OCT-76 1757 000   1RPG BCOMPL 23-OCT-76  06-NOV-76 P789>
COMPLR DMP   1  3   32.9 31-MAR-76 1028 000 JNK BG COMPLR 08-DEC-76  11-APR-76 P680>
CROSS  DMP   1  3    8.2 08-AUG-75 0943 000 SYSSUZ COPY   24-OCT-76  08-SEP-75 P570>
DDTLSP DMP   1  3   50.0 08-DEC-76 1258 000 AIDRPG DDTLSP 08-DEC-76  09-DEC-76 T25  
FORMAT DMP   1  3   24.0 11-NOV-72 2302 000   S WD COPY   06-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
FUNLST DMP   1  3   13.2 08-AUG-75 0945 000 SYSSUZ COPY   01-DEC-76  08-SEP-75 P570>
IC     DMP   1  3   49.9 24-FEB-75 1243 000 FOLRWW ICIC   15-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
IL     DMP   1  3   11.9 29-JAN-76 1510 000 FOLRWW FRAID  09-DEC-76  17-FEB-76 P652>
LISP   DMP   1  3    9.9 07-FEB-74 0123 000   SDWP LISP   08-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
MACLSP DMP   1  3   33.3 08-DEC-76 1444 007 204CGN MACLSP 09-DEC-76  09-DEC-76 T25  
MEXPR  DMP   1  3   23.9 19-JAN-74 1847 000 L70DAV MEXPR  09-JUL-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
MLISP  DMP   1  3   23.9 13-NOV-74 1743 000 ENGHJE MLISP  12-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
MLISP2 DMP   1  3   33.9 31-MAY-74 2114 000   1HJE MLISP2 08-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
MLISPC DMP   1  3   33.9 13-NOV-74 1745 000 ENGHJE MLISPC 08-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
MONITR DMP   1  3    3.5 06-MAY-72 1138 000   1DCS        08-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
NCOMPL DMP   1  3   89.0 09-DEC-76 1036 007 AIDRPG NCOMPL 09-DEC-76 
RLISP  DMP   1  3   24.9 27-NOV-76 1455 000   1ACH TMP    08-DEC-76  04-DEC-76 P805 
REDUCE DMP   1  3   49.9 09-DEC-76 1648 000   1ACH TMP    09-DEC-76 
.ssect1(Other Symbolic languages)
PLNR   DMP   1  3   23.0 26-APR-72 0408 000   1RPO        24-SEP-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
SCHEME DMP   1  3   60.0 09-DEC-76 1114 000 AIDRPG SCHEME 09-DEC-76 
FASBOL DMP   1  3   34.8 25-MAY-75 0553 000  CSMJC COPY   01-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
SLR1   DMP   1  3   16.0 26-NOV-76 1242 000 PSI JP COPY   09-DEC-76  04-DEC-76 P805 
.sect Languages for system building
.ssect1 (PDP-10 Assemblers)
FAIL   DMP   1  3   15.8 03-JUN-76 1756 000 ACTREG FAIL1  09-DEC-76  14-JUN-76 P707>
MACRO  DMP   1  3    9.2 19-JAN-76 2347 000   SMJC LOADER 07-DEC-76  01-FEB-76 P644>
MIDAS  DMP   1  3   21.7 23-NOV-76 1436 000 NETMRC MIDAS  09-DEC-76  04-DEC-76 P805 
.ssect1(Structured System Programming)
BLISS  DMP   1  3   46.2 27-SEP-76 0908 000 BLI TM XBLS10 01-NOV-76  16-OCT-76 P777>
.ssect1(Educational System Programming)
MIX    DMP   1  3   19.3 06-FEB-76 1900 000   1DSB COPY   13-NOV-76  23-FEB-76 P655>
MIXAL  DMP   1  3    4.2 11-FEB-72 0950 000               13-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
    Machine Languages
	FAIL	A fast one-pass assembly language

To use:
	Have a source program written in assembly language with an
	  extension of .FAI or missing.
	Give system command COMPILE <NAME> or use EX <NAME> if you
	  want program to be compiled and executed.

Reference: FAIL.REG[AIM,DOC],AIM 291

FAIL is an  assembly program for  PDP-6 and PDP-10  machine language.
FAIL operates in one pass,  which means that it reads the  input file
only once;  the linking loader program (LOADER or  LINK-10) completes
any aspects  of the assembly  which could not  be done by  FAIL.  The
efficiencies which have  been employed in  its coding make  FAIL five
times faster than MACRO-10, the DEC assembler.

FAIL  processes  source program  statements  by  translating mnemonic
operation codes into the binary codes needed in machine instructions,
relating  symbols to  numeric  values, and  assigning  relocatable or
absolute  core  addresses  for program  instructions  and  data.  The
assembler  can prepare  a  listing of  the program  which  includes a
representation of the  assembled code.  Also, the  assembler notifies
the user of any errors detected during the assembly.

FAIL has a  powerful macro processor  which allows the  programmer to
create new  language elements to  perform special functions  for each
programming job.

FAIL permits an ALGOL-style  block structure which provides a  way of
localizing the usage of  symbols to particular parts of  the program,
called blocks.   Block structure  allows the same  symbol name  to be
given different meanings in different blocks.

The user should be familiar with the PDP-10 instruction set, which is
described in both DECsystem-10 System Reference Manual and PDP-10 and
PDP-6 Instruction Sets (SAILON-71).

Other documents of interest:

Frost, M.  UUO Manual, SAILON-55.5, November 1977
Harvey, B. Monitor Command Manual, SAILON-54.5, January 1976
Petit, P.  RAID, SAILON-58.1, September 1969

The following are available in the DECsystem-10 Software Notebooks:

       Cross-Reference Listing: CREF, June 1973
       DDT-10 Programmer's Reference Manual, June 1973
       Linking Loader Programmer's Reference Manual, August 1971
       LINK-10 Programmer's Reference Manual, May 1973
       MACRO-10 Assembler Programmer's Reference Manual, June 1972
       DECsystem-10 Operating System Commands, February 1974
       DECsystem-10 Monitor Calls, June 1973
	MACRO	An older 2-pass assemblier with good macro facilities
	MIDAS	MIT's assembler for the PDP-10

Maintained by RMS and MRC.

	Access:
		R MIDAS

     MIDAS is a two-pass assembler for the PDP-10.  While not as fast
as FAIL, it has considerably better error diagnostics and a much more
powerful macro facility.  It is, of course, worlds ahead of MACRO-10.
MIDAS comes from MIT, and is their standard assembler the way FAIL is
the standard assembler here.

     MIDAS also has the capability to generate FASL files for MAC LISP,
for those LISP hackers who need assembly language routines in their
LISP environment.

     MIDAS is accessed in the way most compilers and assemblers are.
The simplest way to compile a MIDAS program is with the COMPILE, LOAD
and EXECUTE monitor commands.

     The MIDAS language is documented in MIDAS.MRC[UP,DOC].
MIDAS  OLD   1  3   26.6 12-NOV-77 2324 000   1MRC MIDAS  12-NOV-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
MIDAS  DMP   1  3   26.7 12-FEB-78 0828 000   1MRC MIDAS  22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
	PALX	PDP-11 assembler

Maintained by RMS.

	Access:
		R PALX

     PALX is a PDP-11 source code assembler for the PDP-10.  This
program comes from MIT, and is considered better than the DEC-supplied
MACY11 program.
PALX   OLD   1  3    6.9 14-SEP-77 0908 000   1MRC PALX   22-OCT-77 03-OCT-77 P981>
	MIX
    Algebraic Languages

PRUNE.DAT[3,2] listings
BAIL  	      	      	SAIL debugger
FAIL  	      	      	PDP-10 machine language assembler
FASBOL	      	      	Dialect of Snobol4
LISP  	      	      	Pointers to documentation of various LISP dialects
SAIL  	      	      	Dialect of ALGOL
SNOBOL	      	      	String processing language--see FASBOL
	SAIL	The standard AI lab. ALGOL based languague
        PASCAL  An ALGOL-60 based languague developed by N. Wirth.

Maintained by nobody at present.

For information about the peculiarities of the SAIL Pascal compiler,  type
READ PASMAN.  To find out about other documentation, type READ PASCAL.  To
learn the language, see the Pascal  Report by Wirth (can usually be  found
at the bookstore), or take CS105 or CS106.

To use, type 
    EXECUTE FOO.PAS

The more common  COMPILE class  commands work  as expected,  but the  user
should be warned that there are still some peculiarities in the way  these
commands interface to PASCAL.

The newer  version was  put up  at SAIL  by Armando  Rodriguez (ARR),  now
departed, who also put up a version  at LOTS and SCORE called PASGO  which
is used by students  and which produces a  runnable core image instead  of
having to be linked.  The current compilers came via LOTS from DECUS,  and
claims to be the '30-DEC-76' version from Hamburg.

	BASIC
	AID
	WISE
	FORTRAN 40
    LISP languages List Processing Languages

Currently, the only LISP that is maintained is MACLISP, the MIT dialect.
Help for that version and other goodies can be found by doing "HELP
MACLISP" or by reading LISP.RPG[S,DOC] and LSPARC.RPG[UP,DOC].  MACLISP is
run on this system with the command:  LISP.

Other LISPs available at the AI Lab are: LISP 1.6, ILISP, MLISP & MLISPC (a
compiler for MLISP), and RLISP.
	MACLISP Standard AI Lab Lisp programming language.

	One can run MACLISP  by saying R  MACLSP; allocation is  much
the same as in the other local  LISPs. To input a file named  FOO.BAR
one says: (UREAD  FOO BAR) or  (UREAD FOO BAR  DSK (BLE TCH)).   This
opens the file in  the correct mode but  does not begin reading.   In
order to read the file, one must set the flag ↑Q (control-Q) to T, by
either (SETQ ↑Q T), (IOC Q), OR ↑Q typed to the toplevel of  MACLISP.
When the file is complete, the TTY becomes the input device. To  read
from a file within  a program, one  does the same  thing, but the  ↑Q
option fails. Unfortunately, UREAD assumes a non-E file. To UREAD  an
E-file (or a non-E file for that matter) one can use EREAD.  When one
does (EREAD FOO  BAR) (SETQ ↑Q  T), then all  MACLISP read  routines,
such as (READ),(TYI), &  (TYIPEEK) will read  from the selected  disk
file.
	To write to a file one does (UWRITE) with no arguments;  this
opens a file for writing with a name like 019RPG.LSP where 19 is  one
of your job numbers and RPG is your PN. ↑R is the flag for output  to
disk. Note that this does not shut  off output to the screen; use  ↑R
for that. Now one must name the output file by doing (UFILE FOO BAR),
which deletes any files  with the same name,  and renames the  output
file to FOO.BAR. As with EREAD, all print routines will now print  to
the selected file.
	Sometimes you may  encounter an error, and a  breakpoint will
occur.  Usually the information that  is typed will alert  you to the
cause of the error; if  not, you should read HELP.DOC[AID,RPG] for  a
description of the  debugging possibilities. However, to  get back to
the  toplevel of MACLISP  you type: ↑G or  (IOC G).   If the error is
unbound variable, one can say (RETURN '(<VALUE>)) to continue.
	A very useful file  to have is  HELP.FAS[MAC,LSP] if you  do:
(HELP),(FASLOAD HELP FAS DSK  (MAC LSP)), or COPY  this file to  your
directory and do (FASLOAD HELP) an "AUTOLOAD" property will be set up
for all of the interesting functions mentioned in  HELP.DOC[AID,RPG].
An AUTOLOAD property is a property  list entry which has a file  name
as its value. If one tries to apply the function with this  property,
and there is no such function, MACLISP will FASLOAD the file and then
try to apply the function once  more, the point being that this  file
should contain a FASLOADable definition of the function.
        A feature of  BIBOP is  that  EREAD  and  HELP  already  have
autoload   properties  set  up  from  the   outset,  so   that  doing
(EREAD FOO BAR) will work, and (HELP) will load the HELP features.
        At  this point you  may wonder  what FASLOAD  means. Normally
when one compiles LISP, one gets in  return a LAP file which is  then
read in with a  small resident assembler. This is  indeed possible to
do  in  MACLISP, but  the compiler  can  also assemble  the  LAP file
directly into  a  relocatable file  which  can  then be  loaded  into
MACLISP  with an  even smaller  resident loader.  The gains  are that
FASLOAD  file are an order of magnitude  smaller and load an order of
magnitude faster.
	The MACLISP compiler is called NCOMPLR  (for Number COMPiLeR)
and  is noted for  being the  "best" LISP  compiler in  existence. In
particular there are facilities for declaring the types of objects so
that a  fair amount of  open-coding is  possible; this is  especially
nice for numerical  computations (hence the "N" in NCOMPLR). For more
information on this either locate an old MACLISP manual or ask RPG or
WLS.
	To compile a file do:
		R NCOMPLR
		<target>←FN.EXT<(SWITCHES)>

The <target>  is optional  and defaults  accordding to the  switches.
Briefly the switches are:
	T 	Talk: verbose mode
	A	Assemble: take a .LAP file and assemble it
	F	Fasload: take a source file and compile & assemble it
	K  	Kill: take a source file and compile & assemble it but 
		kill the LAP file
The default names  are FN.LAP for a  compiled file and FN.FAS  for an
assembled file.  NCOMPLR understands ALIASes.
	Hopfully a new manual will appear from MIT, but for now there
are  three known manuals at  SAIL. RPG and  WLS have 1  each, and the
bookshelf which used to be  outside Lester's office has one. For  now
you    can    read    MACLSP.DM[UP,DOC]    HELP.DOC[AID,RPG],    and
LISP.NEW[AID,RPG], or ask RPG/WLS.
	LISP 1.6 Stanford AI Lab Lisp 1.6 System

The STANFORD A.I.  Lisp 1.6 System was originally an adaptation of one
developed by the Artificial Intelligence Project at M.I.T.  Since 1966,
that system has been largely rewritten by John Allen and Lynn Quam.

The documentation can be found on LISP16.WD[S,DOC]. LISP 1.6 can be run on
this system with the command R LISP
	MLISP Meta-notation LISP programming language

MLISP is a meta-notation for LISP.  It  makes LISP programs easier to read
and write.  MLISP is maintained by Dave Smith (DAV) and is described in AI
Memo AIM-135 (CS-179), available online as MLISP.DAV[AIM,DOC].

To interactively translate and execute MLISP expressions, type
	.R MLISP
	*<expression> ; <expression> ; ...

To translate and execute an MLISP program on a file, type
	.R MLISP
	*LISP;
	*(MLISP <filename>)

To translate an MLISP program and print out its LISP translation, type
	.R MLISPC
	*LISP;
	*(MLISP  <filename>  NIL)

To translate an MLISP program and compile it to LAP, type
	.R MLISPC
	*LISP;
	*(MLISP  <filename>  T)

A version of MLISP using UCI LISP exists.  Type "R MLISP.UCI" instead
of "R MLISP" or "R MLISPC".  However UCI MLISP does not contain the UCI
compiler, so programs to be compiled must first be translated to LISP
form and then compiled using the UCI compiler.
	MLISP2 LISP derivative programming language.

MLISP2 is a powerful AI language based on LISP/MLISP.  Capabilities
include backtracking, pattern-matching, and list-processing.  MLISP2
is maintained by Dave Smith and is described in AI MEMO 195,
available online as MLISP2.DAV[AIM,DOC].

To translate an MLISP2 program, type
	.R MLISP2 <core_size>
	*(PARSE <source_file>)

To translate an MLISP2 program and print out its LISP translation, type
	.R MLISP2.PRI <core_size>
	*(PARSE <source_file> <destination_file>)
		or
	*(PARSE <source_file> <destination_file> NIL)
The second alternative makes MLISP2 act like a compiler-compiler;
namely, it translates and prints without executing the translation.

To use MLISP2 (rather than LISP) as the top level notation, type
	.R MLISP2 <core_size>
	*(PARSE)
Exit from this mode by typing _EOF_
	ILISP UC Irvine Lisp

ILISP is the Stanford name for UC Irvine Lisp.  It is a version of
Stanford Lisp 1.6 with an in-core BBN-style editor and superior trace and
break facilities for debugging.  Detailed documention is available from
the Computer Science office at $3.50.  There is also a machine-readable
version of the documentation on IL.TVR[UP,DOC].

To run ILISP on the Stanford system, try R IL
	RLISP REDUCE Lisp

REDUCE is a program designed primarily for general algebraic computations
of interest to mathematicians, physicists and engineers.  However, its
source language is general enough to allow for a full range of LISP-like
symbolic calculations. A description of this source language is in
RLISP.ACH[UP,DOC]. Anyone interested in the general algebraic capabilities
of the system should consult the REDUCE 2 User's Manual {see
RLISP.ACH[UP,DOC]}.

Programming aids
	@ ATSIGN prepares a (compiler-like) cross-reference listing

Reference ATSIGN.RMS[UP,DOC]

Maintained by MRC

The @ program makes cross-reference listings of programs.  One or many
files can be listed together.  On each line will appear the file, page,
and line of the definition of a symbol referenced on that line.

Comparison listings can be made, containing only the pages changed since
the previous listing, for both programs and text-justifier output files.

* Menu:

* Basic::	Simplest usage of @, for programs.
* Output::	What @ output looks like, for programs.
* Text::	Simplest usage of @, for papers.
* Assembler::	What @ understands about assembler language.
* Lisp::	What @ understands about Lisp.
* Muddle::	What @ understands about Muddle.
* Quotes::	Quotes (') control whether files are listed.
* Switches::	What you can do with command line switches.
* Files::	What files are used, and their default names.
* Substitutions::  What to do when you move your source files.
ARPAnet programs

BH and MRC are good persons to help you with ARPA protocol if you have trouble
or fail to understand some of the following write-ups.

The follow programs are currently documented in the next few pages.
	HOST and HOSTAB		Examine the ARPAnet host table
	TELNET	Communicate with an ARPAnet host
	SUPDUP	Communicate with an ARPAnet host via SUPDUP display protocol
	OTN and NTN	OBSOLETE and ARCHAIC versions of TELNET
	IMSSS	Communicate with IMSSS
	FTP	File Transfer Program to transfer files over the ARPAnet
	HOSTAT	Report status of hosts on the ARPAnet
	IMPSTA	Report status of ARPAnet connections at SAIL
	TALK	Link to users at other hosts on the ARPAnet
	NETWHO	Report who is logged in on another host on the ARPAnet
	TIMES	Report on times from the network time servers
	DFTP and DCSTAT		Hack the CCA Datacomputer
	HOST and HOSTAB		Examine the ARPAnet host table

Written and maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		R HOST;host-name
		R HOSTAB

	If HOST is called with the host name in the command line,
	it will exit after completion.  Otherwise it will prompt
	for a new name; just ↑C out if done.

     The HOST program is used to look up information in the
host table about a particular host name.  This information
includes the official name of the host if the name is a
nickname, the host number (in both octal and decimal),
whether the host is a user or a server, the host machine and
the host operating system.

     When you run HOST, it will prompt with a sharp (#)
character.  Type the host name (or any abbreviation) you
want to look for.  The program will print all hosts (and
nicknames) which match the input specification.  When it is
done, it will prompt for another specification.  A null
specification types EVERYTHING (!!).

     Note that even non-unique abbreviations are accepted.
For example "SU" will print out ALL of the Stanford University
hosts.  This is different from TELNET, etc. which only accept
abbreviations which are unique to a single host.

     Note also the HOSTAB program, which pretty-prints the
host information using official names only in ascending
numerical order.  If you want a "host list", HOSTAB is
probably what you want.
HOST   DMP   1  3    302 20-FEB-78 2246 000   1MRC HOST   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
HOSTAB DMP   1  3    320 31-JAN-78 0159 000   1MRC HOSTAB 20-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
	TELNET	Communicate with an ARPAnet host

Written and maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		TELNET socket-number,host-name
		OTN socket-number,host-name

	The <CONTROL><META>Q command (or <CTRL>↑ Q on non-displays)
	closes the network connection and exits from TELNET.

     TELNET is used to communicate with other hosts on the ARPAnet.
Using TELNET, a user at a terminal here can log into a remote host.
The socket number argument is optional and can be omitted.  An
octal host number is legal instead of a host name.

     The TELNET command defaults to using socket 27 or the new
TELNET protocol.  The OTN command defaults to using socket 1 or the
old TELNET protocol.

     TELNET is described in full detail in TELNET.MRC[UP,DOC]
TELNET DMP   1  3    2.6 07-FEB-78 2105 000   1MRC TELNET 23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
	SUPDUP	Communicate with an ARPAnet host via SUPDUP display protocol

Written and maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		SUPDUP host-name

	The [ESCAPE] I Q command closes the network connection
	and exits from SUPDUP.

     SUPDUP is used to communicate with other hosts on the ARPAnet
using the SUPDUP display protocol as described in RFC 734 in the
ARPAnet protocol handbook.  The SUPDUP protocol is a highly
efficient display protocol which originated as the internal protocol
in the I.T.S. timesharing system for controlling MIT's display
terminals.

     Currently only we (SU-AI) and the I.T.S. systems at MIT (AI, ML,
MC, and DM) have SUPDUP servers; consequently SUPDUP is used primarily
to run as a display at MIT from here.  SUPDUP runs only on displays.

     SUPDUP is described in full detail in SUPDUP.MRC[UP,DOC]
SUPDUP OLD   1  3    8.9 29-JAN-78 1734 000   1MRC SUPDUP 29-JAN-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
SUPDUP DMP   1  3    8.9 20-FEB-78 0151 000   1MRC SUPDUP 23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
	IMSSS	Communicate with IMSSS

Maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		R IMSSS

	The <CONTROL><META>Q command (or <CTRL>↑ Q on non-displays)
	closes the linker connection and exits from IMSSS.  DO NOT
	CALL OUT SINCE IT WILL HANG UP THE LINKER UNTIL THE IMSSSS
	PHANTOM REALIZES IT IS FREE.

     The IMSSS program is used to talk to IMSSS' Tenex system in much
the same way as TELNET talks to Tenex systems.

     This program also provides a method of performing file transfer
from IMSSS.  The program may be replaced with another that will use
the Dialnet protocol.

     The IMSSS program is documented in IMSSS.JBR[UP,DOC]
	FTP	File Transfer Program to transfer files over ARPAnet

Maintained by MRC and BH.

	Access:
		FTP host-name
		FTP copy-spec (read the documentation)

	The QUIT command closes the network connection and
	exits from FTP.

     FTP is used to transfer files over the ARPAnet.  How to do so is
too complicated to describe here, but briefly the most important
commands are:

	GET local-file ← foreign-file
to snarf a file from a remote site and
	STORE local-file → foreign-file
to push a file from here to a remote site.

     FTP is documented in the monitor command manual and in NEWS[UP,DOC].
NEWS[UP,DOC] contains much information regarding the new "one-liner"
FTP copy specs which should be read.
	HOSTAT	Report status of hosts on the ARPAnet

Written and maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		R HOSTAT

     HOSTAT reads the ARPAnet survey information from MIT-DMS and
pretty-prints it on the user's console, listing hosts on the network
and what their current status (up, down, refusing, etc.) is.  It takes
no commands and it exits when done.
	IMPSTA	Report status of ARPAnet connections at SAIL

Written and maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		R IMPSTA

	Typing any character causes the program to exit.  The
	CONTINUE monitor command will continue its operation.

     IMPSTA reports the status of all the ARPAnet connections here at
SAIL in real-time.  On displays, it uses display programs to provide a
real-time snapshot of the status of the IMP at any given moment.  The
program is cyclic; on DD's and III's it updates every second, on DM's
it updates every 5 seconds.  On non-displays it merely prints the entire
status every 20 seconds.

     The information output by IMPSTA and the format it is in is
documented in IMPSTA.MRC[UP,DOC].
	TALK	Link to users at other hosts on the ARPAnet

Written and maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		TALK;user%host

	The <CONTROL><META>Q (or <CTRL>Z on non-displays) character
	will break the link and network connection and exit from TALK.

     The TALK program allows users to link to a user on another host
on the ARPAnet.  The link is set up as character-at-a time.  On displays,
one can switch to the line editor with the <META>L command, or switch
back to character-at-a-time with the <CONTROL><META>L command.

     Any host which supports RS EXEC (ie, Tenex, I.T.S., Multics, and
SAIL sites) will support network links.
TALK   OLD   1  3    1.5 09-JAN-78 0446 000   1MRC TALK   09-JAN-78 23-JAN-78 P1050>
	WHO	Report who is logged in on another host on ARPAnet

Written and maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		R WHO;host

     The WHO program prints a short status summary of the users
who are logged in at that remote host.  Any host which supports the
RS EXEC protocols will support network WHO's.
	TIMES	Report on times from the network time servers

Maintained by MRC.  Original version by KLH%SRI-KL.

	Access:
		R TIMES

     The TIMES program is a demonstration program of the ARPAnet time
protocol.  It calls up the hosts which support the ARPAnet time
protocol, asks them for their idea of the time, and prints it out.
Currently these hosts are: AMES-67, MIT-AI/ML/MC/DM, SU-AI.
TIMES  DMP   1  3    273 12-FEB-78 0941 000   1MRC TIMES  21-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
	DFTP and DCSTAT		Hack the CCA Datacomputer

Maintained by MRC.

	Access:
		R DFTP
		R DCSTAT

	The QUIT command to DFTP (which requires two carriage returns
	for confirmation) closes the network connection and exits from
	DFTP.

     DFTP is the "Datacomputer File Transfer Program" and is used to
store and retrieve files from the CCA Datacomputer.  DFTP is documented
in detail in DFTP.MRC[UP,DOC] and this document MUST be read by any
prospective user of DFTP.

     DCSTAT prints a "prerecorded" status message about the current
state of the Datacomputer from CCA and exits.
DFTP   OLD   1  3    9.0 23-NOV-77 2354 000   1MRC DFTP   07-DEC-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
	DDHACK	To control DD displays from remote ARPA hosts

Maintained by DEA

To use type R DDHACK

Documentation in DDHACK.DOC[I,DEA]

DDHACK implements the TELNET protocol and talks directly to the remote
host over the network.

When DDHACK starts, it prompts for a host, and the user may type in any host
name (host numbers and special sockets are not implemented).  DDHACK will connect
to the host using the regular TELNET ICP socket.

	The program provides access to any one of the 16 page printers available
to a job running on a display terminal.  The user, or the program running
on the PTY may, through issuing appropriate commands, select a page printer
to recieve text, display selected page printers, and control the screen position
and the number of lines in each page printer.

	The program also provides 10 buffers for inserting data disc display
programs.  These programs are constructed out of text sent to the program
from the PTY.  The user, or the program, may define a screen "window" associated
with each buffer by specifying the top line of the window, its width in characters
and its starting column.  Commands may be issued by either program or user
to run the display programs for selected windows at any time.  Data can be
moved from one buffer to another.  When data being sent to a selected buffer
causes the buffer to overflow, the next buffer in numeric sequence is selected
as the current buffer with the same characteristics as the former buffer,
and the rest of the data is transfered to the newly selected buffer.
[In the future, the user may designate certain buffers as "protected"]

Debugging Aids

DDT    DMP   1  3    3.9 10-MAY-76 2338 000 ACTREG DDT    08-DEC-76  25-MAY-76 P698>
UEDDT  DMP   1  3    4.9 05-DEC-76 1745 000   1JBR UEDDT  08-DEC-76  07-DEC-76 T20  
FRAID  DMP   1  3    8.1 30-NOV-76 2006 000   1JBR FRAID  09-DEC-76  04-DEC-76 P805 
PSEG   DMP   1  3    8.9 09-DEC-73 0151 000   XAIL COPY   06-JAN-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
RAID   DMP   1  3    7.9 30-NOV-76 2004 000   1JBR RAID   09-DEC-76  04-DEC-76 P805 
.sect Cross Reference Programs
ATSIGN DMP   1  3   15.0 12-OCT-76 2018 000   1 RG ATSIGN 04-DEC-76  23-OCT-76 P781>
CREF   DMP   1  3    1.7 30-JUL-76 1343 005   1JFR LOADER 24-NOV-76  16-AUG-76 P743>
GLOB   DMP   1  3    1.1 15-SEP-72 1408 000 CSPSYS        27-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
GRUMP  DMP   1  3    1.5 28-SEP-76 2022 000   1JFR GRUMP  09-DEC-76  09-OCT-76 P774>
SOLO   DMP   1  3    1.4 10-JUL-76 0351 000   1JBR SOLO   02-DEC-76  25-JUL-76 P731>
	RAID	An interactive debugging aid (also FRAID).

Maintained by JEFF Rubin

Reference: RAID.PMP[S,DOC]

To use: Load your program using the /V or /H switch or use the SNAIL
	commands, PREPARE, TRY or DEBUG (see below).

    RAID is an interactive debugging program that uses the displays
and allows dynamic monitoring of memory locations.  RAID lives in
core with your program and allows you to do various things with and
to your program, such as stop at selected places and examine your
core image, etc.  The major advantage of RAID over DDT is that RAID
uses the displays to give you a constantly updated view of selected
locations in core.  It also can be used from a teletype, typing only
those lines that have changed since last time it wanted to display
something. 

    It is possible to use RAID in a stand-alone fashion, for writing
small programs on the spot, or finding the octal representation of
something, for example.  The monitor command R RAID
calls in a fresh copy of RAID and starts it up.

    SNAIL knows about RAID; the PREPARE, TRY, and DEBUG commands cause
RAID to be loaded with your program.  This saves you the trouble of
remembering the loader switches.

    The loader will load RAID with your program if you use the /V or
/H switch.  This saves you the trouble of explicitly loading
RAID.REL[1,3].  For example if the binary file for your program was
called FNORP, the loader command /VFNORP$ (where $ means alt-mode)
would cause the loader to load RAID with your program.  If you put
this switch after the name of your file, it is also necessary to tell
the loader to load your program symbols; this is done with the /S
switch.  Here are some sample commands to load FNORP:

/SFNORP/V$	  (Load symbol table, then RAID)
/VFNORP$	  (Load RAID, then FNORP, then symbol table)

    It is sometimes a good idea to put RAID after all the code, so
addresses in the core image will be close to where they would be
without the RAID. This helps if you are debugging a copy without RAID
in parallel to one with RAID.

    Once you have your program and RAID in core, you must get into
RAID. This is done by typing DDT<cr> to the system.  This is because
the system can't tell the difference between RAID and DDT. It is also
possible to enter RAID by hitting a breakpoint (ways to set and clear
breakpoints are discussed later) or by jumping to RAID's starting
address (this is the global symbol DDT, and it can also be found in
the right half of JOBDDT).

    When RAID is entered, the display screen flashes and the RAID
display will appear.  The duplexing of keyboard input moves down to
the bottom of the screen.  RAID is now ready to accept commands.  

FRAID

    There is also a version of RAID for examining files; it is called
FRAID.  The monitor command R FRAID calls in a fresh copy and starts
it up.  FRAID first asks if the file to be examined is a DMP file (if
so, the starting address will be noted and FRAID will look for a
symbol table) and whether the file is to be modified.  If FRAID is
run in file-modify mode, all changes made in the core version of the
file are immediately written onto the disk. 

    All of the commands that run a job and set and clear breakpoints
are illegal in FRAID.  Furthermore, if the file is a dump file, locations
0 through 73 are non-existant.  There are a few commands that work only
in FRAID or which have different meanings in FRAID.  These are:

  αS	Simulates setting $IO to -1.  Causes I/O instructions to be typed out

  βS	Simulates setting $IO to 0.  Causes I/O instructions to not be typed out

  εE	Exits from FRAID.  RELEASES the file after finishing all modifications.
Conversion Programs

.chapter publications and fonts
.sect Formatting Programs
POX    DMP   1  3   25.9 19-OCT-76 0242 000   1REM PXGOOD 09-DEC-76  30-OCT-76 P785>
.reference(XGP Programs,POX)
PUB    DMP   1  3   45.0 22-AUG-76 0002 005   1JFR PUB    09-DEC-76  08-SEP-76 P756>
PUB2   DMP   1  3   11.1 30-JUN-76 2303 000   1JFR FRAID  09-DEC-76  11-JUL-76 P720>
RUNOFF DMP   1  3    2.1 12-DEC-74 1519 000  11 BO RUNOFF 20-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
XAP    DMP   1  3   15.1 23-MAR-74 2104 000   1BGB XAP    16-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
.reference(XGP Programs,XAP)
XIP    DMP   1  3   12.9 01-JUL-76 0907 000  MAJAM XIP    07-DEC-76  11-JUL-76 P720>
.reference(XGP Programs,XIP)
TXTF80 DMP   1  3   1023 20-MAR-72 2221 000 F80RHT        06-JAN-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
COLIST DMP   1  3    3.9 14-NOV-74 1718 000 ACTREG COLIST 05-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.sect XGP Programs


COMBIN DMP   1  3    6.1 23-DEC-75 2001 000 XGPTVR COMBIN 06-DEC-76  05-JAN-76 P632>
CRAM   DMP   1  3    1.9 21-JAN-74 2245 000   ISRS COPY   24-SEP-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
F      DMP   1  3   32.9 08-NOV-76 1641 005 XGPTVR F      20-NOV-76  20-NOV-76 P800>
FCOPY  DMP   1  3   13.9 11-JUL-76 0454 005 XGPTVR FCOPY  09-DEC-76  25-JUL-76 P731>
FOLMRG DMP   1  3   10.2 01-DEC-76 2109 000 SHOREF FOLMRG 08-DEC-76  02-DEC-76 T16  
FREEFO DMP   1  3    5.9 10-JAN-75 1705 000   SLES FREEFO 05-SEP-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
INDEX  DMP   1  3    4.6 03-DEC-74 1713 000  NS ME INDEX  06-SEP-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
KWIC   DMP   1  3   36.9 07-FEB-74 1852 000   SLES KWIC   24-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
TENGWR DMP   1  3    6.3 13-OCT-76 0620 000 234DON TENGWR 02-DEC-76  30-OCT-76 P785>
TJ6PUB DMP   1  3   12.6 06-JAN-75 1407 000 MITMLM TJ6PUB 23-JUN-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
XEROX  DMP   1  3    6.1 25-MAR-73 1814 000   DLES XEROX  08-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
XGPTYP DMP   1  3    6.5 19-JUL-76 1829 000   SLES XGPTYP 08-DEC-76  01-AUG-76 P735>
XGPVID DMP   1  3   13.9 16-AUG-73 1143 000 GEMTVR COPY   01-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
File duplicating programs

COPY

A major group of commands runs the COPY program.  Their arguments are
generally in the form "new-file ← old-file":

  COPY     copy a file
  TRANSFER copy and delete the original
  RENAME   rename a file or change protection

The following COPY commands imply  a destination, and take just one  or more
input file specifications (separated by commas if more than one):

  DELETE   delete a file
  TYPE     copy to the terminal
  LIST     copy to the line printer (SPOOL, below, is preferred)
  PRINT    copy to the line printer, different format options
  XGPLIST  copy to the Xerox Graphics Printer (XSPOOL is preferred)
  DIRECTORYtype file directory

The COPY manual  explains these commands  fully, along with  various options
specified in the argument list; see Appendix 2 of the Monitor Command Manual.

While it is possible to use the copy command to make listings, this should
be done only on an emergency basis.  Use the SPOOL commands (see below).

SPOOL

Since only one  job can use the  line printer or XGP  at a time,  if several
people want  to make  listings at once  there is  a scheduling  problem.  To
solve this,  the system allows  listing requests to  be stored on  disk, and
processed one at a time by spoolers which actually control the LPT  and XGP.
The system commands for this function are:

  SPOOL    request line printer listing of specified file(s)
  XSPOOL   request XGP listing of specified file(s)
  UNSPOOL  delete a spooler request
  QSPOOL   type out spooler status and queues

The  SPOOL  commands also  allow  editing  options to  be  specified  in the
argument list; see Appendix 3 of the Monitor Command Manual for details.
	COPY

Reference: COPY.RPH[S,DOC] or Monitor Command Manual Appendix 2.

COPY  reads data  from the  logical file(s)  indicated by  the  source term,
performs any operations requested by the switch term(s), and writes the data
on  the  logical  file  indicated  by  the  destination  term.   Any listing
information goes to the list term.

Dev and p,pn are sticky in the source; that is, if they are absent, the last
one specified is used.   The default device is  DSK and the default  p,pn is
blank (those of the current job).

A single * may be substituted for any of the following:

  filnam
  ext
  p
  pn

A * in the source term means "all."  A * in the destination term means "same
as in source file being transferred."

If filnam.ext  is absent in  the destination term,  *.* is assumed.   If the
destination  filnam.ext are  specified (no  *'s), all  source files  will be
concatenated into one big file with that name.

For example:

COPY DING←FOO,BAZ

would cause a file named DING  to be created on your disk area  comprised of
the files FOO and BAZ from your  area.  If filnam.* or *.ext is used  in the
destination term, the source files  will be copied onto the  destination one
by one with the new filename or extension.  <destination term>← may  be left
out and DSK:*.*← will be  assumed.  For source terms with  directory devices
you must specify the filnam.ext.

If you try to write on top of a file which already exists, you will be given
the option  of deleting  it or  not.  If any  of the  source files  you have
specified do not exist, you will be informed and given the proper option.

If a string of source descriptors is specified, the string is  executed from
left to right.

You cannot write a  file in two different modes  (e.g.  FIL1←TTY:,DSK:FIL2).
However FIL1←TTY:,DSK:FIL2/ASCII is quite acceptable (/ASCII causes the data
mode to be 0).  Data modes are explained in the UUO Manual.

The <spec  term> construct causes  the scanner to  continue scanning  in the
file specified by the term.  The term must indicate a unique file.  When end
of file occurs the scanner again reads from the terminal.  No spec terms may
appear  in the  file.   Switches preceding  the  "@" are  treated  as sticky
switches.  Switches following  the "@" are  treated as sticky  switches only
while reading from  the indirect file.   In a sense  the indirect file  is a
"program block."  Upon leaving the  "block" all defaults are reset  to those
in force just before the "@".   A device name and p,pn may precede  the "@",
in which case the defaults are  changed to those, but no operation  is done.
The  device  and p,pn  used  in the  spec  term do  not  affect  the current
defaults.

The \<filehack selector> construct for a term is a special shorthand feature
to  allow commonly  referenced files  which would  normally require  a large
amount of typing to  be entered quickly.  The  following is a list  of legal
filehack selectors and what they are short for (<prg> stands for the current
programmer name right justified).  Only enough letters to  uniquely identify
the name among those in this list need be typed.

  Filehack
  Selector File selected       What for?

  MSG      <prg>.MSG[2,2]      Current user's mail file
  MAIL     <prg>.MSG[2,2]      Current user's mail file
  PLAN     <prg>.PLN[2,2]      Current user's plan file
  PLN      <prg>.PLN[2,2]      Current user's plan file
  NAP      <prg>.NAP[2,2]      Current user's NS notification file
  NS       <prg>.NAP[2,2]      Current user's NS notification file
  RPG      *.RPG[*,<prg>]      All of current user's RPG files
  OPTION   OPTION.TXT[*,<prg>] All of current user's option files
  DOWN     MAINT.TXT[2,2]      System downtime forecast
  DIGEST   DIGEST[2,2]         Latest A.P. news digest
  NOTICE   NOTICE.TXT[2,2]     System message file
  GRIPES   GRIPES.TXT[2,2]     System gripe file
  DAY      DAY.TXT[2,2]        Daily birthday or holiday message

The ∂{<pn>|*} construct  is another form  of shorthand for  referencing MAIL
files  (see   Appendix   4  of   the  Monitor   Command   Manual,  in   file
MONCOM.BH[S,DOC]).   If no  argument follows the  ∂ then  the current user's
mail file is indicated.   If <pn> is used,  it means that user's mail  file.
And lastly, if *  is used the file NOTICE.TXT[2,2] is  selected (this is the
public mail  file).  The default extension (.MSG) and PPN ([2,2]) implied by
∂ can  be explicitly  overridden, e.g., ∂PRG.PLN  will get  user PRG's  plan
file.

There is a page counter in COPY which monitors ASCII output for  form feeds.
When a form feed is encountered, the counter is incremented.  If a page list
is used in a term, N is taken as the starting page of this output and  M (or
N  if M  is absent)  as the  ending page.   Output is  only active  when the
counter is within the range of the page list (e.g., LIST COPY(21) would list
page 21 of  the file COPY).   When the end of  the first term  is exhausted,
control  is  transferred  to  the  next term,  and  so  on  until  the right
parenthesis is reached, at which point output ceases.  If more than one file
is indicated,  the page  list is re-scanned  for each  one.  Page  lists are
never sticky.  An  asterisk (*) may  be used in a  page list instead  of the
final page number, to denote the last page, e.g., LIST COPY(3:*)  would list
all but the first two pages of the file COPY.

Switches will  be described in  a section  of their own.   See /LIST  for an
explanation of "list term."

Logical device  names may be  used, but all  switches apply to  the physical
device.  The following are legal physical devices for the copy command:

            DSK     UDPn    DTAn    MTAn    TTYn
            LPT     XGP     PTR     PTP     TTY

When the  special character ↓  (↑A on Teletypes)  appears, the  scanner will
read the line character-by-character without interpretation until the next ↓
(or  ↑A).   This is  useful  for allowing  non-alphameric  characters  to be
included in filenames, e.g., editor or spooler temporary files.

For numeric input there is always a default radix (either decimal or octal).
Sometimes, however,  it is desirable  to force one  or the other.   A number
preceded  by  a single  quote  is  always interpreted  in  octal.   A number
preceded by a double quote is always interpreted in decimal.
	SPOOL, XSPOOL, QSPOOL and UNSPOOL, [LIST] and [XSPL]

Reference: SPOOL.REG[UP,DOC] (updated 19-NOV-77)
	   Monitor Command Manual Appendix 3 (not completely up-to-date)

Spooling  provides a  method  of producing  line printer  listings  of files
without the usual disadvantage of tying up a user's job while the listing is
actually being done and without usurping the position of others using SPOOL.

(The following is taken from page 2 of SPOOL.REG[UP,DOC]

This file  documents the entire  spooler system  except for the  subroutines
available  for  making   spooler  command  files.    Those  subroutines  are
documented separately in the file SPSUB.REG[UP,DOC].  Documented here are:

	SPOOL	- Accept commands to spool files to the LPT.
	XSPOOL	- Accept commands to spool files to the XGP.
	QSPOOL	- Spooler status report program
	UNSPOOL	- Deletes spooled requests. Modifies PRINTR behavior
	[LIST]	- The actual LPT listing program.
	[XSPL]	- The actual XGP listing program.

To use the spooler,  a user must create commands  for it.  A command  is the
name of a file to list, and control switches.  Spooler commands  are created
by the monitor commands SPOOL and XSPOOL.

As an example of spooling, the monitor command

SPOOL SPOOL.REG[UP,DOC]

will cause the LPT spooler to list the file SPOOL.REG[UP,DOC].

Spooled listings are preceded by  a title page (except see  /NOTITLE below),
used to make  it easy to separate  different listings.  This  title includes
the file identifier,  the name of  the requestor and  his project-programmer
name, the current  date and time,  and the date and  time when the  file was
last written.   Programmer names are  read from the  file FACT.TXT[SPL,SYS].
Project  names   (of  which  there   are  few)  are   read  from   the  file
XFACT.TXT[SPL,SYS].

In the discussion below, "SPOOL" is used to mean either the command SPOOL or
the  command XSPOOL,  except as  noted.  SPOOL  makes requests  for  the LPT
spooler; XSPOOL makes requests for the XGP spooler.

To have  the spooler  make a  listing the  user must  tell the  spooler what
file(s) to print.  This easiest way to tell the spooler what to do is by the
monitor command SPOOL.  This command consists of the word SPOOL  followed by
the  name(s) of  the file(s)  to  be listed.   File names  are  separated by
commas.  Each file name may  be followed by switches, explained  below.  The
program SPOOL will send commands to the spooler.

Files to  be spooled are  specified in the  conventional way, by  file name,
extension, and optionally project-programmer name.

Asterisk, *,  may be  used to allow  matching of  any file  name, extension,
project name,  or programmer  name.  (RPG, DMP,  and REL  files will  not be
matched by * in the extension).

If no extension is  specified and the  file is not found,  it is then  tried
with .LPT or .XGP as the extension for SPOOL and XSPOOL respectively.

Switches are allowed either preceding or following the file  name.  Switches
that precede the name are sticky and will be applied to subsequent names.  A
switch consists  of a slash,  the switch name,  and sometimes,  a parameter.
For example, /REPEAT=5.

The following switches are available.  Note that most switches occur  in two
senses (e.g., delete and nodelete).  This allows an explicit switch  in some
term to override a sticky switch.

  Switch      Action

  DELETE      DELETE this file after printing.  The file protection
   NODELETE   of  this file  must be low enough so that the spooler
              can delete it.  The file must belong to the requestor
              (alias not allowed).
  NONUMBER    Omit SOS line numbers  from  the  listing.  "N" is an
   NUMBER     accepted abbreviation for NONUMBER.
  FORTRAN     The first character of each  line is interpreted as a
   NOFORTRAN  FORTRAN carriage control character.
  LPT100      The spooler will open the LPT in mode 100, instead of
   LPT0       the usual mode 0.  This changes some character codes.
  HEADING     Print a page heading at the top of each page.  "H" is
   NOHEADING  accepted as HEADING.   HEADING is the default for all
              files, except:
                  LST or DOC extensions,
                  any file from any area with programmer = DOC.
              The heading includes date, time,  filename, and  page
              numbers.
  TITLE       Precede the listing with a title page.   TITLE is the
   NOTITLE    default for all files.
  NARROW      Center the title page to fit an 8.5 inch wide page.
   NONARROW
  RECOPY      Copy the file to  [SPL,SYS]  and list the copy.  This
   NOCOPY     allows  the file to be edited while the listing is in
              progress.
  REPEAT=n    Make n copies of the listing.  (REPEAT is NOT sticky)
              COPIES=n is like REPEAT=n.
  EXTRA=n     Insert n extra line feeds in the listing  after every
              line feed in the file.  (EXTRA is NOT sticky).
  DUMP        Octal listing.  Data will be printed  as  octal  full
   NODUMP     words.  (OCTAL is an equivalent switch.)
  NOFF        Each line feed in the file is translated to  '177&'21
   FF         which causes single spacing with no form-feed between
              pages.
  NOWARN      Suppress "spooling done" typeout after listing.
   WARN
  ASK         Before making the spool command, SPOOL will  type the
              file name and wait for the user to answer with "Y" to
              spool the file.  (This is useful with *.* terms).
  HOLD=hhmm   The listing will be held in the queue  until the time
              specified by hh hours, mm minutes.   (24-hour time is
              assumed.)  If hhmm is prior to the current time, hhmm
              tomorrow is assumed. HOLD is not allowed with XSPOOL.
  MODE=n      Open the file in mode n (n is octal).

File specifications may be read  from an auxiliary file by including  in the
command line the name  of the auxiliary file  preceded by @.  This  file may
include file names and switches.
	TENDMP
	6TO10
Communication Programs
.chapter Communication -- The Mail System
MAIL   DMP   1  3   10.1 05-DEC-76 1857 000   1 ME MAIL   09-DEC-76  07-DEC-76 T20  
CANCEL DMP   1  3    942 06-FEB-76 1602 000   1 ME LOADER 08-DEC-76  23-FEB-76 P655>
RCV    DMP   1  3    4.5 27-SEP-76 1643 000   1 ME RCV    09-DEC-76  09-OCT-76 P774>

.chapter Conecting to Other Systems
.sect ARPA network
⊗c  DFTP   DMP   1  3    6.8 07-DEC-76 0414 000 NETMRC DFTP   09-DEC-76  07-DEC-76 T20  
⊗c  FTP    DMP   1  3    9.6 05-DEC-76 1856 000   1 ME FTP    09-DEC-76  07-DEC-76 T20  
⊗c  RSEXEC DMP   1  3    2.5 13-SEP-76 0025 000   GGFF RSEXEC 07-DEC-76  28-SEP-76 P767>

HOST   DMP   1  3    1.2 05-DEC-76 1855 000   1 ME HOST   07-DEC-76  07-DEC-76 T20  
.reference(Information on the ARPA net,HOST)

.sect Other Sites
⊗c  DIAL   DMP   1  3    2.5 14-JUN-76 0150 000   1JBR DIAL   09-DEC-76  27-JUN-76 P712>
   [P,TED]
HANG   DMP     42 28-NOV-73 1504
⊗c  IMSSS  DMP   1  3    2.8 26-APR-76 0356 000   1JBR IMSSS  09-DEC-76  10-MAY-76 P692>
cards /ibm 360
lots
	MAIL
MAIL   BH   UPDOC   19.1 21-JUN-76 1551 000   1 ME E      08-MAR-78 05-JUL-76 P717>
MAIL   OLD   1  3   10.2 08-SEP-77 1319 000   1 ME MAIL   14-FEB-78 27-SEP-77 P977>
MAIL   DMP   1  3   10.9 20-FEB-78 1937 000   1 BH MAIL   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
	FTP	EFTP
Demonstration programs
.chapter games
.sect Intelligent Games
.ssect1 Chess
.ssect1 Other Intelligent Games
TECH2  DMP   1  3   75.9 23-JUL-74 0228 000 105SGK TECH2  05-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
JOTTO  DMP   1  3   22.6 18-NOV-72 1801 000   FRPH JOTTO  09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
DOC    DMP   1  3   17.0 20-AUG-70 1432 000               04-DEC-76  08-SEP-75 P570>
DOCTOR DMP   1  3   47.0 23-NOV-76 1145 000 MACLSP DOCTOR 23-NOV-76  04-DEC-76 P805 
GO     DMP   1  3   25.6 21-MAR-73 1255 000  GOMAL GO     05-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
CHECKE DMP   1  3   26.7 11-JUL-72 1958 000 CH2SMG        12-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
KALAH  DMP   1  3   11.2 05-JUL-74 1418 000   1 BH COPY   14-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
IIIGO  DMP   1  3   20.6 21-MAR-73 1256 000  GOMAL IIIGO  06-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
DCHESS DMP   1  3    9.5 15-JAN-74 2211 000 NETGUE COPY   09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
LOA    DMP   1  3    4.5 23-MAR-72 0834 000   1GJA        23-AUG-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
.sect Graphics
.ssect1 III Graphics
.ssect2 III Games
SW     DMP   1  3    1.7 29-AUG-76 1938 000  SWREG FRAID  28-NOV-76  28-SEP-76 P767>
SWR    DMP   1  3    3.2 22-MAY-76 2014 000   1JBR FRAID  09-DEC-76  07-JUN-76 P704>
DF     DMP   1  3    3.3 26-JUN-76 1912 000   1PMF DF     06-DEC-76  11-JUL-76 P720>
3DFLY  DMP   1  3   11.6 27-APR-75 2042 000 CARHPM COPY   09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
BROOM  DMP   1  3    928 17-AUG-72 0112 000   1GJA        19-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.ssect2 III Displays
FRWK40 DMP   1  3    2.1 04-JUL-76 1130 000 THERHT FRWK40 10-NOV-76  18-JUL-76 P725>
PETAL  DMP   1  3   10.0 13-AUG-72 1812 000 SLSDCS        09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
DPYCLK DMP   1  3    384 15-JUN-71 0910 000               07-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
DPYHAX DMP   1  3    4.9 17-MAR-73 1458 000   2TVR DPYHAX 06-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
CHACK  DMP   1  3    768 15-MAR-70 0534 005               06-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
DIZZY  DMP   1  3     46 19-AUG-72 0804 000 MUSTVR        03-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
ARMDPY DMP   1  3   25.1 08-JUL-76 1328 000 GEMTVR FRAID  06-DEC-76  25-JUL-76 P731>
REPENT DMP   1  3    290 07-AUG-72 0039 000  SWREG        06-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
AMOEBA DMP   1  3    512 15-MAR-70 0537 000               06-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
DAZZLE DMP   1  3   10.0 28-FEB-73 0729 000 XGPTVR DAZZLE 03-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
HYPNO  DMP   1  3    768 19-JUL-72 1658 000   SREG        06-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
FIRWRK DMP   1  3    654 04-JUL-76 1045 000 THERHT FIRWRK 06-DEC-76  18-JUL-76 P725>
ADH    DMP   1  3    2.0 16-APR-74 0030 000 ACTREG ADH    06-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.ssect1 Data Disc Graphics
LIFE   DMP   1  3    9.4 08-MAR-76 0530 000   1PMF LIFE   04-DEC-76  22-MAR-76 P669>
RECKNU DMP   1  3   16.9 13-NOV-76 0154 000   1PMF RECKNU 06-DEC-76  04-DEC-76 P805>
.ssect1 Hard Copy Graphics
HEART  DMP   1  3   10.8 09-DEC-73 1608 000   SRHT HEART  23-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
BILLBD DMP   1  3   10.0 15-MAR-70 0537 005               08-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.sect Other Diversions
LITCRY DMP   1  3    1.9 06-DEC-75 1959 000   1RCC LITCRY 29-MAY-76  22-DEC-75 P623>
LESCAL DMP   1  3    4.6 30-DEC-74 0343 000   SLES LESCAL 22-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.reference(Information about the world, LESCAL)
PRN    DMP   1  3    1.2 30-APR-74 1743 000  SWREG PRN    09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
ORACLE DMP   1  3     84 01-NOV-75 0419 044   1MJC COPY   25-NOV-76  17-NOV-75 P605>
LIMRIK DMP   1  3    1.2 19-NOV-74 2244 000   1 BH LIMRIK 08-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
	Chess
CHESS  AKC  UPDOC    1.0 01-JUL-76 1355 000   1RSS E      02-MAR-78 11-JUL-76 P721>
TECH2  DMP   1  3   75.9 23-JUL-74 0228 000 105SGK TECH2  03-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
	An old version of a chess program written by Alan Baisley (AGB @ MIT-AI)
	find no other source of amusment.
	Checkers
	Go
GO     DON  UPDOC    512 20-FEB-77 0931 000   1DON E      21-FEB-78 10-OCT-77 P987>
GOGAME DMP   1  3   19.1 13-MAR-77 1748 000   1DON GOGAME 21-FEB-78 29-MAR-77 P871>
SAMPLE GO    1  3    255 13-FEB-77 1023 000   1DON GOGAME 17-FEB-78 26-FEB-77 P857>
	KALAH	Modern version of WARI, an ancient  African game

Brian Harvey  probably knows  as much  about this  program as  anyone
around although John McCarthy was  early involved in the  programming
of Kalah at MIT.

See KALAH.AKC[UP,DOC]

	To start the program type	R KALAH .
	Type QUIT to terminate the game

	Kalah is a game played by two persons.  The board consists of
12  pits (or holes) 6 on each side.  In addition there are two larger
oval shaped holes called kalahs.  The pits  and  kalahs  may  contain
stones  -  all  stones  are alike.  The starting board position has 6
stones in each pit and the kalahs are empty (while learning the  game
it  is better to start with a smaller number of stones e.g. 3 in each
pit). A move consists of picking up all the stones in any pit on your
own  side  and moving counterclockwise dropping one stone in each pit
or kalah as you go along (you never drop a stone into the  opponent's
kalah).   A stone, once played into a kalah is never moved out.   Two
simple rules help to make the game interesting (and  nontrivial).  1.
If the last stone falls into your kalah you play again.    2.  If the
last stone falls into an empty pit on your own side you  capture  all
stones  in  the opponent's pit opposite your pit and place your stone
and the captured stones into your kalah (you don't get  to  go  again
after  a  capture,  and  you  can't  capture if the opponent's pit is
empty).

	The objective of the game is to get more stones in your kalah
than the opponent can get in his.  The game ends if any one gets more
than  half the total number of stones into his kalah or if anyone has
no stones left in any of his pits (even if it is his opponent's  turn
to  move)  in  which  case  his opponent gets to keep all outstanding
stones.


	All commands are terminated by a carriage return.  In  almost
all  cases  it  is  sufficient  to  type  the  first character of the
command.

	Before each game the program asks three questions.
	(a)	START WITH 1,2,3,3,5 OR 6?
	(b)	WHAT LEVEL C,B,A, MASTER OR TOURNAMENT?
	(c)	DO YOU WISH TO START?

	The  program  can  play  at any of 5 levels.  At both C and B
levels it makes its moves almost instantaneously.   Level  A  is  the
standard setting (about 3 sec).  Master and tournament level settings
take about 6 and 15 sec compute times per move.   If you can beat the
tournament level consistently you may apply for a grandmaster ranking
(there is, as yet, no kalah grandmaster).
	If  the  computer's  move  requires several steps, after each
step the program types
		PLEASE TYPE <CR>
asking you to type a carriage return after after examining the move.


The game will be saved on file KALAH.OUT on your area.

KALAH  DMP   1  3   11.2 05-JUL-74 1418 000   1 BH COPY   21-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
KALAH  AKC  UPDOC    1.3 06-OCT-72 1907 000  UPDOC COPY   08-MAR-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
Recreation Programs
LINS   DMP   1  3    384 03-JAN-78 0131 000 105SGK FRAID  23-FEB-78 17-JAN-78 P1046>
	This program is the alternative source of system fortunes.  It
	is invoked by setting the COOKIE option to Login, and says something
	cute each time you log in.  It may be run by itself if the user can
	find no other source of amusment.
	ADVENTURE

	(EYEWASH)
	PARRY	A model paranoid			Sept. 1977

A natural language "understanding" program that pretends to be a paranoid if
you pretend to be a psychiatrist.  To run, say "R HARRY" and answer the
various questions about options any way you like, but type in upper case.
One good set of answers is: "Y", "M", "N", "N", "Y", "N".

Programmer:	KMC, BLF, etc.
Source file:	unknown (in MLISP)
Documentation:	William Faught, "Motivation and Intensionality in a Computer
		Simulation Model", Memo AIM-305, Thesis: Ph.D. in Computer Science,
		September 1977.
	CRYPTO	A bookkeeping program for use in solving puzzles.

A program to do the "bookkeeping" involved in solving cryptogram puzzles
(single-letter-substitution ciphers).
Not to be confused with the enciphering/deciphering program  CRYPT.

Runs on a DataDisc but can be used on other terminals.
Will create your own file of cryptograms.
Sample cryptograms available.

To use type R CRYPTO, to exit type QUIT or EXIT

Type READ CRYPTO for further details.

There is no PRUNE.DAT listing.

There is no HELP file.

Written by DON.
USEFUL SUBROUTINES
	OUTDPY	SAIL callable subroutine to display text

	title outdpy
	entry outdpy
	extern outstr,corget,correl

comment ⊗ (taken from OUTDPY.FAI[S,PMF]

This subroutine was written for dd's by pmf.  The iii and dm routines, along with
the column-positioning, was added by don on 4-May-78.

Outdpy is a sail-callable procedure for displaying text on datadiscs, iiis,
and datamedias.  The declaration within the sail program is:

require "outdpy.rel[s,pmf]" library;
procedure outdpy (string message; integer string_pos, pp_pos);

where:	message		is the text to be displayed
	string_pos	is the position where the first char should go (see below)
	pp_pos		is the position for the page printer (see below)

Lines which are partially occupied by the message will be cleared to right
margin; this will not  be the case  for blank lines in  the text.  To  get
them truly blank, include at least one space character.

If the terminal is  not a display, the  sail function "outstr" is  invoked
instead.

The value of string_pos should  be x,,y (i.e. (x lsh  18)+y) where x is  a
column and y is a  line.  Columns are numbered from  1 to n (n depends  on
the display type); a  column of zero  will put text  at the standard  left
margin (column 2 on dd's  and iii's, column 1  on dm's); a column  greater
than the right margin (99 is  big enough regardless of the terminal  type)
will put text  at the column  used for  "Page xx" by  the "copy"  program.
Only the first  line of text  starts at the  specified column;  subsequent
lines, if any, will start at  the standard left margin.  Meanwhile,  lines
are numbered from  0 (system wholine)  through m (again  depending on  the
terminal).  Line 3 is  the standard "first  line", 2 is  the line used  by
"copy" for page  numbers, etc.   Finally, if string_pos  is negative,  the
screen is erased  before the display  is done, and  the absolute value  is
used to determine the x/y coordinates for the text.

The value of pp_pos  should be a  line number, where  0 again denotes  the
system wholine.  If pp_pos is negative, the page printer is positioned  to
leave |pp_pos| blank lines  between the last line  of the message and  the
first line of the printer.  The size of the page printer is set to  extend
as near as  possible to the  bottom of  the screen, with  the glitch  size
being the default for the particular terminal (4 for dd's, 2 for iii's,  3
for dm's) unless this would result in  only 1 glitch per screen, in  which
case a smaller glitch is used.

⊗;
UNSORTED
	BUZZ	Terminal test					1967

Programmer:	JOE

Say "R BUZZ<cr>" then "<character><cr>" and it will type <character> many times.
Say "<character>=" and it types the octal code for <character>.  Either kind
of command can be repeated.
	DOCTOR	Eliza						1968

Programmer:	Joe Weizenbaum (MIT)
Documentation:	Numerous idiotic articles

Gives non-directive couselling.  Say "R DOCTOR<cr>" and it will say
"SPEAK UP!".  Thereafter, pretend that you are lying on a Psychiatrist's
couch and type whatever you like (assuming that you can type while lying
down) followed by TWO carriage returns.  Everything must be in UPPER CASE.
Multiple-line statements or questions are OK.
	P2P	Paper tape puncher			1973?

Programmer:	RPH
Documentation:	P2P.RPH[UP,DOC]

P2P is a program for reading, punching, and comparing paper tapes.  As an
added feature it will take any tape that can be loaded with the 20 loader
and punch a readin mode 20 loader at the beginning of it.  This allows you
to use the readin switch on the PDP-10 (the one on the PDP-6 doesn't do
the same thing).  Also it will punch a test pattern so that you may see if
the punch is dropping any bits.

	A2E	ASCII to EBCDIC code conversion			Jan. 1973

Programmer:	Kevin Kay
Documentation:	A2E.KK[S,DOC]

A2E is a program for transferring files from the Stanford AI PDP-10 to an
IBM 360 Series machines. It will transfer files written in ASCII from the
PDP-10 to the System/360 and EBCDIC files from the System/360 to the PDP-10 .
	SHUFFL	Operating System test program

Programmer:	?

Used to test memory management in the timesharing system.  Say
R SHUFFL <core>
and this program will compute indefinitely, alternating its core size
between <core> pages and 2 pages.  This is intended to drive the operating
system crazy.
	CHACK & AMOEBA	III display hacks			1969

Programmer:	JAM

Log in on a III display, smoke a little grass, type "R CHACK" or "R AMOEBA"
and be dazzled.
	BILLBD	Billboard printer				Nov. 1966

Programmer:	Aram Grayson
Source file:	lost (written in Fortran)

Prints BIG on the line printer (one character per page).  Upper case only--
no digits or punctuation.

Say "R BILLBD<cr>" then type the message (remember, UPPER CASE) followed by
end-of-file (αβLF).
PRUNE.DAT[3,2] as of March 2 1978  (copy 1 to extract lines for redistrbution)
BINCOM	      	      	Program to compare binary files
CANCEL	      	      	Command to delete reminder requests
COMPIL	      	      	Command to compile programs
COPY  	      	      	Program to copy files, list directories, etc.
CRE   	      	      	Contour-Region-Edge program to process TV pictures
CREF  	      	      	Program to produce cross-reference listings from compilations
DART  	      	      	Program to dump and restore disk files on magnetic tape
DDKEY 	DPY   	      	*** Prints Data Disc escape commands on the XGP
DISPLA	      	      	Information on the use of display terminals
DMKEY 	DPY   	      	*** Prints Datamedia escape commands on the XGP
DO    	      	      	Program to execute commands from a file
DRAW  	      	      	Lists sources of logic drawing system information.
EVENT 	      	BH    	Notify users of coming events
EXT   	      	      	Lists standard extensions for disk file names
FILES 	      	      	Basic information on disk file naming and manipulation
FIND  	      	      	Program to locate a text string in a file
FINGER	      	      	Program to see names and locations of logged-in users
FTP   	      	      	Program to transfer files over ARPA network
GEOMED	      	      	Geometric editor to manipulate picture files
GRIPE 	      	      	Command to complain about system problems
GUEST			What you can do without logging in
HELP  	      	      	Tells how to use HELP program and suggests basic HELPers
HOST  	      	      	Program for info on ARPA host names and numbers
IIIKEY	DPY   	      	*** Prints III escape commands on the XGP
LIST  	      	      	Commands to list files on line printer
MAIL  	      	      	Command to mail messages to other users
MONCOM	DMP   	      	Lists names of all monitor commands
PRUNE 	      	      	Program to help keep track of your files
RCV   	      	      	Program to read and edit your mail
REMIND	      	      	Command to enter a delayed message request
SEND  	      	      	Command to send a message to a logged-in user's terminal
SPOOL 	      	      	Command to list files on the line printer
SRCCOM	      	      	Program to compare text files
SYSTEM	      	      	Pointers to basic system documentation
TIP		BPM	Information on the SU-TIP
TTY   	      	      	How to use the system from non-display terminals
TYPE  	      	      	Command to list a file at your terminal
WHERE 	      	      	Program to list loged-in jobs of a particular user
WHO   	      	      	Program to display system status
WHOLIN	      	      	Information about "who line" on Stanford display terminals
ZERO  	      	      	Program to initialize disk or DECtape directory

PRUNE.DAT[3,2] as of March 2 1978 (copy 2 to hold for SRCCOM with later versions)
ALIAS 	      	      	Command to change default directory used for disk files
ASSIGN	      	      	Command to acquire use of non-sharable device
ATTACH	      	      	Command to attach terminal to a detached job
BAIL  	      	      	SAIL debugger
BINCOM	      	      	Program to compare binary files
CANCEL	      	      	Command to delete reminder requests
COMPIL	      	      	Command to compile programs
COPY  	      	      	Program to copy files, list directories, etc.
CRE   	      	      	Contour-Region-Edge program to process TV pictures
CREF  	      	      	Program to produce cross-reference listings from compilations
DART  	      	      	Program to dump and restore disk files on magnetic tape
DDKEY 	DPY   	      	*** Prints Data Disc escape commands on the XGP
DIR   	      	      	Command to list file directories
DISPLA	      	      	Information on the use of display terminals
DMKEY 	DPY   	      	*** Prints Datamedia escape commands on the XGP
DO    	      	      	Program to execute commands from a file
DRAW  	      	      	Lists sources of logic drawing system information.
DSKSIZ	      	JBR   	Program to tell user his disk allocation and usage.
ETEACH	DPY   	      	*** Runs E text editor, editing a special teaching file
EVENT 	      	BH    	Notify users of coming events
EXT   	      	      	Lists standard extensions for disk file names
FAIL  	      	      	PDP-10 machine language assembler
FASBOL	      	      	Dialect of Snobol4
FILES 	      	      	Basic information on disk file naming and manipulation
FIND  	      	      	Program to locate a text string in a file
FINGER	      	      	Program to see names and locations of logged-in users
FTP   	      	      	Program to transfer files over ARPA network
GEOMED	      	      	Geometric editor to manipulate picture files
GRIPE 	      	      	Command to complain about system problems
GUEST			What you can do without logging in
HELP  	      	      	Tells how to use HELP program and suggests basic HELPers
HOST  	      	      	Program for info on ARPA host names and numbers
IIIKEY	DPY   	      	*** Prints III escape commands on the XGP
KJOB  	LNK   	      	Command to log out of system (same as HELP LOGOUT)
LISP  	      	      	Pointers to documentation of various LISP dialects
LIST  	      	      	Commands to list files on line printer
LOGIN 	      	      	Command to log into system
LOGOUT	      	      	Program to log out of system (same as HELP KJOB)
MAIL  	      	      	Command to mail messages to other users
MONCOM	DMP   	      	Lists names of all monitor commands
POX   	      	      	Program to prepare text for Xerox Graphics Printer output
PRUNE 	      	      	Program to help keep track of your files
RCV   	      	      	Program to read and edit your mail
REMIND	      	      	Command to enter a delayed message request
SAIL  	      	      	Dialect of ALGOL
SEND  	      	      	Command to send a message to a logged-in user's terminal
SNOBOL	      	      	String processing language--see FASBOL
SPOOL 	      	      	Command to list files on the line printer
SRCCOM	      	      	Program to compare text files
SYSTEM	      	      	Pointers to basic system documentation
TALK  	      	      	Command to communicate with other users
TIP		BPM	Information on the SU-TIP
TTY   	      	      	How to use the system from non-display terminals
TYPE  	      	      	Command to list a file at your terminal
WHERE 	      	      	Program to list loged-in jobs of a particular user
WHO   	      	      	Program to display system status
WHOLIN	      	      	Information about "who line" on Stanford display terminals
ZERO  	      	      	Program to initialize disk or DECtape directory
DIR[1,3] as of 23-FEB-78 0931 (copy for extracting lines for distribution)
FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF

GLOB   DMP   1  3    1.1 15-SEP-72 1408 000 CSPSYS        02-JUL-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
TV     DMP   1  3   24.9 05-JUN-73 0130 000 SLSDCS COPY   27-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
FILES  GON   1  3    1.3 30-JUL-77 1853 000 SNDMMM E      25-NOV-77 21-AUG-77 P958>
DAEMON DMP   1  3    8.8 11-JUL-72 0424 000   S WD        05-JUL-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
PIX    DMP   1  3   36.9 19-FEB-78 2246 000 CARHPM PIX    22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
SAISG2 REL   1  3    6.2 27-JAN-72 1602 000   1  3 DAEMON 22-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
LISP   DMP   1  3    9.9 07-FEB-74 0123 000   SDWP LISP   23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
BINCOM DMP   1  3    4.7 11-MAR-77 2330 000   1PMF BINCOM 22-FEB-78 29-MAR-77 P871>
BAIMSC REL   1  3    1.9 16-FEB-77 1944 400   1JFR FAIL   23-FEB-78
HEADER DMP   1  3    5.0 31-JUL-76 2139 000 MIXMUZ HEADER 20-FEB-78 16-AUG-76 P743>
SAISG8 OLD   1  3   13.2 12-MAY-77 2325 005   1PMF COPY   12-MAY-77 31-MAY-77 P911>
BAIL   REL   1  3   16.9 12-FEB-77 0048 400   1JFR COPY   23-FEB-78
MLISP2 PRI   1  3   33.9 31-MAY-74 2114 000   1HJE MLISP2 22-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
PARRY2 DMP   1  3   70.9 08-OCT-76 1034 005 DIABLF PARRY2 17-FEB-78 23-OCT-76 P781>
WEAK   DMP   1  3   48.9 02-JUL-76 0006 000 LETDCO VERIFY 19-DEC-76 04-DEC-76 P805>
RCV    OLD   1  3    4.5 10-APR-76 2336 000   1 ME RCV    19-DEC-76 04-OCT-76 P770>
HE     DMP   1  3    6.3 07-NOV-74 1152 000   1KKP HE     21-FEB-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
SMG1   DPY   1  3    1.4 06-MAY-73 1603 000   2SMG COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
MEXPR  DMP   1  3   23.9 19-JAN-74 1847 000 L70DAV MEXPR  19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
SRCCOM OLD   1  3    3.3 11-DEC-76 1431 000   1DSB COPY   26-NOV-77 31-MAY-77 P911>
LIBSA8 OLD   1  3   26.6 25-FEB-77 0021 005   1PMF COPY   25-FEB-77 19-MAR-77 P866>
IL     SEG   1  3   15.0 17-FEB-75 1502 000   SDWP IL     22-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
PETAL  DMP   1  3   10.0 13-AUG-72 1812 000 SLSDCS        19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
COMPLR DMP   1  3   29.9 19-FEB-78 0130 000   S WD COPY   19-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
LISPDP REL   1  3    384 15-MAR-70 0533 000   1  3 DAEMON 19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
FRWK40 DMP   1  3    2.1 04-JUL-76 1130 000 THERHT FRWK40 02-APR-77 18-JUL-76 P725>
PICTUR DMP   1  3   20.8 12-NOV-74 1142 000   1KKP PICTUR 23-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
SCAN   REL   1  3    256 06-JUN-72 1744 000   1  3 DAEMON 23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
PCHECK DMP   1  3   29.9 10-APR-73 0901 000 CHE WD COPY   21-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
HEART  DMP   1  3   10.8 09-DEC-73 1608 000   SRHT HEART  14-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
MLISP2 DMP   1  3   33.9 31-MAY-74 2114 000   1HJE MLISP2 21-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
WILD   DMP   1  3    3.5 22-FEB-78 1550 005 PAPREF WILD   22-FEB-78 23-FEB-78 T20  
CM11   DMP   1  3    2.0 31-MAY-76 2223 000  11RGH CM11   22-APR-77 14-JUN-76 P707>
PTYOLD DMP   1  3    418 30-NOV-77 1620 000   1 ME PTYOLD 23-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>
S      OLD   1  3   36.9 12-JUN-77 1324 000  MAJAM S      30-JUN-77 11-JUL-77 P935>
COPY   OLD   1  3    6.3 25-MAR-77 1949 000   1 ME COPY   25-MAR-77 03-APR-77 P876>
PROFIL DMP   1  3    7.1 07-DEC-76 2329 005   1JFR PROFIL 14-FEB-78 18-DEC-76 P816>
CRYPT  OLD   1  3    421 19-MAR-75 2024 000 CARHPM COPY   24-AUG-77 04-SEP-77 P967>
FASBOL DMP   1  3   34.8 25-MAY-75 0553 000  CSMJC COPY   20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
SAIL   SEG   1  3   29.0 17-SEP-77 1650 000   1JFR SAIL   23-FEB-78 03-OCT-77 P981>
2OPS2  OPS   1  3    512 11-JUN-76 2130 005   1JFR MAKETA 23-FEB-78 27-JUN-76 P712>
DO     DMP   1  3    6.5 27-NOV-77 1720 000   1 ME DO     23-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>
MIX    DMP   1  3   19.3 06-FEB-76 1900 000   1DSB COPY   04-DEC-77 23-FEB-76 P655>
HELIB  REL   1  3   19.5 30-JAN-75 0957 000   1KKP BUILD  19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
SEGFND DMP   1  3    5.3 20-OCT-74 1613 000   SRHT SEGFND 19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
WL     OLD   1  3   68.9 13-OCT-77 1611 000   1TED WL     04-NOV-77 14-NOV-77 P1009>
OSNAIL DMP   1  3    5.0 08-OCT-76 1010 000 204MJC COPY   19-DEC-76 23-OCT-76 P781>
FASLIB REL   1  3   13.2 25-MAY-75 0547 000  CSMJC COPY   11-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
PDATZ        1  3   27.8 28-DEC-75 2132 005 PARBLF B      17-FEB-78 12-JAN-76 P635>
DDVID  DMP   1  3    9.4 05-SEP-74 0700 000   1PDQ COPY   06-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
REDH   FAP   1  3    950 17-NOV-77 0849 000   1ACH FTP    19-JAN-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
SOSLNK LAP   1  3    2.0 18-JUL-72 0618 000 CHE WD        14-APR-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
CROSS  DMP   1  3    8.2 08-AUG-75 0943 000 SYSSUZ COPY   19-FEB-78 08-SEP-75 P570>
SAIL   DMP   1  3   25.9 16-FEB-77 1913 000   1JFR SAIL   23-FEB-78 12-MAR-77 P861>
ORLISP DMP   1  3   21.9 01-OCT-73 2312 000   1ACH COPY   19-DEC-76 06-NOV-76 P789>
MLISP  DMP   1  3   23.9 13-NOV-74 1743 000 ENGHJE MLISP  22-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
MLISPC DMP   1  3   33.9 13-NOV-74 1745 000 ENGHJE MLISPC 23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
VERIFY DMP   1  3   77.9 23-FEB-78 0100 000   1RAK VERIFY 23-FEB-78 23-FEB-78 T20  
PLTVEC DMP   1  3   10.2 30-JAN-73 1617 000   SRHT PLTVEC 12-SEP-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
DOCTOR DMP   1  3   26.9 01-DEC-77 1526 000 AIDRPG DOCTOR 07-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>
LISP   LSP   1  3    891 19-FEB-78 0143 200   S WD COPY   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
CREF   DMP   1  3    1.7 26-FEB-77 1530 000   1 ME CREF   20-FEB-78 19-MAR-77 P866>
DAC    DMP   1  3    3.1 12-DEC-77 2336 000   1 KS DAC    23-FEB-78 27-DEC-77 P1033>
REDUCE DMP   1  3   49.9 17-NOV-77 1321 000   1ACH REDUCE 31-JAN-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
TRACE        1  3    896 18-JUL-72 0631 000   1  3        21-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
BAIMSC SM1   1  3    359 16-FEB-77 1944 000   1JFR PD8SM1 23-FEB-78 12-MAR-77 P861>
ARITH  LSP   1  3    138 07-FEB-77 1335 000 AIDRPG COPY   14-APR-77 19-FEB-77 P852>
WISE   OLD   1  3    6.9 24-FEB-72 1044 000   2RES        29-MAR-77 03-APR-77 P876>
TXTF80 DMP   1  3   1023 20-MAR-72 2221 000 F80RHT        19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
RUNOFF DMP   1  3    2.1 12-DEC-74 1519 000  11 BO RUNOFF 22-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
MP     DMP   1  3   24.7 14-FEB-78 1647 000 SAM JC MP     23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
SMG2   DPY   1  3    3.3 06-MAY-73 1657 000   2SMG COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
CHECKE DMP   1  3   26.7 30-MAR-77 1122 000   EALS CHECKE 07-FEB-78 10-APR-77 P880>
BAICLC REL   1  3    379 16-FEB-77 1944 400   1JFR FAIL   23-FEB-78
BIGNUM REL   1  3    1.5 25-JUL-72 1044 000   2ACH        30-APR-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
BAIIO1 REL   1  3    1.1 16-FEB-77 1944 400   1JFR FAIL   23-FEB-78
SAILDP SEG   1  3   29.0 05-JAN-77 1554 005   1JFR SAIL   19-JAN-78 22-JAN-77 P834>
HELP   MLI   1  3    256 06-APR-75 1815 000 DOCDAV E      10-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
MKVID  DMP   1  3    904 20-MAY-74 0541 000 GEMBGB MKVID  06-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
2OPS2  OLD   1  3    512 11-JUN-76 2132 000   1JFR COPY   19-DEC-76 27-JUN-76 P712>
LOADAV DMP   1  3   16.9 14-JUN-77 1621 005   1 RP LOADER 22-FEB-78 02-JUL-77 P931>
BAIIO2 REL   1  3    1.3 16-FEB-77 1944 400   1JFR FAIL   23-FEB-78
WL     DMP   1  3   68.9 15-NOV-77 1359 005   1TED WL     23-FEB-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
TSNAIL DMP   1  3   15.8 10-FEB-78 1615 000   1MJC COPY   18-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
SAISG8 SEG   1  3   13.2 12-MAY-77 2325 000   1PMF UPPER  23-FEB-78 31-MAY-77 P911>
DMDRD  OLD   1  3   13.5 02-OCT-77 1502 000   1 ME DMDRD  02-OCT-77 17-OCT-77 P990>
BAIPD8 REL   1  3     37 11-JAN-76 0032 005   1JFR FAIL   23-FEB-78 27-JAN-76 P641>
BAIPRC REL   1  3    1.0 16-FEB-77 1944 400   1JFR FAIL   23-FEB-78
SPOOL  OLD   1  3    3.2 27-DEC-77 0034 000   1 ME SPOOL  27-DEC-77 09-JAN-78 P1043>
BAIPRC SM1   1  3    189 16-FEB-77 1944 000   1JFR PD8SM1 23-FEB-78 12-MAR-77 P861>
MPLA   DMP   1  3    5.0 20-FEB-77 0726 000   1JMG MPLA   02-DEC-77 12-MAR-77 P861>
COMPLR FAP   1  3    7.4 25-NOV-77 1914 000 NETSYS F-DEC  30-JAN-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
CRE    DMP   1  3   10.4 13-FEB-74 2326 000 GEMBGB CRE    19-OCT-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
BAICLC SM1   1  3     55 16-FEB-77 1944 000   1JFR PD8SM1 23-FEB-78 12-MAR-77 P861>
PDRILL DMP   1  3    9.9 07-MAY-76 0301 005   1TAG PDRILL 27-DEC-76 25-MAY-76 P698>
CODE   DMP   1  3    3.5 16-OCT-72 0656 255   1  3 CODE   10-JUN-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
TECO   ERR   1  3    5.0 23-JUL-72 2103 255 CHE WD        21-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
BIGPIC DMP   1  3    2.7 06-MAY-72 1138 000   1DCS        27-OCT-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
3DFLY  DMP   1  3   11.6 27-APR-75 2042 000 CARHPM COPY   17-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
IIIGO  DMP   1  3   20.6 21-MAR-73 1256 000  GOMAL IIIGO  31-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
FORMAT DMP   1  3   23.9 17-FEB-78 0143 000   S WD COPY   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
HLBSA8 REL   1  3   26.9 12-MAY-77 2332 005   1PMF FUDGE2 11-FEB-78 31-MAY-77 P911>
INDENT DMP   1  3    8.3 29-JUL-72 1610 000 SLSDCS        19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
LCF    DMP   1  3   50.9 25-AUG-73 1431 000 MAMMAL COPY   21-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
LAP          1  3    2.2 18-JUL-72 0630 000   1  3        23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
GFPAK4 REL   1  3    256 02-AUG-72 1221 000   1ACH        19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
GLBSG8 SEG   1  3   14.9 26-NOV-75 2033 000   SRHT COPY   26-NOV-77 09-DEC-75 P615>
BAIIO1 SM1   1  3    190 16-FEB-77 1944 000   1JFR PD8SM1 23-FEB-78 12-MAR-77 P861>
CANCEL DMP   1  3    942 06-FEB-76 1602 000   1 ME LOADER 21-FEB-78 23-FEB-76 P655>
UTILS        1  3    2.9 08-JUL-76 1535 000   1RAK COPY   23-FEB-78 25-JUL-76 P731>
CRAM   DMP   1  3    1.9 21-JAN-74 2245 000   ISRS COPY   20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
MONUSE DMP   1  3    512 17-MAY-72 1646 000   1  3        29-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
MONITR DMP   1  3    3.5 06-MAY-72 1138 000   1DCS        09-MAY-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
BAIIO2 SM1   1  3    251 16-FEB-77 1944 000   1JFR PD8SM1 23-FEB-78 12-MAR-77 P861>
DAEMON OLD   1  3   18.0 26-MAY-71 1556 000   1  3        21-MAY-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
SMG3   DPY   1  3    726 06-MAY-73 1709 000   2SMG COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
ARITH  REL   1  3    288 07-FEB-77 1335 400 AIDRPG COPY   19-FEB-77
PUB    DMP   1  3   46.0 05-JUN-77 1857 005   1MJC COPY   23-FEB-78 25-JUN-77 P926>
PAL    DMP   1  3    3.3 12-SEP-73 1328 000  11 BO PAL    19-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
NEWS   DMP   1  3    6.9 13-SEP-74 1650 000  NS ME NEWS   22-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
PUB2   DMP   1  3   11.1 30-JUN-76 2303 000   1JFR FRAID  23-FEB-78 11-JUL-76 P720>
PLNR   DMP   1  3   23.0 26-APR-72 0408 000   1RPO        20-MAY-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
LAP    FAP   1  3    1.6 25-NOV-77 2020 000 NETSYS F-DEC  25-NOV-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
KLMUS  OLD   1  3   18.9 31-JUL-76 1650 000  MAJAM COPY   19-DEC-76 04-OCT-76 P770>
GLBLOW REL   1  3    2.5 26-NOV-75 2033 000   SRHT COPY   19-DEC-76 09-DEC-75 P615>
YELO   DMP   1  3    7.0 01-JUL-76 2120 017   1BES COPY   27-MAY-77 11-JUL-76 P720>
TD     DMP   1  3    1.1 25-APR-76 0241 005   1TAG LOADER 19-DEC-76 10-MAY-76 P692>
PUBSTD DFS   1  3    640 10-JUN-75 2308 000   LHJS E      23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
SMG4   DPY   1  3    2.8 12-MAY-73 2230 000   2SMG COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
RPG    DMP   1  3    5.0 27-JUN-76 0028 000   SMJC COPY   21-FEB-78 11-JUL-76 P720>
RECORD DEF   1  3    384 07-FEB-76 0150 000 HALRHT E      23-FEB-78 23-FEB-76 P655>
DMCHK  DMP   1  3    312 13-DEC-77 1652 000   1 ME DMCHK  07-FEB-78 27-DEC-77 P1033>
PROCES DEF   1  3    896 03-SEP-77 2211 000   1 KS E      23-FEB-78 16-SEP-77 P974>
GRUMP  DMP   1  3    1.5 28-SEP-76 2022 000   1JFR GRUMP  06-FEB-78 09-OCT-76 P774>
11TTY  DMP   1  3    1.9 06-DEC-77 1928 000   1PMF 11TTY  22-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>
FOLMRG DMP   1  3   10.3 28-JAN-78 1812 000 PAPREF FOLMRG 31-JAN-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
LIB40  OLD   1  3   22.4 27-APR-76 0022 000  MAJAM FUDGE2 19-FEB-78 18-JUL-76 P725>
SIXTYP DMP   1  3    4.3 09-JUL-77 1748 005 PAPREF SIXTYP 22-FEB-78 24-JUL-77 P943>
PUBMAC DFS   1  3    1.0 03-AUG-76 0803 000   1BJC E      17-FEB-78 16-AUG-76 P743>
TMPCOR DMP   1  3    1.8 06-NOV-75 1755 000   1JFR COPY   17-FEB-78 17-NOV-75 P605>
LITCRY DMP   1  3    1.9 06-DEC-75 1959 000   1RCC LITCRY 25-JAN-78 22-DEC-75 P623>
G      DMP   1  3   35.9 31-JAN-74 0818 000 GEOBGB G      11-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
RSEXEC DMP   1  3    2.5 13-SEP-76 0025 000   GGFF RSEXEC 17-FEB-78 28-SEP-76 P767>
OPASCA DMP   1  3   20.6 29-MAY-76 0811 000   P TM COPY   22-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
DRONE  DMP   1  3   41.9 17-APR-76 1021 000  MAJAM DRONE  19-DEC-76 03-MAY-76 P689>
SAILOW REL   1  3    2.5 12-MAY-77 2325 000   1PMF UPPER  23-FEB-78 31-MAY-77 P911>
XS     DMP   1  3    291 08-OCT-74 0826 000   1TAG XS     14-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
LSPTRG REL   1  3    561 09-AUG-73 0046 400 GEMBGB COPY   19-DEC-76
LINK   DMP   1  3   20.6 03-SEP-76 1213 005   1JFR COPY   22-FEB-78 13-SEP-76 P760>
PSEG   DMP   1  3    8.9 09-DEC-73 0151 000   XAIL COPY   19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P528>
LINK   ERR   1  3    5.2 20-SEP-75 1522 005   1JFR COPY   02-MAR-77 06-OCT-75 P581>
DF     DMP   1  3    3.3 26-JUN-76 1912 000   1PMF DF     17-FEB-78 11-JUL-76 P720>
MAGGOT DMP   1  3   11.9 11-APR-76 0404 005   1TAG MAGGOT 22-FEB-78 26-APR-76 P686>
DRAW   DMP   1  3   17.5 10-JAN-77 0019 000 JASJMG DRAW   13-JAN-78 22-JAN-77 P834>
TRANS  FAP   1  3    1.0 07-FEB-77 0746 000 NETSYS F-ECL  25-NOV-77 19-FEB-77 P852>
GOGTAB DEF   1  3    344 16-FEB-77 1910 000   1JFR SCISS  26-JAN-78 12-MAR-77 P861>
X      DMP   1  3    1.0 10-APR-76 0825 005   1TAG LOADER 23-FEB-78 26-APR-76 P686>
F40    OLD   1  3   10.1 09-JUL-76 2255 005   1EJG COPY   14-JAN-78 31-DEC-76 P820>
FIRWRK DMP   1  3    654 04-JUL-76 1045 000 THERHT FIRWRK 19-FEB-78 18-JUL-76 P725>
ORACLE DMP   1  3     84 01-NOV-75 0419 044   1MJC COPY   23-FEB-78 17-NOV-75 P605>
ISR    FRX   1  3    989 12-JAN-74 2313 000 THEJRL INFO   20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
MUSIC  LOD   1  3    4.2 03-JUL-76 1140 000 220 GM COPY   16-FEB-78 18-JUL-76 P725>
FIXIM1 DMP   1  3    2.3 24-JAN-78 1500 000   1PMF FIXIM1 18-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
LIB40  TMP   1  3   21.4 22-DEC-77 0124 005   1 ME COPY   16-JAN-78
P      DMP   1  3   16.9 02-AUG-76 1559 000   1TAG P      23-FEB-78 16-AUG-76 P743>
XIP    DMP   1  3   12.9 03-JUN-77 1720 000  MAJAM XIP    23-FEB-78 25-JUN-77 P926>
SAISG7 SEG   1  3   11.7 22-SEP-74 0039 000   SAIL PSEG   21-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
SAM    DPY   1  3    2.0 27-JUL-73 0529 000   1LMM COPY   20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
FUNLST DMP   1  3   13.2 08-AUG-75 0945 000 SYSSUZ COPY   15-JAN-78 08-SEP-75 P570>
BIGDAC DMP   1  3   68.6 10-MAR-76 1319 000  MAJAM BIGDAC 16-MAY-77 22-MAR-76 P669>
FILE   DMP   1  3   10.9 13-DEC-73 0222 000   1DCS COPY   16-SEP-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
ALL    PAR   1  3   26.9 06-AUG-75 1828 000 PARBLF BIN    17-FEB-78 16-AUG-75 P560>
INDEX  DMP   1  3    4.6 03-DEC-74 1713 000  NS ME INDEX  10-SEP-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
ADUDP  DMP   1  3   11.9 10-NOV-77 1252 000   1 KS ADUDP  23-FEB-78 29-NOV-77 P1017>
PROVER DMP   1  3   44.9 14-MAY-75 1546 000   PJRA PROVER 11-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
AD     DMP   1  3   11.9 22-JUN-77 1811 000  MAJAM AD     26-DEC-77 11-JUL-77 P935>
SAIL   OLD   1  3   26.9 06-JAN-77 0018 005   1JFR COPY   19-JAN-78 22-JAN-77 P834>
SOUND  DMP   1  3   19.4 14-MAY-77 1739 000   MNPW COPY   11-JAN-78 31-MAY-77 P911>
PTY    DMP   1  3    4.2 17-SEP-74 0456 000 SNDJMG COPY   21-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
DECDFS 253   1  3    402 01-MAY-76 0323 000 COMRPG COPY   19-DEC-76 17-MAY-76 P695>
LSP    DMP   1  3   72.9 16-SEP-77 1422 000   MMFB LSP    06-FEB-78 03-OCT-77 P981>
XAP    DMP   1  3   15.1 23-MAR-74 2104 000   1BGB XAP    14-APR-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
COPY   DMP   1  3    6.3 04-JAN-78 0040 000   1 ME COPY   23-FEB-78 17-JAN-78 P1046>
YELLOW DMP   1  3   24.9 07-OCT-76 1126 017 NEWBES COPY   27-MAY-77 23-OCT-76 P781>
AM11   DMP   1  3    6.4 30-MAY-76 1220 000  11RGH AM11   15-JAN-78 14-JUN-76 P707>
SOS    OLD   1  3    6.6 12-JAN-77 0244 000   1 ME SOS    25-JUN-77 19-MAR-77 P866>
TJ6PUB DMP   1  3   12.6 06-JAN-75 1407 000 MITMLM TJ6PUB 15-AUG-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
SEESND DMP   1  3   12.5 19-SEP-77 1651 000   1DGL COPY   22-FEB-78 03-OCT-77 P981>
IL5    SEG   1  3   15.0 10-DEC-74 0042 000   SDWP FOO    29-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
PCP    DMP   1  3   17.9 02-AUG-76 1601 000   1TAG PCP    22-JUN-77 16-AUG-76 P743>
FUNC11 DMP   1  3    6.1 21-MAY-76 1229 000  11RGH FUNC11 22-APR-77 31-MAY-76 P701>
DDD          1  3   16.2 20-NOV-76 2308 000 VCGSMG VERIFY 19-DEC-76 11-DEC-76 P811>
LIMRIK DMP   1  3    1.2 08-JUL-77 2033 000   1FOO LIMRIK 20-FEB-78 24-JUL-77 P943>
WM     DMP   1  3    356 17-DEC-77 0143 000   1 ME WM     21-FEB-78 03-JAN-78 P1038>
LIFE   DMP   1  3    9.4 08-MAR-76 0530 000   1PMF LIFE   22-FEB-78 22-MAR-76 P669>
MLISP  UCI   1  3   41.0 19-DEC-74 0004 000 L70DAV MLISP  19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P528>
MACRO  DMP   1  3    9.2 19-JAN-76 2347 000   SMJC LOADER 18-FEB-78 01-FEB-76 P644>
SYNTH  DMP   1  3   51.7 31-JAN-77 0957 000 JASJMG SYNTH  13-FEB-78 12-FEB-77 P847>
DO     OLD   1  3    6.4 24-SEP-77 1439 000   1MJC COPY   15-NOV-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
DART   DMP   1  3   17.9 10-FEB-78 0455 000 DMPEJG DART   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
EDSND  OLD   1  3   19.3 25-MAY-77 0050 000 MIXMUZ EDSND  30-MAY-77 05-JUN-77 P916>
MIXSND DMP   1  3   23.6 01-NOV-77 1131 000   1LPL MIXSND 23-FEB-78 14-NOV-77 P1009>
REVED  DMP   1  3   25.4 19-JUL-77 0853 000   1 KS LOADER 21-FEB-78 09-NOV-77 P1003>
WHO    OLD   1  3    3.6 19-MAR-77 1646 000   1PMF WHO    15-FEB-78 03-APR-77 P876>
BAIL   OLD   1  3   16.9 12-FEB-77 0032 005   1JFR COPY   12-FEB-77 26-FEB-77 P857>
SAILOW NEW   1  3    2.5 12-MAY-77 1920 000   1PMF UPPER  12-MAY-77 31-MAY-77 P911>
REVED  OLD   1  3   25.4 25-JUN-77 2235 000   1 KS COPY   25-OCT-77 09-NOV-77 P1003>
PVCOMP DMP   1  3   21.9 23-FEB-77 1803 000 220JOS PVCOMP 23-FEB-78 19-MAR-77 P866>
SIXFIX OLD   1  3    1.5 09-DEC-77 2350 000   1 KS SIXFIX 11-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
FOL976 DMP   1  3   64.9 08-SEP-76 1227 000 FOL CG FOLOLD 02-NOV-76 13-NOV-76 P794>
BLISS  DMP   1  3   46.2 27-SEP-76 0908 000 BLI TM XBLS10 28-JAN-78 16-OCT-76 P777>
BLILIB REL   1  3    9.1 31-AUG-76 0920 000 NETSYS F-CMUA 13-JUN-77 28-SEP-76 P767>
BLIS10 ERR   1  3    2.9 19-SEP-76 0713 000 NETSYS F-CMUA 28-JAN-78 04-OCT-76 P770>
TA           1  3    1.7 19-SEP-76 1515 000   1SMG V      09-DEC-76 04-OCT-76 P770>
NETSTA DMP   1  3    2.5 25-SEP-76 0038 000   GGFF NETSTA 21-FEB-78 09-OCT-76 P774>
TINGLE DMP   1  3    3.1 30-SEP-77 0845 000   1FOO TINGLE 23-FEB-78 17-OCT-77 P990>
LIBSA8 REL   1  3   26.8 12-MAY-77 2331 005   1PMF FUDGE2 23-FEB-78 31-MAY-77 P911>
AL     DMP   1  3    479 28-JUN-77 1848 000   1ARG RAL    15-FEB-78 11-JUL-77 P935>
RAID   MAP   1  3      4 12-NOV-76 1448 000   1DSB FOL    12-NOV-76 04-DEC-76 P805>
DAC    OLD   1  3    3.0 10-NOV-77 1248 000   1 KS DAC    12-DEC-77 19-DEC-77 P1028>
FAP    FAP   1  3    3.0 17-NOV-77 0848 000   1ACH FTP    17-NOV-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
F40    TMP   1  3   10.1 18-DEC-76 0115 000   1EJG F40    16-JAN-78
PUB    OLD   1  3   45.0 05-JUN-77 1856 005   1MJC COPY   09-OCT-77 25-JUN-77 P926>
FILES  WHE   1  3   11.3 01-AUG-77 1523 355   1 ME E      10-SEP-77 21-AUG-77 P958>
RCREF  FAP   1  3    4.0 17-NOV-77 0849 000   1ACH FTP    17-NOV-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
TOM          1  3    256 20-FEB-77 1718 000 NEWBES E      20-FEB-77 12-MAR-77 P861>
SAILOW OLD   1  3    2.5 12-MAY-77 2325 005   1PMF COPY   12-MAY-77 31-MAY-77 P911>
RECKNU OLD   1  3   17.9 20-FEB-77 2111 000   1PMF RECKNU 26-OCT-77 09-NOV-77 P1003>
SLR1A  REL   1  3    2.7 23-NOV-76 1015 000   1JLS COPY   27-NOV-76 11-DEC-76 P811>
SLR1   DMP   1  3   16.0 26-NOV-76 1242 000 PSI JP COPY   02-JAN-78 11-DEC-76 P811>
VERIFY NEW   1  3   63.9 20-FEB-78 1427 000 SYSWLS VERIFY 23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
HANAL  DMP   1  3   25.9 22-MAR-77 1040 000  MAJAM HANAL  15-FEB-78 03-APR-77 P876>
DDTLSP DMP   1  3   33.9 29-JAN-78 1853 000 AIDRPG FRAID  22-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
SCHEME DMP   1  3   28.9 28-DEC-77 1104 000 AIDRPG SCHEME 17-FEB-78 09-JAN-78 P1043>
RABBIT DMP   1  3  112.0 05-AUG-77 0040 000 AIDRPG RABBIT 16-SEP-77 21-AUG-77 P958>
IIIPOX DMP   1  3    8.3 15-NOV-77 2014 000   1MLB COPY   24-DEC-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
VERIFY HLP   1  3    2.2 27-SEP-77 1745 204 VCGRAK E      18-FEB-78 10-OCT-77 P986>
ELCF   DMP   1  3   73.9 07-FEB-78 1527 000  PVFWH ELCF   07-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
FAIL   OLD   1  3   15.8 05-JUL-77 1552 000   1PMF FAIL   05-JUL-77 16-JUL-77 P939>
CVOS   DMP   1  3    678 14-JAN-78 1755 000 SAMDGL COPY   20-FEB-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
PPSAV  DMP   1  3    458 03-JUL-77 1146 000   1PMF PPSAV  23-FEB-78 16-JUL-77 P939>
FLTCMP DMP   1  3   13.5 21-OCT-77 1350 000  MAJAM FLTCMP 25-JAN-78 09-NOV-77 P1003>
SNAIL  OLD   1  3    7.2 02-JAN-78 1500 000   1MJC COPY   01-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
SNAIL  DMP   1  3    7.2 10-FEB-78 1615 000   1MJC COPY   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
BLETCH BAR   1  3    281 13-FEB-77 1721 000 SYSWLS XVER   13-FEB-77 26-FEB-77 P857>
ERAID  DMP   1  3   19.9 20-FEB-78 1615 000   1 ME ERAID  20-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
HLBSA8 OLD   1  3   26.9 25-FEB-77 0035 005   1PMF COPY   25-FEB-77 19-MAR-77 P866>
DFSYN  DMP   1  3   22.9 23-FEB-77 1808 000 220JOS DFSYN  22-FEB-78 19-MAR-77 P866>
BLSLIB REL   1  3    6.0 11-MAY-77 0126 057   SJAB COPY   05-AUG-77 22-MAY-77 P905>
LPSYN  DMP   1  3   20.9 26-FEB-77 1817 000  MAJAM LPSYN  26-FEB-77 19-MAR-77 P866>
XGPSYN DMP   1  3   36.5 15-FEB-78 1933 000 CARHPM XGPSYN 22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
SOS    DMP   1  3    6.6 01-MAR-77 2351 000   1 ME SOS    23-FEB-78 19-MAR-77 P866>
CHEAPY DMP   1  3   70.0 05-AUG-77 0021 000 ISIRPG CHEAPY 01-OCT-77 21-AUG-77 P958>
DDTNCO DMP   1  3  100.9 30-DEC-77 1320 000 AIDRPG DDTNCO 03-FEB-78 09-JAN-78 P1043>
LOADER DMP   1  3    7.3 18-AUG-77 1345 000   1 ME LOADER 23-FEB-78 04-SEP-77 P967>
ERAID  OLD   1  3   41.0 05-SEP-77 1456 000   1 ME ERAID  29-SEP-77 16-SEP-77 P974>
REVERB OLD   1  3    9.4 22-MAY-77 1715 005   1LPL REVERB 29-MAY-77 05-JUN-77 P916>
LINKER DMP   1  3    3.0 16-MAR-77 0118 000 MIXMUZ LINKER 17-FEB-78 03-APR-77 P876>
EXMRG  DMP   1  3   18.9 22-MAR-77 1033 000  MAJAM EXMRG  22-FEB-78 03-APR-77 P876>
MFSYN  DMP   1  3   19.9 22-MAR-77 1141 000  MAJAM MFSYN  31-MAY-77 03-APR-77 P876>
TFUN   DMP   1  3   24.2 20-APR-77 0620 000 220 RT COPY   18-FEB-78 10-MAY-77 P897>
WISE   DMP   1  3    7.0 24-MAR-77 2158 000   1PMF WISE   20-FEB-78 03-APR-77 P876>
AFPIX  DMP   1  3   17.9 30-MAR-77 1939 000 JOSFRM AFPIX  03-NOV-77 10-APR-77 P880>
NCOMPL OLD   1  3  102.0 23-JUL-77 1329 000 SY2WLS NCOMPL 31-OCT-77 21-AUG-77 P958>
RLISP  DMP   1  3   24.9 22-NOV-77 0909 000   1ACH RLISP  28-JAN-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
PHYS   FAP   1  3    3.7 16-NOV-77 1932 000 NETSYS F-DEC  18-NOV-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
EDSND  DMP   1  3   36.8 23-FEB-78 0431 000   1JMG EDSND  23-FEB-78 23-FEB-78 T20  
ADUDP  OLD   1  3   11.9 19-OCT-77 0130 000   1 KS ADUDP  06-DEC-77 29-NOV-77 P1017>
FLTAPP DMP   1  3   29.9 29-MAY-77 1904 000  MAJAM FLTAPP 07-DEC-77 17-JUN-77 P921>
ENORM  DMP   1  3   28.9 29-MAY-77 1905 000  MAJAM ENORM  30-SEP-77 17-JUN-77 P921>
MACLSP OLD   1  3   35.8 17-JUL-77 1603 000 KRLRPG FRAID  12-JAN-78 23-JAN-78 P1050>
65536        1  3    618 01-JUN-77 0221 000 VCGSMG VERIFY 03-JUN-77 17-JUN-77 P921>
SPACE  DMP   1  3   34.9 30-MAY-77 1019 000  MAJAM SPACE  22-FEB-78 17-JUN-77 P921>
NCOMPL DMP   1  3   80.9 10-FEB-78 1858 055 AIDRPG NCOMPL 23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
TIMER  DMP   1  3    630 24-MAY-77 1513 000   1DGL COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUN-77 P916>
MIXSND OLD   1  3   22.9 07-JUN-77 2344 000   1LPL MIXSND 01-NOV-77 14-NOV-77 P1009>
REVERB DMP   1  3   26.9 29-MAY-77 1855 000  MAJAM REVERB 15-DEC-77 17-JUN-77 P921>
PASLIB REL   1  3   15.0 25-JAN-78 0222 005   1EJG COPY   22-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
DAB    OLD   1  3    4.2 15-NOV-77 0958 000   1 KS DAB    16-NOV-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
ADUDP  JAM   1  3   19.9 24-JUN-77 1148 000  MAJAM ADUDP  13-SEP-77 27-SEP-77 P977>
RYDER  DMP   1  3   25.6 16-JUL-77 1632 000   XXGP COPY   12-JAN-78 31-JUL-77 P946>
REVIVE DMP   1  3    1.1 17-JUL-77 1141 005   1 RP LOADER 23-FEB-78 31-JUL-77 P946>
S      DMP   1  3   27.2 06-OCT-77 2111 000   1DGL COPY   23-FEB-78 17-OCT-77 P990>
KRL    DMP   1  3   73.0 13-JUL-77 1227 000 KRLRPG KRL    15-OCT-77 31-JUL-77 P946>
DAB    DMP   1  3    4.2 16-NOV-77 1825 000   1 KS DAB    19-FEB-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
DART   OLD   1  3   17.9 10-JAN-78 2202 000   1EJG DART   10-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
FOO    DMP   1  3   41.9 06-AUG-77 1924 000 LSPRPG FOO    15-FEB-78 21-AUG-77 P958>
DDTLSP SHR   1  3   23.0 10-FEB-78 1523 000 RECPAM FRAID  22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
DIRED  916   1  3   14.5 02-OCT-77 1602 000   1 ME DIRED  02-OCT-77 17-OCT-77 P990>
XCOMPL DMP   1  3   80.9 31-OCT-77 1237 000 AIDRPG XCOMPL 31-OCT-77 14-NOV-77 P1009>
EDIT   SHR   1  3   36.0 17-FEB-78 1602 000 AIDRPG MACLSP 22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
MACLSP SHR   1  3   23.0 22-FEB-78 2352 005   1 PB STORY  23-FEB-78 23-FEB-78 T20  
EDIT   DMP   1  3   38.9 17-FEB-78 1602 000 AIDRPG EDIT   22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
SCHEME SHR   1  3   30.0 28-DEC-77 1103 000 AIDRPG MACLSP 17-FEB-78 09-JAN-78 P1043>
WO     DMP   1  3   67.9 24-AUG-77 1102 000   1TED WO     01-OCT-77 04-SEP-77 P967>
FLTSND DMP   1  3   12.2 23-JAN-78 0134 000 MIXMUZ FLTSND 23-JAN-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
QUAD   DMP   1  3   10.5 04-FEB-78 1434 000 MIXMUZ QUAD   13-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
MBOX   DMP   1  3   31.6 20-FEB-78 1318 000 SAMDGL LOADER 23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
RUNCHK DMP   1  3  101.9 16-FEB-78 0113 000 VCGSMG RUNCHK 16-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
DMDRD  DMP   1  3   13.5 02-OCT-77 1541 000   1 ME DMDRD  22-FEB-78 17-OCT-77 P990>
SRCONV DMP   1  3    6.1 30-SEP-77 1453 000   1DGL COPY   30-SEP-77 17-OCT-77 P990>
UDP    DIR   1  3    454 14-OCT-77 1718 000   1 KS ADUDP  14-OCT-77 31-OCT-77 P999>
GOGOGO DMP   1  3   33.9 08-FEB-78 1730 000 AIDRPG GOGOGO 11-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
NADUDP OLD   1  3   11.9 19-OCT-77 0132 000   1 KS NADUDP 10-NOV-77 29-NOV-77 P1017>
LPS    DMP   1  3   20.6 21-OCT-77 1351 000  MAJAM LPS    26-OCT-77 09-NOV-77 P1003>
TAPE   DMP   1  3    3.8 22-OCT-77 1757 005   1EJG TAPE   20-FEB-78 09-NOV-77 P1003>
VERIFY SHR   1  3   59.0 20-FEB-78 1426 000 SYSWLS VERIFY 23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
RELSAQ SHR   1  3   44.0 22-FEB-78 2242 000   1HIC NLISP  22-FEB-78 23-FEB-78 T20  
XMACLS SHR   1  3   26.0 16-FEB-78 2344 000 AIDRPG XMACLS 16-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
VER    INI   1  3    384 24-OCT-77 1309 000 SYSWLS E      08-FEB-78 09-NOV-77 P1003>
NLISP  SHR   1  3   44.0 17-FEB-78 0211 000   1HIC NLISP  17-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
VCGEN  SHR   1  3   45.0 09-FEB-78 2323 000 VCGRAK MACLSP 22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
VCGEN  DMP   1  3   51.9 09-FEB-78 2331 000 VCGRAK VCGEN  22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
RELFLY DMP   1  3    6.1 25-OCT-77 1654 000 CARHPM COPY   25-OCT-77 09-NOV-77 P1003>
NADUDP DMP   1  3   11.9 10-NOV-77 1256 000   1 KS NADUDP 05-DEC-77 29-NOV-77 P1017>
TEN    OLD   1  3    7.0 13-DEC-77 0035 000   1 KS TEN    27-JAN-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
IIIPOX POX   1  3    512 15-NOV-77 2004 000   1MLB E      24-DEC-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
TEN    DMP   1  3    7.0 27-JAN-78 0645 000   1 KS TEN    23-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
INT    FAP   1  3   11.4 17-NOV-77 1058 000   1ACH FTP    18-NOV-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
SIXFIX DMP   1  3    1.6 11-FEB-78 0703 000   1 KS SIXFIX 22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
CEDIT  FAP   1  3    633 17-NOV-77 0845 000   1ACH FTP    21-JAN-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
LSPFNT DMP   1  3    2.3 27-NOV-77 1412 000 SAI JP LSPFNT 06-DEC-77 19-DEC-77 P1028>
TRANS  DMP   1  3    5.3 23-NOV-77 2100 000   1 KS TRANS  27-JAN-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
PTYJOB OLD   1  3    2.1 26-NOV-77 0143 000   1 ME PTYJOB 11-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>
XSPLIT DMP   1  3    1.9 11-DEC-77 1327 000 PAPREF XSPLIT 14-JAN-78 27-DEC-77 P1033>
DO     MID   1  3    6.5 27-NOV-77 1720 000   1 ME DO     27-NOV-77 19-DEC-77 P1028>
STORY  DMP   1  3   53.9 01-DEC-77 2155 000 THE JP STORY  22-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>
SIMPLE SHR   1  3   40.0 20-FEB-78 2346 000 MACDCO MACLSP 20-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
SIMPLE DMP   1  3   30.9 20-FEB-78 2346 000 MACDCO SIMPLE 20-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
PRUNE  DMP   1  3    8.0 15-DEC-77 0317 000   1 ME PRUNE  16-FEB-78 27-DEC-77 P1033>
SILENT LOD   1  3    4.2 06-JAN-78 1629 000   1MWK LOADER 13-JAN-78 23-JAN-78 P1050>
PR     DMP   1  3    253 15-JAN-78 2326 000   GGFF PR     21-FEB-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
XMACLS DMP   1  3   35.9 16-FEB-78 2343 000 AIDRPG XMACLS 16-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
MACLSP DMP   1  3   13.9 10-FEB-78 1658 055 RECPAM FRAID  23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
VERIFY OLD   1  3   76.9 14-FEB-78 0154 000   1RAK VERIFY 23-FEB-78 23-FEB-78 T20  
PK     DMP   1  3    1.4 25-JAN-78 0147 000   1 ME PK     22-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
FIXIML DMP   1  3    2.3 24-JAN-78 1500 000   1PMF FIXIML 18-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
FIXIML OLD   1  3    2.4 14-JAN-78 1756 000   1PMF COPY   24-JAN-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
FIXIM1 OLD   1  3    2.4 14-JAN-78 1756 000   1PMF COPY   24-JAN-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
CHATER DMP   1  3    217 15-JAN-78 2326 000   GGFF CHATER 23-FEB-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
LIB40  REL   1  3   21.4 16-JAN-78 0042 005   1EJG FUDGE2 23-FEB-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
F40    DMP   1  3   10.1 16-JAN-78 0405 000   1EJG F40    23-FEB-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
RFOL   DMP   1  3   85.9 28-JUL-77 2142 000   1TED DART   22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
VPROVE SHR   1  3   43.0 20-FEB-78 1358 000 SYSWLS VPROVE 23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
SYM    FOL   1  3    2.8 24-JAN-78 1524 000 SMPAMR SYMMAK 24-JAN-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
LOD    FOL   1  3    4.2 24-JAN-78 1526 000 SMPAMR COPY   24-JAN-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
SIXUSE DMP   1  3    759 28-JAN-78 0527 000   1 KS SIXUSE 22-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
PASCAL DMP   1  3   33.5 31-JAN-78 2101 005   1EJG PASCAL 22-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
VPROVE DMP   1  3   53.9 20-FEB-78 1359 000 SYSWLS VPROVE 23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
PARDIS SHR   1  3   44.0 22-FEB-78 1818 000 MACDEW MACLSP 23-FEB-78 23-FEB-78 T20  
	TOTAL=8737.4
FILES ASSIGNED TO REG

RSL    OLD   1  3    9.5 07-JUL-76 1937 000 ACTREG RSL    20-DEC-76 31-DEC-76 P825>
JOBDAT REL   1  3    194 25-SEP-75 2204 000 ACTREG MACRO  23-FEB-78 12-OCT-75 P584>
SAVE   DMP   1  3    2.1 24-NOV-74 1904 000 ACTREG SAVE   02-OCT-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
LOADER OLD   1  3    5.7 05-JUN-76 1056 005 ACTREG LOADER 09-MAR-77 19-MAR-77 P866>
BLTST  DMP   1  3    512 26-MAY-76 0946 005 ACTREG FRAID  04-SEP-77 14-JUN-76 P707>
SW     DMP   1  3    1.7 29-AUG-76 1938 000  SWREG FRAID  04-FEB-78 28-SEP-76 P767>
PRN    DMP   1  3    1.2 30-APR-74 1743 000  SWREG PRN    23-FEB-78 03-APR-77 P876>
BKTBL  BKT   1  3    169 20-OCT-74 1417 000 ACTREG DART   23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
SPELL  DMP   1  3   40.9 19-MAY-75 2316 000 ACTREG SPELL  22-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
AID    DMP   1  3   10.1 07-NOV-75 1710 000 ACTREG AID    23-FEB-78 25-NOV-75 P609>
REPENT DMP   1  3    290 07-AUG-72 0039 000  SWREG        17-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
DART   REG   1  3   17.9 08-JUL-76 1430 000 ACTREG DART   08-DEC-77 04-DEC-76 P805>
ZERO   DMP   1  3    2.6 27-JUN-74 2104 000 ACTREG ZERO   23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
HYPNO  DMP   1  3    768 19-JUL-72 1658 000   SREG        17-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
PRUNE  OLD   1  3    7.8 14-NOV-74 1748 000 ACTREG PRUNE  04-FEB-78 27-DEC-77 P1033>
BASIC  DMP   1  3   12.6 17-MAR-73 0320 000 ACTREG BASIC  31-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
COLIST DMP   1  3    3.9 14-NOV-74 1718 000 ACTREG COLIST 22-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
ADH    DMP   1  3    2.0 16-APR-74 0030 000 ACTREG ADH    07-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
FUDGE2 DMP   1  3    2.7 03-OCT-75 1218 000 ACTREG FUDGE2 17-FEB-78 20-OCT-75 P590>
SYSDWN OLD   1  3    4.8 15-JUL-76 2014 000 ACTREG SYSDWN 02-NOV-77 14-NOV-77 P1009>
F40    REG   1  3   10.1 18-JAN-76 1249 000 F40REG F40    15-JAN-78 31-DEC-76 P820>
GREEN  DMP   1  3   13.8 12-FEB-75 1500 000 ACTREG GREEN  21-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
TENDMP DMP   1  3    8.2 18-DEC-75 1733 000 ACTREG TENDMP 14-FEB-78 29-DEC-75 P627>

MAIL DON 6-MAR-78
Iam starting to generate a file called HOW that tells how to use the files on the
system, priincipally on [1,3].  You have the following files under your name.
Would you be able to help me?  I suggest that you look at HOW[1,als] as a starter
to see what I am trying to do.  ALS  

GOGAME DMP   1  3   19.1 13-MAR-77 1748 000   1DON GOGAME 21-FEB-78 29-MAR-77 P871>
DCHESS DMP   1  3    9.6 14-DEC-77 2224 000   1DON DCHESS 23-FEB-78 27-DEC-77 P1033>
TNG40  DEF   1  3    768 22-APR-76 0133 000   1DON COPY   20-DEC-76 03-MAY-76 P689>
TNG75  DEF   1  3    768 22-APR-76 0134 000   1DON COPY   03-SEP-77 03-MAY-76 P689>
TNG112 DEF   1  3    768 22-APR-76 0134 000   1DON COPY   16-SEP-77 03-MAY-76 P689>
TENGWR DMP   1  3    6.3 20-DEC-76 0649 000 234DON COPY   16-SEP-77 31-DEC-76 P825>
ADVENT DMP   1  3   26.8 13-FEB-78 0725 000   1DON ADVENT 22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
BLOOP  DMP   1  3   21.6 13-MAR-77 1840 000   1DON BLOOP  18-FEB-78 29-MAR-77 P871>
FSCALE DMP   1  3    1.9 20-NOV-77 1803 000   1DON FSCALE 21-FEB-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
SAMPLE GO    1  3    255 13-FEB-77 1023 000   1DON GOGAME 17-FEB-78 26-FEB-77 P857>
PACK   DMP   1  3   14.8 06-FEB-78 1307 000   1DON LOADER 21-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
WHEN   DMP   1  3    545 29-NOV-77 1356 000   1DON WHEN   23-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>
SWR    DMP   1  3    3.5 29-SEP-77 0428 000   1DON LOADER 20-FEB-78 10-OCT-77 P986>
CRYPT  DMP   1  3    427 24-AUG-77 0335 000   1DON C      19-FEB-78 04-SEP-77 P967>
MTRX   DMP   1  3   10.5 20-JAN-78 1310 000 MATDON INIT   20-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
ADVENT SAV   1  3   24.6 13-FEB-78 0735 000   1DON FOO    21-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
CRYPTO DMP   1  3    4.3 20-JAN-78 1412 000   1DON CRYPTO 11-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
CRYPTO DAT   1  3    468 26-JAN-78 0037 000   1DON FRAID  11-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>

MAIL LES 6-MAR-78

The following files are on [1,3] under your name.  I have data on some of them
but I need data on all of them for the HOW file. Can you help a bit?  ALS

LESCAL DMP   1  3    4.6 30-DEC-74 0343 000   SLES LESCAL 17-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
FINGER OLD   1  3    8.0 18-MAR-77 1613 000   SLES FINGER 13-NOV-77 29-NOV-77 P1017>
PHONE  DMP   1  3     47 16-AUG-76 1430 000   SLES PHONE  01-FEB-78 29-AUG-76 P752>
KWIC   DMP   1  3   36.9 07-FEB-74 1852 000   SLES KWIC   17-JUL-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
XEROX  DMP   1  3    6.1 25-MAR-73 1814 000   DLES XEROX  08-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
FREEFO DMP   1  3    5.9 10-JAN-75 1705 000   SLES FREEFO 19-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
BUREAU DMP   1  3   12.1 17-DEC-77 1452 000   1LES BUREAU 22-FEB-78 03-JAN-78 P1038>
XGPTYP DMP   1  3    6.5 19-JUL-76 1829 000   SLES XGPTYP 22-FEB-78 01-AUG-76 P735>
HARRY  DMP   1  3    376 08-OCT-76 1025 000   SLES DART   17-FEB-78 22-JAN-77 P834>
RSL    DMP   1  3    9.4 20-DEC-76 0248 000   SLES RSL    23-FEB-78 31-DEC-76 P825>
FINGER DMP   1  3   11.4 18-JAN-78 0232 000   1LES FINGER 23-FEB-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
COOL   DMP   1  3    9.9 12-FEB-78 1843 000   1LES COOL   20-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
SOB    DMP   1  3   12.2 23-DEC-77 0217 000   1LES SOB    22-FEB-78 03-JAN-78 P1038>

MAIL TVR 6-MAR-78
Iam starting to generate a file called HOW that tells how to use the files on the
system, principally on [1,3].  You have the following files under your name.
Would you be able to help me?  I suggest that you look at HOW[1,als] as a starter
to see what I am trying to do.  ALS  

NEWMUS OLD   1  3   23.9 26-SEP-77 0254 000 MUSTVR NEWMUS 22-JAN-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
PERUSE DMP   1  3    1.9 24-MAR-75 1327 000 NETTVR PERUSE 13-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
DPYHAX DMP   1  3    4.9 05-FEB-78 0241 000 NETTVR FRAID  20-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
DIZZY  DMP   1  3     46 19-AUG-72 0804 000 MUSTVR        18-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
WORM   DPY   1  3    317 02-SEP-73 0020 000   2TVR COPY   22-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
DIZZY  DPY   1  3    3.5 26-DEC-72 0046 000 TMPTVR COPY   20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
MUS14  OLD   1  3   12.9 08-NOV-75 1517 000 XGPTVR MUS14  30-NOV-77 21-JUN-76 P709>
ARMDPY DMP   1  3   25.1 08-JUL-76 1328 000 GEMTVR FRAID  21-FEB-78 25-JUL-76 P731>
HYPNO2 DPY   1  3    4.5 26-DEC-72 0046 000 TMPTVR COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
SPARKL DPY   1  3    1.1 26-DEC-72 0046 000 TMPTVR COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
DAZZLE DMP   1  3   10.0 28-FEB-73 0729 000 XGPTVR DAZZLE 20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
RADIAL DPY   1  3    1.1 26-DEC-72 0046 000 TMPTVR COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
KLMUS  DMP   1  3   19.9 04-APR-77 1023 000 NETTVR FRAID  30-JAN-78 17-APR-77 P884>
MUS14  DMP   1  3   13.1 09-JUN-76 0307 000 MUSTVR MUS14  28-JAN-78 21-JUN-76 P709>
BOUNCE DPY   1  3    461 30-DEC-72 0254 000 MUSTVR BOUNCE 20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
UDPUSE DMP   1  3    271 22-JUN-75 1517 000 XGPTVR UDPUSE 23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
CINEMA DMP   1  3    3.5 15-JUL-76 0107 000 XGPTVR FRAID  02-OCT-77 01-AUG-76 P735>
IL     UCI   1  3    2.6 16-APR-76 1051 000 LSPTVR LOADER 19-DEC-76 03-MAY-76 P689>
*RAID* SEG   1  3    5.1 22-SEP-72 0452 000   1TVR SAVDDT 15-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
DEBUG  REL   1  3    8.2 22-SEP-72 0729 000 MUSTVR RAID   24-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
NETDPY REL   1  3    242 21-DEC-75 1244 400   2TVR FAIL   26-DEC-77
XGPVID DMP   1  3   13.9 16-AUG-73 1143 000 GEMTVR COPY   21-JUL-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
NMUSIO DMP   1  3   26.9 24-SEP-77 0257 000 MUSTVR FRAID  20-JAN-78 10-OCT-77 P986>
CLOVER DPY   1  3    2.8 13-MAY-73 1640 000 GEMTVR COPY   19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
CAM    DMP   1  3   12.4 21-FEB-72 1507 000 NETTVR DART   30-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
FED    DMP   1  3    4.0 10-JUL-71 1322 000 NETTVR DART   16-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
IL     LOD   1  3    4.2 19-APR-76 1254 000 NETTVR LOADER 29-JAN-78 03-MAY-76 P689>
COMBIN DMP   1  3    6.1 05-FEB-78 0218 000 NETTVR FRAID  22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
*DDT*  SEG   1  3    2.5 12-OCT-72 2321 255   1TVR DART   03-DEC-77 07-JUN-76 P704>
LIFE         1  3   16.9 19-JUL-77 0138 000   2TVR NLIFE  14-FEB-78 31-OCT-77 P999>
F      DMP   1  3   15.1 14-APR-77 1523 005 XGPTVR FSMALL 12-DEC-77 01-MAY-77 P893>
GEOMED DMP   1  3   22.4 03-OCT-76 0744 000 GEMTVR G      22-FEB-78 16-OCT-76 P777>
MUSIC  DMP   1  3   16.2 17-MAY-77 2020 000 MUSTVR MUSIC  11-FEB-78 31-MAY-77 P911>
SAMCMP DMP   1  3   33.9 29-JAN-78 1533 000 MUSTVR SAMCMP 15-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
NEWMUS DMP   1  3   24.9 22-JAN-78 1554 000 MUSTVR NEWMUS 22-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>

MAIL MRC 6-MAR-78
Iam starting to generate a file called HOW that tells how to use the files on the
system, principally on [1,3].  You have the following files under your name.
Would you be able to help me?  I suggest that you look at HOW[1,als] as a starter
to see what I am trying to do.  ALS  

MAIL MRC 8-MAR-78
Thanks for your prompt help.  I have gone over your list and I find that you
have supplied a write-up for everything except for the following:
SIMPER DMP   1  3     47 20-FEB-78 0207 000   1MRC SIMPER 21-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
SNAIL  OLD   1  3    7.2 02-JAN-78 1500 000   1MJC COPY   01-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
SEND   DMP   1  3    1.0 04-FEB-78 0112 000   1MRC SEND   20-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>

Did I miss these somehow?

MAIL LES 6-MAR-78
The following files are all extremely old and do not bear evidence as to who is
responsible for them. It seems likely that many of them have been replaced with
other versions or that they are no longer of use.  Can you enlighten me?  als

CHRSET DMP   1  3    256 15-MAR-70 0533 005               01-MAY-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
TVTEST DMP   1  3    384 15-MAR-70 0533 005               12-JAN-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
P2P    DMP   1  3    512 16-AUG-71 1515 000               30-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
LISPDP LSP   1  3    384 15-MAR-70 0533 005               30-JUN-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
SMILE        1  3    1.1 15-MAR-70 0534 000               19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
GRIN         1  3    768 15-MAR-70 0534 005               16-MAY-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
BIGNUM LSP   1  3    256 15-MAR-70 0534 000               25-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
LISP   SYM   1  3    512 25-NOV-70 0705 000               08-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
LISP   ED    1  3    1.3 25-NOV-70 0707 000               08-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
DPYCLK DMP   1  3    384 15-JUN-71 0910 000               01-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
CHACK  DMP   1  3    768 15-MAR-70 0534 005               10-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
A2E    DMP   1  3    1.1 07-NOV-71 1101 000               06-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
BUZZ   DMP   1  3    128 01-JUL-70 1733 000               14-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
PIXPEN DMP   1  3    8.1 15-MAR-70 0536 000               15-MAY-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
MIXAL  DMP   1  3    4.2 11-FEB-72 0950 000               25-JAN-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
BILLBD DMP   1  3   10.0 15-MAR-70 0537 005               26-NOV-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
DOC    DMP   1  3   17.0 20-AUG-70 1432 000               28-JAN-78 08-SEP-75 P570>
SHUFFL DMP   1  3    128 15-MAR-70 0537 005               04-SEP-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
AMOEBA DMP   1  3    512 15-MAR-70 0537 000               10-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>

MAIL RWW 7-MAR-78
Iam starting to generate a file called HOW that tells how to use the files on the
system, principally on [1,3].  You have the following files under your name.
Would you be able to help me?  I suggest that you look at HOW[1,als] as a starter
to see what I am trying to do.  I, of course, have information on some of these
but I thought that you would like a complete list with the opportunity to edit
what little I have already done.  ALS

IC     DMP   1  3   49.9 24-FEB-75 1243 000 FOLRWW ICIC   29-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
LISP   LOD   1  3    3.8 02-JUL-75 0123 000 FOLRWW LOADER 08-FEB-78 14-JUL-75 P545>
IL     DMP   1  3   11.9 29-JAN-76 1510 000 FOLRWW FRAID  22-FEB-78 17-FEB-76 P652>
IL     SYM   1  3    2.9 31-JAN-75 2238 000 FOLRWW COPY   29-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
PRUNE  DAT   1  3    2.8 20-JAN-78 0227 200 W78RWW PRUNE  19-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
EFOL   DMP   1  3   74.9 29-JAN-77 1739 000 FOLRWW EFOL   29-JAN-77 12-FEB-77 P847>
FOL    DMP   1  3   69.9 22-FEB-78 0031 000 W78RWW FOL    22-FEB-78 22-FEB-78 T18  
FOL477 DMP   1  3   84.9 15-APR-77 1002 000 FOLRWW FOL477 16-APR-77 01-MAY-77 P893>
HFOL   DMP   1  3   69.9 15-JUN-77 1433 000 FOLRWW HFOL   14-JUL-77 02-JUL-77 P931>
FOLOLD DMP   1  3   69.9 23-JAN-78 1039 000 W78RWW FOL    26-JAN-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>

Files under JBR
DDT    REL   1  3    6.5 09-AUG-77 1903 400   1JBR FAIL   22-FEB-78
FIND   DMP   1  3    2.5 02-AUG-77 1758 000   1JBR FIND   23-FEB-78 21-AUG-77 P958>
HG     DMP   1  3    1.5 27-MAY-77 1746 000   1JBR HG     30-DEC-77 05-JUN-77 P916>
ORAID  REL   1  3    9.0 14-APR-77 1552 400   1JBR FAIL   13-JAN-78
PPSAV  OLD   1  3    562 08-FEB-77 1902 000   1JBR PPSAV  31-MAR-77 10-APR-77 P880>
FAIL   DMP   1  3   15.9 11-NOV-77 1346 000   1JBR FRAID  23-FEB-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
METER  DMP   1  3    1.8 27-JUN-77 1816 000   1JBR METER  11-FEB-78 11-JUL-77 P935>
UEDDT  DMP   1  3    4.9 17-JAN-78 1430 000   1JBR UEDDT  22-FEB-78 30-JAN-78 P1055>
SWR    OLD   1  3    3.2 22-MAY-76 2014 000   1JBR FRAID  12-SEP-77 21-AUG-77 P958>
EDDT   REL   1  3    6.9 12-DEC-76 2005 400   1JBR FAIL   20-NOV-77
RAID   REL   1  3   10.2 20-JUL-77 1840 400   1JBR FAIL   23-FEB-78
RAID   DMP   1  3    7.9 20-JUL-77 1842 000   1JBR RAID   22-FEB-78 31-JUL-77 P946>
SOLO   DMP   1  3    3.5 07-FEB-77 1720 000   1JBR SOLO   20-FEB-78 19-FEB-77 P852>
WHO    DMP   1  3    3.9 04-JAN-78 1306 000   1JBR WHO    23-FEB-78 17-JAN-78 P1046>
DDT    DMP   1  3    3.9 09-AUG-77 1907 000   1JBR DDT    21-FEB-78 21-AUG-77 P958>
SRCCOM DMP   1  3    6.7 07-JUL-77 1332 000   1JBR SRCCOM 23-FEB-78 16-JUL-77 P939>
TJCNV  DMP   1  3    402 06-JUL-74 2124 000   1JBR TJCNV  19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P528>
D      DMP   1  3   33.7 21-FEB-78 1533 005   1JBR D      23-FEB-78 22-FEB-78 T18  
PC     DMP   1  3   42.0 21-FEB-78 1533 005   1JBR PC     21-FEB-78 22-FEB-78 T18  
FRAID  DMP   1  3    8.2 14-APR-77 1554 000   1JBR FRAID  22-FEB-78 01-MAY-77 P893>
L      DMP   1  3   58.1 11-DEC-75 0223 000   1JBR T      22-FEB-78 22-DEC-75 P623>  153
FILEX  DMP   1  3    6.2 06-MAR-77 1929 000   1JBR FILEX  13-FEB-78 19-MAR-77 P866>
MITFIX DMP   1  3    289 29-OCT-73 1438 000   1JBR MITFIX 08-MAR-77 05-JUL-75 P528>
D      OLD   1  3   33.7 01-AUG-77 1729 000   1JBR D      04-NOV-77 14-NOV-77 P1009>
SYSDWN DMP   1  3    4.8 10-JAN-78 1355 000   1JBR SYSDWN 17-FEB-78 23-JAN-78 P1050>
PRIV   DMP   1  3    248 11-JAN-78 2304 005   1JBR PRIV   17-FEB-78 23-JAN-78 P1050>

MAIL GJA 8-MAR-78
HI. I see that you are sometimes on the machine.  I am trying to get togather a
CUSP manual to be called HOW as in READ HOW.  I find two old programs of yours
on 1,3 without adequate documentation.  Could you help me?  If you want to see
what I have in mind look at HOW[1,ALS].  Also while I am writing, I would like
to get your version on GO back up on the machine. It was taken off for some reason
and I am not sure what is the best version.  I would also like some documentation
on GO. ALS

FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF
BROOM  DMP   1  3    928 17-AUG-72 0112 000   1GJA        28-SEP-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
LOA    DMP   1  3    4.5 23-MAR-72 0834 000   1GJA        23-FEB-77 05-JUL-75 P528>

MAIL RPH 8-MAR-78
HI. I see that you are on the machine sometimes of late.  I am trying to get
togather a file called HOW as in READ HOW, to explain how to use files on the
system particularly those on 1,3.
Your initials are with the following:
FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF
JOTTO  DMP   1  3   22.6 18-NOV-72 1801 000   FRPH JOTTO  17-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
6TO10  DMP   1  3    1.9 18-APR-74 1954 000   FRPH 6TO10  19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
CHRTST DMP   1  3    607 06-JAN-74 0801 000   FRPH CHRTST 28-JUN-77 05-JUL-75 P527>
MACTO6 DMP   1  3    4.2 18-MAR-73 2124 000   TRPH MACTO6 19-DEC-76 05-JUL-75 P527>
FILDMP DMP   1  3    2.0 11-FEB-74 1217 000   FRPH FILDMP 06-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
TAPE   OLD   1  3    3.8 09-FEB-74 1503 000   FRPH TAPE   22-OCT-77 31-OCT-77 P999>

Could you help me by supplying some info?  To see what I have in mind see
HOW[1,ALS], especially the directory and page 2 and perhaps look at the write-up
for E.  als

MAIL SGK 8-MAR-78
Iam starting to generate a file called HOW that tells how to use the files on the
system, principally on [1,3].  You have the following files under your name.
Would you be able to help me?  I suggest that you look at HOW[1,als] as a starter
to see what I am trying to do.  I, of course, have information on some of these
but I thought that you would like a complete list with the opportunity to decide
what should be done.  ALS
FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF
TECH2  DMP   1  3   75.9 23-JUL-74 0228 000 105SGK TECH2  03-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
DIRED  DMP   1  3   14.7 14-FEB-78 1902 000 105SGK DIRED  23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
DIRED  OLD   1  3   14.7 20-DEC-77 1751 000 105SGK DIRED  02-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
ODRD   DMP   1  3   14.5 03-NOV-77 0929 000 105SGK COPY   03-NOV-77 14-NOV-77 P1009>
LINS   DMP   1  3    384 03-JAN-78 0131 000 105SGK FRAID  23-FEB-78 17-JAN-78 P1046>

MAIL BH 8-MAR-78
Iam starting to generate a file called HOW, as in READ HOW, that tells how
to use  the files  on the  system,  principally on  [1,3].  You  have  the
following files under your name.  Would you be able to help me?  I suggest
that you look at HOW[1,als]  as a starter to see  what I am trying to  do.
You might look at the directory and at page 2 in particular.

I, of course, have  information on some  of these but  I thought that  you
would like a complete list with  the opportunity to decide what should  be
done.  ALS

FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF
HELP   OLD   1  3    691 07-NOV-74 1720 000   1 BH HELP   19-APR-77 13-SEP-76 P760>
CALLIT DMP   1  3    431 03-MAR-74 1334 000   1 BH CALLIT 19-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
DDUSE  DMP   1  3    220 29-NOV-73 2127 000   1 BH DDUSE  23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
LOGRUN DMP   1  3    284 07-APR-74 1714 000   1 BH LOGRUN 23-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
TECO   DMP   1  3    4.0 15-NOV-74 1349 000   1 BH TECO   22-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P527>
MAIL   DMP   1  3   10.9 20-FEB-78 1937 000   1 BH MAIL   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
ADS    DMP   1  3    742 25-DEC-77 1435 000   1 BH ADS    12-FEB-78 09-JAN-78 P1043>
MAP    DMP   1  3    679 22-SEP-75 2307 000   1 BH MAP    21-FEB-78 10-MAY-76 P692>
POLL   DMP   1  3    301 25-DEC-77 1439 000   1 BH POLL   22-FEB-78 09-JAN-78 P1043>
HELP   DMP   1  3    724 19-NOV-77 1830 000   1 BH HELP   23-FEB-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
RCV    DMP   1  3    4.8 24-JAN-78 1457 000   1 BH RCV    23-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1059>
OFTP   DMP   1  3    9.7 27-NOV-77 2224 000   1 BH COPY   10-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>

MAIL REM 8-MAR-78
I am starting to generate a file called HOW, as in READ HOW, that tells how
to use  the files  on the  system,  principally on  [1,3].  You  have  the
following files under your name.  Would you be able to help me?  I suggest
that you look at HOW[1,ALS]  as a starter to see  what I am trying to  do.
You might look at the directory and at page 2 in particular.

I, of course, have  information on some  of these but  I thought that  you
would like a complete list with  the opportunity to decide what should  be
done.  ALS

FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF
FILES  ISR   1  3   31.5 12-JAN-74 1410 000   1REM COPY   20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
IARITH LSP   1  3    138 29-SEP-74 1016 000   1REM COPY   29-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
IARITH REL   1  3    210 29-SEP-74 1016 000   1REM COPY   29-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
SSORT  76    1  3    6.8 02-NOV-76 1151 000   1REM SSORT  25-DEC-77 03-JAN-78 P1038>
CRU1   DMP   1  3    9.9 21-SEP-76 1302 000   1REM C1X    05-FEB-78 05-FEB-77 P843>
SPINDL DMP   1  3   13.9 30-NOV-76 0615 000   1REM C3     12-FEB-78 11-DEC-76 P811>
POX    DMP   1  3   29.9 03-FEB-78 0914 000   1REM NPOX   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
CRU2   DMP   1  3    3.2 25-AUG-77 0315 000   1REM CRU2   26-DEC-77 11-SEP-77 P971>
SRCCHK DMP   1  3    1.1 13-DEC-77 1453 000   1REM SRCCHK 28-DEC-77 27-DEC-77 P1033>
RECKNU DMP   1  3   18.8 26-OCT-77 0954 000   1REM RECKNU 28-NOV-77 09-NOV-77 P1003>
SSORT  DMP   1  3    6.9 25-DEC-77 1735 000   1REM SSORT  21-FEB-78 09-JAN-78 P1043>
GRHOCK DMP   1  3   23.3 28-DEC-77 1806 000   1REM GRHOCK 17-FEB-78 09-JAN-78 P1043>
POX    C28   1  3   29.9 28-DEC-77 1826 000   1REM POX    02-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
POX    202   1  3   29.9 02-FEB-78 1718 000   1REM NPOX   03-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
INFO   DMP   1  3   35.2 29-JUN-73 0048 000 LESREM INFO   20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P528>
.chapter research
.sect Mathematical Theory of Computation
.ssect1 Proof Checkers
.ssect2 FOL
DFOL   DMP   1  3   95.9 24-JUL-76 1458 000 FOLRWW DFOL   09-DEC-76  08-SEP-76 P756>
FOL    DMP   1  3   74.9 24-NOV-76 1939 000 FOLRWW FOL    09-DEC-76  04-DEC-76 P805 
.ssect2 LCF
LCF    DMP   1  3   50.9 25-AUG-73 1431 000 MAMMAL COPY   11-SEP-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.ssect2 Others
PCHECK DMP   1  3   29.9 10-APR-73 0901 000 CHE WD COPY   10-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
PROVER DMP   1  3   44.9 14-MAY-75 1546 000   PJRA PROVER 07-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
.ssect1 Program Verification
VERIFY DMP   1  3   66.9 06-DEC-76 1203 000 WEADCO VERIFY 09-DEC-76  07-DEC-76 T20  
WEAK   DMP   1  3   48.9 02-JUL-76 0006 000 LETDCO VERIFY 24-NOV-76  04-DEC-76 P805>
.sect Hand-Eye and Vision
HE     DMP   1  3    6.3 07-NOV-74 1152 000   1KKP HE     08-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
YELLOW DMP   1  3   24.9 07-OCT-76 1126 017 NEWBES COPY   09-DEC-76  23-OCT-76 P781>
YELO   DMP   1  3    7.0 01-JUL-76 2120 017   1BES COPY   09-DEC-76  11-JUL-76 P720>
AL     DMP   1  3    479 04-OCT-76 1402 000   1ARG COPY   09-DEC-76  16-OCT-76 P777>
.reference(Programing Languages, HAL)
.sect Natural Language
PARRY2 DMP   1  3   70.9 08-OCT-76 1034 005 DIABLF PARRY2 23-NOV-76  23-OCT-76 P781>
.sect Thesis
Scraps
∂22-Dec-76  0228	TAG  
 ∂14-Dec-76  0018	REF  	PDRILL,TD, and XS  
	I'm compiling a directory of system programs.  Could you tell
me what these programs do?  Thanks.
    PDRILL DMP   1  3    9.9 07-MAY-76 0301 005   1TAG PDRILL 08-OCT-76  25-MAY-76 P698>
    TD     DMP   1  3    1.1 25-APR-76 0241 005   1TAG LOADER 24-JUN-76  10-MAY-76 P692>
    XS     DMP   1  3    291 08-OCT-74 0826 000   1TAG XS     24-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
				bob

TD is a sail image which converts a file from the SUDS plot program into a tape
used to control a pc board drilling machine

PDRILL simulates a numerically controlled printed circuit board drilling machine
by reading a drill tape and plotting or listing the pattern.

XS is a program that drives the XGP with video image files ( .XGn) produced by the
SUDS plot program (P.DMP[1,3]).
DIR[UP,DOC] as of 08-MAR-78  1549 (for extraction and distribution of entries)

FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF

PCHECK WD   UPDOC    4.3 05-JAN-73 1735 000 CHE WD COPY   06-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
SIXSYS JAM  UPDOC   26.0 27-FEB-78 2348 000   1 KS E      06-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 P1081
GEOMED BGB  UPDOC    5.2 22-MAY-75 1434 000   1 BH COPY   27-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
PUBMAC TES  UPDOC    1.7 30-JUL-76 0223 000   1BJC E      04-MAR-78 16-AUG-76 P744>
SPOOL  REG  UPDOC    4.1 05-MAR-78 0352 000   1MRC E      05-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 T6   
CODE   REG  UPDOC    512 15-MAY-75 2015 000 105SGK E      25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
BCPL   DBA  UPDOC   37.2 08-APR-74 1748 000 FOODBA COPY   13-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
PUBMAC LES  UPDOC    1.3 28-FEB-77 1616 000   SLES E      04-MAR-78 19-MAR-77 P867>
DDKEY  BH   UPDOC    1.7 24-JAN-78 1531 005   1 BH E      07-MAR-78 06-FEB-78 P1060>
DART   REG  UPDOC    2.1 25-JUN-76 1209 000 ACTREG E      28-FEB-78 11-JUL-76 P721>
WHO    ME   UPDOC    2.7 11-FEB-78 1157 005   1MRC E      04-MAR-78 27-FEB-78 P1077>
MTRX   DON  UPDOC    3.2 21-JAN-78 1318 000   1DON COPY   23-JAN-78 06-FEB-78 P1060>
SPSUB  REG  UPDOC    1.8 22-DEC-77 0133 000   1 ME E      11-FEB-78 03-JAN-78 P1039>
PTY    JMG  UPDOC    2.3 11-MAR-76 1018 000  XXLCS E      08-MAR-78 22-MAR-76 P670>
SUDS   RPH  UPDOC   26.3 07-JUL-77 1248 000   1TED E      07-MAR-78 16-JUL-77 P940>
FILDMP RPH  UPDOC    768 09-OCT-72 1457 000  UPDOC COPY   02-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
HYRS   RFS  UPDOC    3.6 06-OCT-72 1906 000  UPDOC COPY   25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
DHACKS WD   UPDOC    512 21-APR-74 2344 000 TALTVR E      25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
DIRED  SGK  UPDOC    3.0 03-NOV-77 0918 000 105SGK E      08-MAR-78 14-NOV-77 P1010>
P2P    RPH  UPDOC    768 11-JUN-72 0040 200  UPDOC        25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
FLOW   MJW  UPDOC    1.0 30-JUL-73 2240 000   M  H TV     25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
FCROX  JAM  UPDOC    768 06-OCT-72 1913 000  UPDOC COPY   25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
IMSSS  JBR  UPDOC    512 06-MAR-78 1129 000   1MRC E      06-MAR-78 07-MAR-78 T9   
INDENT DCS  UPDOC    1.6 09-OCT-74 1354 000   SLES E      25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
MIX    RES  UPDOC    5.5 14-JAN-77 0045 000   1 ME E      25-DEC-77 29-JAN-77 P841>
FILE   DCS  UPDOC    2.8 27-NOV-74 1510 000   1ECH E      07-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
WISE   RES  UPDOC    5.0 26-MAR-77 0759 000 BPMBPM E      24-FEB-78 10-APR-77 P881>
DISPLY RBN  UPDOC    4.7 19-JUN-74 1430 000 FEBNJM E      26-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
RADIO  DON  UPDOC    1.1 06-MAR-78 0233 000   1DON E      06-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 T6   
RAIDUP TVR  UPDOC    640 12-OCT-72 1610 000 L70DAV COPY   25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
ZERO   RPH  UPDOC    384 06-OCT-72 1946 000  UPDOC COPY   04-MAR-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
PLNR   RPO  UPDOC   13.2 16-OCT-72 0220 000   HRPO COPY   25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
SPSUB  OLD  UPDOC    1.5 22-DEC-77 0125 000   1 ME E      25-DEC-77 03-JAN-78 P1039>
LRNSAM DGL  UPDOC   54.2 06-DEC-77 1031 000 SAMDGL E      02-MAR-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
SCORE  LCS  UPDOC   15.7 20-FEB-78 1715 000 COPLCS E      06-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 P1081>
HELP   BH   UPDOC    896 06-MAR-78 1439 000   1KLB E      06-MAR-78 07-MAR-78 T9   
SPELL  REG  UPDOC    5.8 11-MAR-76 0923 000 ACTREG E      05-MAR-78 22-MAR-76 P670>
XEROX  LES  UPDOC    1.5 05-APR-75 1806 000  GLJAM E      29-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
FTP    DCS  UPDOC    1.5 26-NOV-72 1509 000 SLSDCS COPY   02-MAR-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
LOGOUT BH   UPDOC    896 22-NOV-77 1503 055   1JBR E      01-MAR-78 13-DEC-77 P1024>
NET    JAM  UPDOC    7.2 11-JUL-77 1026 000   1JBR E      22-FEB-78 24-JUL-77 P944>
BUREAU LES  UPDOC    1.0 03-NOV-75 2314 000   SLES E      27-FEB-78 17-NOV-75 P605>
RLISP  ACH  UPDOC    8.8 06-NOV-76 0930 000   1ACH FTP    28-JAN-78 20-NOV-76 P801>
FREEFO LES  UPDOC    1.6 20-FEB-75 0336 000   SLES E      25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
DO     RPH  UPDOC    512 21-JUN-76 1653 000   1 ME E      03-MAR-78 05-JUL-76 P717>
INFO   REM  UPDOC    768 11-NOV-72 0130 000   1REM COPY   05-MAR-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
TVEDIT BPM  UPDOC   16.3 15-APR-76 1302 000 BPMBPM E      25-DEC-77 26-APR-76 P687>
WILD   REF  UPDOC    2.7 01-MAR-78 1114 000 PAPREF E      07-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 P1081
TECH2  SGK  UPDOC    768 02-JUL-74 1625 000   1 BH COPY   26-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
UXGP   REG  UPDOC    4.0 30-DEC-74 1140 000 ACTREG E      11-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
6TO10  RPH  UPDOC    256 12-JUN-75 2125 000 105SGK E      27-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
POX    REM  UPDOC    2.1 09-AUG-76 0006 000   TFRM E      25-FEB-78 23-AUG-76 P749>
TVED   DCS  UPDOC   12.3 11-AUG-75 1445 000   1BWP E      27-JAN-78 25-AUG-75 P564>
GENRAL BPM  UPDOC    3.3 16-APR-76 2246 000 BPMBPM E      17-FEB-78 03-MAY-76 P690>
USEMUS LCS  UPDOC   14.0 06-DEC-77 1505 000 MSSLCS E      02-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
PURGE  REG  UPDOC    1.3 23-NOV-77 1601 000   1JBR E      03-MAR-78 13-DEC-77 P1024>
KWIC   LES  UPDOC    1.0 09-MAR-77 0114 000   SLES E      11-JAN-78 29-MAR-77 P872>
RCV    BH   UPDOC    3.2 21-JUN-76 1556 000   1 ME E      08-MAR-78 05-JUL-76 P717>
PRUNE  DAT  UPDOC    640 03-MAR-75 1539 200 EXPTJW E      10-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
IIIKEY BH   UPDOC    1.0 15-DEC-77 1935 000   1MRC E      10-JAN-78 27-DEC-77 P1035>
RSL    JHS  UPDOC    3.7 19-JUL-74 0124 000 ACTREG E      26-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
NOTICE      UPDOC   82.8 04-MAR-78 1657 000   1 ME E      07-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 T6   
TEACH       UPDOC   13.2 07-DEC-77 2317 005   1 ME E      06-MAR-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
CSET   SRS  UPDOC    1.0 03-NOV-74 0040 000   SMJC E      25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
CRE    BGB  UPDOC    4.0 11-OCT-73 0817 000   3BGB E      09-JAN-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
RUNES  POX  UPDOC    1.2 05-JAN-77 2200 000   1DON E      25-DEC-77 22-JAN-77 P835>
IMLKEY BO   UPDOC    1.1 30-SEP-73 2255 000 IML BO COPY   25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
TENGWR DON  UPDOC    2.3 22-APR-76 0210 000   1DON COPY   25-DEC-77 03-MAY-76 P690>
UDP    BH   UPDOC    2.6 07-DEC-77 0034 000 VCGRAK E      19-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
ARM    LOU  UPDOC    5.8 03-OCT-74 1609 000   1PMF E      13-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
MUSIC  TVR  UPDOC   18.1 29-MAR-77 1717 015 MUSTVR PUB2   02-MAR-78 10-APR-77 P881>
NEWLSP DCS  UPDOC    2.2 03-DEC-73 1108 000 LS1DCS COPY   25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
MUSIC       UPDOC    2.1 26-MAY-77 0506 000   1 KS E      06-MAR-78 05-JUN-77 P917>
FSCALE DON  UPDOC    172 08-OCT-77 1714 000   1DON COPY   27-FEB-78 24-OCT-77 P994>
FILEX  DEC  UPDOC    1.6 06-MAR-77 1934 000   1JBR E      26-JAN-78 19-MAR-77 P867>
UFC    REG  UPDOC    640 10-NOV-75 1146 000 ACTREG E      31-DEC-77 25-NOV-75 P610>
E      ALS  UPDOC   43.8 03-MAR-78 0319 000   1 ME E      08-MAR-78 03-MAR-78 T3   
CNVR   MAN  UPDOC   42.0 24-JAN-74 1954 000 SDRMSW PIP    30-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
TENDMP REG  UPDOC    1.0 29-JUL-75 1448 000 ACTREG E      04-FEB-78 10-AUG-75 P558>
CRYPT  HPM  UPDOC    1.8 24-AUG-77 2029 000   1MLB E      04-MAR-78 04-SEP-77 P968>
22AUG  TES  UPDOC    2.3 25-MAY-75 1743 000   LHJS E      04-MAR-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
DDT    REG  UPDOC    2.1 10-JAN-76 1621 000 BPMBPM E      03-MAR-78 27-JAN-76 P641>
FINGER LES  UPDOC    1.0 18-JAN-78 1521 000   1LES E      07-MAR-78 30-JAN-78 P1056>
SAVE   REG  UPDOC    1.3 03-MAR-75 1553 000 EXPTJW E      25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
MAIL   BH   UPDOC   19.1 21-JUN-76 1551 000   1 ME E      08-MAR-78 05-JUL-76 P717>
TMPCOR BH   UPDOC    512 03-FEB-75 2304 000   1 BH E      25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
FASBOL MJC  UPDOC   11.5 14-APR-77 1954 000   1DRN E      25-FEB-78 01-MAY-77 P894>
INDEX  ME   UPDOC    2.1 27-NOV-74 1627 000  NS ME COPY   20-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
IMPSTA MRC  UPDOC    768 05-MAR-78 0954 000   1BPM E      05-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 T6   
KLDIF  REG  UPDOC    1.7 27-JUN-76 1956 000   1JFR E      25-DEC-77 11-JUL-76 P721>
BAIL   JFR  UPDOC     11 06-DEC-74 1627 000   1JFR SOS    27-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
SYSTEM LES  UPDOC    1.1 07-MAR-78 1604 000   1LES E      08-MAR-78 08-MAR-78 T11  
SLIBRY LTR  UPDOC    2.0 28-MAR-75 1924 000 NETSYS IMSSSS 25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
GRFX   XGP  UPDOC    1.7 03-MAR-76 1545 000 FNTDRB COPY   05-MAR-78 16-MAR-76 P666>
PROGS  JAM  UPDOC   13.7 02-NOV-77 1428 000  MAJAM E      03-FEB-78 14-NOV-77 P1010>
CARDS  MJC  UPDOC    768 27-JUN-76 0152 000   1MJC E      29-JAN-78 11-JUL-76 P721>
DRAW   JMG  UPDOC    1.5 10-JAN-77 0236 000   1JMG E      25-DEC-77 22-JAN-77 P835>
ILISP  UCI  UPDOC   72.2 03-MAY-76 1754 000   1REM E      29-JAN-78 10-OCT-77 P987>
KL10   REG  UPDOC    8.0 19-FEB-78 1739 000   1JBR E      04-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 P1081>
XIP    OLD  UPDOC    3.1 24-MAY-75 1505 000 GEMTVR COPY   25-DEC-77 17-JUN-77 P922>
SSORT  REM  UPDOC    2.1 13-FEB-78 0316 000   1MRC E      13-FEB-78 27-FEB-78 P1077>
MAGIC  ME   UPDOC    1.0 30-NOV-77 0130 000   1 ME E      23-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
SWRFRM DON  UPDOC    768 27-SEP-77 0212 000   1DON E      28-JAN-78 10-OCT-77 P987>
LRNMUS DGL  UPDOC    2.3 08-JUL-77 0731 000 222WJR E      29-JAN-78 24-JUL-77 P944>
LRNMU1 DGL  UPDOC    5.6 27-MAY-77 0515 000   1 RP E      25-DEC-77 05-JUN-77 P917>
ITS    JP   UPDOC   32.6 30-AUG-76 1005 000 ISI JP COPY   10-FEB-78 13-SEP-76 P761>
DMKEY  ME   UPDOC    1.2 07-NOV-77 0817 000   1VLF E      08-MAR-78 29-NOV-77 P1018>
DM     ME   UPDOC    3.7 10-FEB-78 2156 000   1BPM E      08-MAR-78 27-FEB-78 P1077>
AIWORD RF   UPDOC   12.7 21-FEB-78 1044 000   1DON E      06-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 P1081>
EXERCI FOL  UPDOC    2.5 06-SEP-76 2138 200 PAPREF COPY   04-FEB-78 19-SEP-76 P765>
REVED  KS   UPDOC    256 19-MAR-77 0650 000 220BIL E      27-FEB-78 03-APR-77 P877>
MIDAS  MRC  UPDOC   34.2 04-NOV-77 0400 000   1MRC E      18-FEB-78 14-NOV-77 P1010>
INFO   ITS  UPDOC   16.7 09-NOV-76 1207 000 ISI JP E      30-DEC-77 20-NOV-76 P801>
F      TVR  UPDOC    9.7 01-MAR-77 1451 005 XGPTVR PUB2   25-DEC-77 19-MAR-77 P867>
DFTP   MRC  UPDOC   11.0 07-DEC-77 0126 005   1MRC E      08-MAR-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
ATSIGN RMS  UPDOC   10.0 08-JAN-77 1355 000   1DSB E      12-FEB-78 22-JAN-77 P835>
P1     XGP  UPDOC   34.6 05-DEC-76 0613 000   1REM POX    25-DEC-77 12-FEB-77 P848>
SPINDL REM  UPDOC    2.7 13-NOV-76 1922 045   1REM COPY   06-JAN-78 04-DEC-76 P806>
SLR1   JP   UPDOC    4.3 26-NOV-76 1322 000 PSI JP E      12-FEB-78 10-OCT-77 P987>
CGOL   PRA  UPDOC   13.5 08-MAR-77 0909 000 AIDRPG E      02-MAR-78 19-MAR-77 P867>
KBDMAP ME   UPDOC    256 10-DEC-77 2237 000   1 ME E      27-FEB-78 27-DEC-77 P1035>
PRLISP JP   UPDOC    7.1 03-DEC-76 0950 000 PSI JP E      15-JAN-78 18-DEC-76 P817>
E      UPD  UPDOC   11.5 03-MAR-78 0311 000   1 ME E      06-MAR-78 03-MAR-78 T3   
FOLMRG REF  UPDOC    3.1 08-DEC-76 1611 000 FOLRWW E      06-MAR-78 31-DEC-76 P821>
IMLAC  PMF  UPDOC    640 04-JAN-77 2341 000   1 ME E      25-DEC-77 15-JAN-77 P831>
LOGIN  BH   UPDOC    3.0 06-DEC-77 0903 000   1MRC E      04-MAR-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
BLOOP  DON  UPDOC    2.5 08-DEC-77 2137 000 220JEG E      15-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
WHEN   DON  UPDOC    640 27-SEP-77 0303 000   1DON E      24-FEB-78 10-OCT-77 P987>
SIMULA JP   UPDOC  126.1 15-APR-77 0757 257 ISI JP COPY   15-FEB-78 01-MAY-77 P894>
NEWESC ME   UPDOC    256 10-DEC-77 2238 000   1 ME E      16-FEB-78 27-DEC-77 P1035>
BLOOD  BPM  UPDOC    768 08-FEB-78 1518 000   1BPM E      08-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 P1081
IIIPOX MLB  UPDOC    1.6 15-NOV-77 2006 000   1MLB E      08-MAR-78 13-DEC-77 P1024>
XIP    JAM  UPDOC    3.5 01-JUN-77 1654 000  MAJAM COPY   08-FEB-78 17-JUN-77 P922>
ADVENT DON  UPDOC    384 04-NOV-77 1208 000   1DON E      01-MAR-78 14-NOV-77 P1010>
DFTP   INT  UPDOC    2.2 03-JUN-77 2205 005 NETMRC COPY   25-DEC-77 25-JUN-77 P927>
POX    XGO  UPDOC   35.6 11-JUN-77 0058 000   1REM POX    27-JAN-78 23-JAN-78 P1051>
DFTPCH XGP  UPDOC   1021 20-JUN-77 1312 000 NETMRC COPY   10-JAN-78 02-JUL-77 P932>
SUPDUP MRC  UPDOC    1.5 05-MAR-78 0558 000   1MRC E      07-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 T6   
PACK   DON  UPDOC    128 07-OCT-77 2356 000   1DON E      27-FEB-78 24-OCT-77 P994>
SWR    REG  UPDOC    7.0 06-NOV-77 0207 000   1DSB E      06-MAR-78 29-NOV-77 P1018>
LSPARC RPG  UPDOC   89.8 20-FEB-78 1359 000 AIDRPG E      02-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 P1081>
TEACH  DM   UPDOC   13.8 08-OCT-77 2130 000   1 BH E      05-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 P1081
TTYJAM PAM  UPDOC    512 06-MAR-78 1026 000   1BPM E      08-MAR-78 07-MAR-78 T9   
TIPUG  BBN  UPDOC   27.0 02-NOV-77 0306 000   SLES E      28-FEB-78 14-NOV-77 P1010>
MUS10  LCS  UPDOC   18.2 15-NOV-77 0930 000 MUSLCS COPY   26-FEB-78 13-DEC-77 P1024>
BIBOP  RPG  UPDOC   10.3 21-DEC-77 1843 000 AIDRPG E      08-FEB-78 03-JAN-78 P1039>
TELNET MRC  UPDOC    2.0 07-FEB-78 2057 100   1MRC E      07-MAR-78 21-FEB-78 P1072>
QUEST  EJF  UPDOC    1.7 30-NOV-77 0940 100   1CJS E      05-MAR-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
DAC    JAM  UPDOC    640 07-DEC-77 2100 000   1 KS E      18-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
COLLOQ REF  UPDOC    256 14-DEC-77 1244 000 PAPREF E      20-JAN-78 27-DEC-77 P1035>
MBOX   DGL  UPDOC    8.2 03-MAR-78 1324 000 SAMDGL E      06-MAR-78 06-MAR-78 T6   
HUNK   RPG  UPDOC    1.3 20-OCT-76 1253 000   1RPG E      24-JAN-78 23-JAN-78 P1051>
MSS    LCS  UPDOC   15.5 12-FEB-78 0846 000 NEWLCS E      14-FEB-78 27-FEB-78 P1077>
MACLIS RPG  UPDOC    1.0 03-NOV-76 1556 000   1RPG E      06-MAR-78 03-JAN-78 P1039>
NCOMPL RPG  UPDOC    4.6 21-DEC-77 1851 000 AIDRPG E      20-FEB-78 03-JAN-78 P1039>
POX    XGP  UPDOC   35.8 11-JAN-78 0149 000   1REM POX    08-MAR-78 23-JAN-78 P1051>
CRYPTO DON  UPDOC    1.1 25-JAN-78 2329 000   1DON E      17-FEB-78 06-FEB-78 P1060>
TIP    BPM  UPDOC    640 10-FEB-78 2159 007   1BPM E      08-MAR-78 27-FEB-78 P1077>
DDHACK DEA  UPDOC    1.7 02-FEB-78 2203 000   IDEA COPY   25-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1065>
PASCAL EJG  UPDOC    768 06-FEB-78 0256 000   SEJG E      08-MAR-78 21-FEB-78 P1072>
PASINS EJG  UPDOC    384 21-JAN-78 1626 005   1EJG E      08-MAR-78 13-FEB-78 P1065>
PASNOT EJG  UPDOC    1.0 21-JAN-78 1627 005   1EJG E      08-MAR-78 13-FEB-78 P1065>
PASHLP EJG  UPDOC    2.2 21-JAN-78 1623 005   1EJG E      08-MAR-78 13-FEB-78 P1065>
PASDOC EJG  UPDOC    4.1 21-JAN-78 1628 005   1EJG E      08-MAR-78 13-FEB-78 P1065>
PASMAN EJG  UPDOC   20.6 21-JAN-78 1630 005   1EJG E      08-MAR-78 13-FEB-78 P1065>
	TOTAL=1397.2

DIR [S,DOC] (copy for extraction of listings as pages are completed)
FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF

RLISP  ACH   SDOC    7.2 31-OCT-75 1257 000   SLES E      25-DEC-77 10-NOV-75 P602>
NS     ME    SDOC   18.3 31-JAN-78 1442 000 RESPAM E      14-MAR-78 13-FEB-78 P1065>
FIND   TES   SDOC    1.3 20-SEP-75 1731 000  NS ME E      12-MAR-78 06-OCT-75 P582>
PUB    TES   SDOC   37.0 22-OCT-77 1841 000 MAMPAM E      14-MAR-78 09-NOV-77 P1004>
DOC    LES   SDOC   21.1 28-FEB-74 0057 000  JCMUS E      03-MAR-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
TAPE   RPH   SDOC    1.5 18-JUN-77 1523 000   1DWP E      27-JAN-78 02-JUL-77 P932>
LISP   RPG   SDOC  105.8 16-DEC-77 1319 000 AIDRPG E      15-MAR-78 21-FEB-78 P1072>
HELIB  KKP   SDOC   35.6 07-JAN-75 1302 000   1KKP E      08-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
FONT   UPD   SDOC    768 27-JAN-78 1317 000   1LES E      15-MAR-78 13-FEB-78 P1065>
PLNR   BGB   SDOC   18.0 22-MAY-74 0635 000 CMSLCS E      25-DEC-77 05-JUL-75 P533>
A2E    KK    SDOC    2.0 12-JUL-76 1038 055   1PEJ COPY   22-FEB-78 25-JUL-76 P732>
LINK   JFR   SDOC    384 21-SEP-75 1449 000   1JFR E      09-MAR-78 06-OCT-75 P582>
PUB    UPD   SDOC   10.6 07-DEC-77 1135 000 RESPAM E      14-MAR-78 19-DEC-77 P1030>
SNAIL  MJC   SDOC    9.7 21-JUN-76 1511 000   1 ME E      12-MAR-78 05-JUL-76 P717>
NEWPRV JBR   SDOC    1.6 16-JAN-78 1410 000   1JBR E      14-MAR-78 30-JAN-78 P1056>
LISP16 WD    SDOC   39.5 17-FEB-76 1647 000 ACTREG E      08-MAR-78 27-FEB-78 P1077>
	TOTAL= 656.2

PRUNE  DAT   SDOC    113 23-MAR-74 2019 200   2REM PRUNE  12-MAR-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
GEOMED	BGB   	BGB   	GEOMETRIC STRUCTURES EDITOR FOR DISPLAYS
MONCOM	BH    	      	MONITOR COMMAND MANUAL, FOR EDITOR RATHER THAN LISTING
APE   	ME    	      	ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS EXTRACTOR USING KEYWORD EXPRESSIONS
FAIL  	PMP   	      	FAST ASSEMBLER WITH MACROS AND BLOCK STRUCTURE
RAID  	PMP   	      	DEBUG MODULE FOR DISPLAYS
COPY  	RPH   	      	GENERAL PURPOSE PROGRAM FOR COPYING FILES AROUND
PUB   	TES   	      	TEXT COMPILER FOR PRODUCING NICELY-FORMATTED WRITEUPS, MANY FEATURES
MAIL LES 17-MAR-78
The following files on S,DOC seem to be quite old and out of date.  Should they
be up-dated or maybe deleted?

FILNAM EXT   PPN    SIZE  WRITTEN  TIME PRO    WRITER     REFERENCE      DUMPED      OFF
DOC    LES   SDOC   21.1 28-FEB-74 0057 000  JCMUS E      03-MAR-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
HELIB  KKP   SDOC   35.6 07-JAN-75 1302 000   1KKP E      08-FEB-78 05-JUL-75 P533>
RLISP  ACH   SDOC    7.2 31-OCT-75 1257 000   SLES E      25-DEC-77 10-NOV-75 P602>
MAIL to others re. HOW
MAIL to EJG
Since you have  been documenting  PASCAL, I am  wondering if  you will  be
willing to be one of the early contributers to the new HOW file.

I have made a start at  a page on PASCAL but  you are welcome to re-do  it
completely if  you  have some  better  ideas  as to  format.   The  PASCAL
write-up is on page 38 of HOW[1,ALS].

.chapter Information
.sect Information about SAIL
.ssect1 People
.ssect2 Who's logged in where
FINGER DMP   1  3    7.8 24-OCT-76 1446 000   SLES FINGER 09-DEC-76  06-NOV-76 P789>
WHERE  DMP   1  3    534 23-AUG-76 0245 005   GGFF WHERE  09-DEC-76  08-SEP-76 P756>
WHO    DMP   1  3    3.0 07-OCT-76 0021 000   1 ME WHO    09-DEC-76  23-OCT-76 P781>)
.reference(System Usage, Who)
.ssect2 Personal statistics
FIND   DMP   1  3    6.7 02-SEP-75 1158 000  NS ME LOADER 09-DEC-76  15-SEP-75 P573>
BUREAU DMP   1  3   12.2 07-DEC-75 2334 000   FACT BUREAU 06-DEC-76  22-DEC-75 P623>
.ssect1 The operating system
.ssect2 System Usage
HG     DMP   1  3    1.7 26-OCT-76 1447 000   1JBR HG     26-OCT-76  06-NOV-76 P789>
MONUSE DMP   1  3    512 17-MAY-72 1646 000   1  3        08-OCT-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.ssect2 Device usage
BIGPIC DMP   1  3    2.7 06-MAY-72 1138 000   1DCS        06-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
POLL   DMP   1  3    277 12-APR-74 1642 000   1 BH POLL   08-DEC-76  10-MAY-76 P692>
UDPUSE DMP   1  3    271 22-JUN-75 1517 000 XGPTVR UDPUSE 20-NOV-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
DDUSE  DMP   1  3    220 29-NOV-73 2127 000   1 BH DDUSE  09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
WM     DMP   1  3     80 18-MAR-74 1840 000   1 BH WM     08-DEC-76  10-MAY-76 P692>
.ssect1 How to get help
this paper
HELP   DMP   1  3    698 01-SEP-76 2028 000   1EJG HELP   09-DEC-76  13-SEP-76 P760>
NEWS   DMP   1  3    6.9 13-SEP-74 1650 000  NS ME NEWS   09-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P527>
.sect Information about the Rest of the World
news service
INFO   DMP   1  3   35.2 29-JUN-73 0048 000 LESREM INFO   05-DEC-76  05-JUL-75 P528>
MAIL LCS 6-MAR-78
The following files are on 1,3 with your initials. I would like to report what
they all do in the HOW file. Can you help me.  ALS

MS     DMP   1  3   38.8 20-FEB-78 1546 000   1LCS MS     23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
PLAY   DMP   1  3    1.9 13-NOV-77 1101 000 MUSLCS PLAY   23-FEB-78 12-DEC-77 P1022>
SCORE  DMP   1  3   32.0 19-FEB-78 1645 000 SCXLCS SCORE  23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
XM     DMP   1  3    1.3 01-FEB-78 1228 000 HRNLCS XM     23-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
FUNC   DMP   1  3   21.3 04-FEB-78 1803 000 PLTLCS FUNC   22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
MUS10  DMP   1  3   15.9 20-FEB-78 1058 000 COPLCS MUS10  23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
WAVES  DMP   1  3    6.7 30-JAN-78 1654 000 MUSLCS WAVES  22-FEB-78 13-FEB-78 P1064>
MUSIC  OLD   1  3   16.2 30-MAR-77 1611 000 NEWLCS MUSIC  17-MAY-77 31-MAY-77 P911>
DMUS   DMP   1  3   22.9 13-OCT-76 1242 000 MSSLCS DMUS   19-DEC-76 30-OCT-76 P785>
MIXER  DMP   1  3    769 10-NOV-77 1109 000 MUSLCS MIXER  27-JAN-78 29-NOV-77 P1017>
MIXSCR DMP   1  3    5.2 06-OCT-77 1219 000 MUSLCS MIXSCR 16-JAN-78 17-OCT-77 P990>
MPT    DMP   1  3   21.5 23-MAY-76 1335 000  XXLCS MPT    19-DEC-76 07-JUN-76 P704>
JUST   DMP   1  3   32.5 18-FEB-78 1047 000 MLGLCS JUST   23-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
DRW    DMP   1  3   22.5 17-FEB-78 1655 000 MLGLCS DRW    22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070
MUS5   DMP   1  3   29.8 02-NOV-77 1049 000 MUSLCS MUS5   10-NOV-77 14-NOV-77 P1009>
PLT    DMP   1  3    439 06-DEC-77 1638 000 MSSLCS PLT    15-FEB-78 19-DEC-77 P1028>
BIGPLA DMP   1  3    386 07-MAR-77 1222 000 COWLCS BIGPLA 23-JUN-77 19-MAR-77 P866>
PAGE   DMP   1  3   26.4 18-FEB-78 1048 000 MLGLCS PAGE   22-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 T14  
DUPINS DMP   1  3   20.0 22-MAR-77 1539 000 NEWLCS DUPINS 02-FEB-78 03-APR-77 P876>
SMPLS  DMP   1  3    6.3 12-OCT-77 1346 000 MUSLCS SMPLS  25-DEC-77 24-OCT-77 P993>
12T    DMP   1  3    7.6 18-NOV-77 1848 000 MSSLCS 12T    25-DEC-77 12-DEC-77 P1022>
TAP    DMP   1  3    7.1 21-FEB-78 1443 000 TAPLCS TAP    22-FEB-78 22-FEB-78 T18  
SFUNC  DMP   1  3   21.3 04-FEB-78 1800 000 PLTLCS SFUNC  04-FEB-78 21-FEB-78 P1070>
MAIL LES 10-MAR-78
MAIL LCS 16-MAR-78
The HOW file is gradually taking shape but it lacks all references to your
music programs.  I know that it is a big job to do a complete job, but
couldn't you make a start? 
Here is an explanation of what is wanted, extracted from page 2 of the
HOW file (which is itself in the desired format).  Does this help?

   	HOW	A condensed reference file to useful system programs.

Currently maintained by ALS

Supplementary information:
	PRUNE.DAT[3,2]	One line descriptions of some files
	HELP	An on-line program called by typing HELP.
	Monitor Command Manual, SAILON-54.5, January 1976
	UUO Manual, SAILON-55.5, November 1977 (on line as UUO.ME[S,DOC])

To use:	Type READ HOW[1,ALS]  then  ⊗FNAME⊗P (in E) where NAME is the name
	  of program you wish to enquire about, or see directory on page 1.

To exit: You will be in E so you may switch to another file or ⊗E exit.

This file describes some of the many useful programs that are available on
the system and gives a few basic commands for using these programs.

The entries each occupy a separate page of less than 100 lines.  The first
line is arranged so that the (E maintained) directory forms a useful index
and so that a ⊗FNAME⊗P command may be used to locate any desired entry.

The entries should conform to the following format:

1) A first line, indented by a single TAB, to contain the program name,  a
second TAB and a very short  description (total line length not to  exceed
68 characters).  Do not mention names of other programs on this line!

2) The name of the author or the person currently maintaining the program.

3) References to supplementary information, on-line files, manual etc..

4) Calling and exiting commands

5) The explanatory text itself.

The author of  each page  has primary responsibility  for maintaining  the
information.  Please report all errors or omissions to him and/or to  ALS.

If you find an error or omission  and it is not corrected in a  reasonable
period of time,  you should add  a signed addendum  to the original  page.
Please do not make other corrections without informing ALS.