CP/M. Sep. 1994. Walnut Creek CDROM. -------------------------------------- FOG Starter Files path: \fog\starter Name Size Date Description ------------ ---- ---- ----- CHECK.COM 2176 05-06-93 [Check 1 of 2] Use this to check the CRC values of files you obtain from the library. Compare the values you obtain with CHECK against those listed in each "disk doc". CHECK.DOC 768 05-06-93 [Check 2 of 2] CPM000.DOC 7936 07-13-94 This is the description of the disk contents. DE-LBR.COM 6272 05-06-93 [De-Library 1 of 2] A utility to quickly extract all members of a .LBR file. DE-LBR.DOC 256 05-06-93 [De-Library 2 of 2] DU-V89.ARK 13056 05-06-93 ver. 8.9 This disk utility allows you to modify any byte on a disk. With DU you may even rebuild a damaged disk directory. This program is not recommended for novices -- they should first try to recover a damaged disk with NewSWeeP. Never work on your only copy of a disk and never practice on a disk you really need. The program and documentation are stored in an archive file to save disk space. Use UNARC. EDFILE.COM 11008 05-06-93 ver. 1/10/84 [EDFILE 1 of 2] Modify any disk file, either in ASCII or hexadecimal, with ease. So easy-to-use that even novices can patch their software. Excellent for getting rid of an extra end-of-file marker (^Z or 1A hex) in your data file as well. EDFILE.DOC 20352 05-06-93 ver. 1/10/84 [EDFILE 2 of 2] FBAD57.COM 1792 05-06-93 ver. 5.7 [Findbad 1 of 2] Finds all the bad blocks on a disk and builds a directory entry to ensure those blocks cannot be accidentally used. Recommended for use on every disk immediately after it is formatted (initialized). An absolute must for any disk which will hold permanent archival copies of your files and data. FBAD57.DOC 6144 05-06-93 ver. 5.7 [Findbad 2 of 2] FBAD58X.COM 4736 05-06-93 ver. 5.8 [Findbad for CPM+ 1 of 2] Modified for CP/M 3.0 systems, this marks out bad sectors on your disks so they cannot be used. FBAD58X.DOC 1280 05-06-93 ver. 5.8 [Findbad for CPM+ 2 of 2] NSWEEP.DOC 28672 05-06-93 ver. 2.07 [NewSWeeP 2 of 2] NSWP207.COM 11776 05-06-93 ver. 2.07 [NewSWeeP 1 of 2] Dave Rand's fabulous file management utility. For anyone who needs to copy, view, print, rename, move, squeeze, unsqueeze, or erase files, either individually or in groups. NewSWeeP can also change the file attributes. On a CP/M 2.2 machine, will recover files from a disk with the dreaded "BDOS Error" -- just press return every time you get the "BDOS Error" message. What NewSWeeP can't recover is probably gone forever and not worth spending the time on. RECVR21.COM 3328 05-06-93 ver. 2.1 [Recover 1 of 3] Unerase files which have been erroneously erased. RECVR21 is for CP/M 2.2 machines; RECVR21X is for CP/M 3.0 machines. RECVR21.DOC 640 05-06-93 ver. 2.1 [Recover 3 of 3] RECVR21X.COM 5888 05-06-93 ver. 2.1 [Recover 2 of 3] SAPP20.COM 1920 05-06-93 ver. 2.0 [Sort And Pack 1 of 2] For both CP/M 2.2 and CPM+ systems, this allows you to update the directory of your disk so that all files are organized alphabetically and all unwanted (erased) files are PERMANENTLY and IRRETRIEVABLY eliminated. SAPP20.DOC 7040 05-06-93 ver. 2.0 [Sort And Pack 2 of 2] SD.DOC 7808 05-06-93 ver. 13.0 [SuperDirectory 2 of 2] SD130.COM 5248 05-06-93 ver. 13.0 [SuperDirectory 1 of 2] Use this instead of the directory program which came with your computer. Be sure to read the documentation so you know about the many options which are available. UNARC-CR.DOC 1280 05-06-93 [File Extraction 4 of 4] Abbreviated documentation for the UNARC, UNARCA, and UNCR programs written specifically for inclusion on this disk. Complete documentation, and most of the source code, is in the regular FOG-CPM library. UNARC.COM 4736 05-06-93 [File Extraction 1 of 4] Extract the members of an archive (.ARK or .ARC) file. Remember, .ARK normally signifies that the members are for CP/M systems and .ARC normally signifies that the members are MS/PC-DOS systems. UNARCA.COM 5760 05-06-93 [File Extraction 2 of 4] Extracts members of archive files on 8080 systems. UNCR.COM 6400 05-06-93 [File Extraction 3 of 4] Extract files which have been compressed with either a crunch or a squeeze program. Remember, not all files with a `Z' as as the middle character of the extension are crunched -- this `Z' can also signify AZM source code.