Most modern computers seem to support INT 16.03 to set the Typematic rate.
I've personally never had it fail with real hardware, but in some Virtual
Machines (VMs) it doesn't actually do anything.
I've had lots of failures with support of INT 16.09 to get the current
typematic rate, both in
Hi! Here is the related RBIL part for you:
B-1603---
INT 16 - KEYBOARD - SET TYPEMATIC RATE AND DELAY
AH = 03h
AL = subfunction
00h set default delay and rate (PCjr and some PS/2)
01h increase delay before repeat
Eric proposed:
"For this, you start DEBUG, then type:
a cs:100
mov ax,0305
mov bx,
int 16
int 20
g
q
"
As Ah=3 int 16h is marked as PCJr only:
INT 16 - KEYBOARD - SET DELAYS (PCjr ONLY)
REG AH = 3
AL = 0: RESET TYPEMATIC
AL = 1: INCREASE INITIAL DELAY
AL = 2: INCREASE CONTINUING DELAY
> Nice response Tom. Next time don’t be so shy and really let the
> language fly, but ya did have a good point if not good language.
well the original question
> > In DOS I was able to press and hold a key and the key would repeat.
> > Great for arrow and page keys.? For some reason this
Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 10 Jun 2022 13:45:13 -0400
> From: Daniel
> To: freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net
> Subject: [Freedos-user] Keyboard issue
> Message-ID:
> u5hmdmd34wbk7...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> In DOS I was able t
Tom,
In DOS I was able to press and hold a key and the key would repeat.
Great for arrow and page keys. For some reason this stopped workin
wow. one of these Asshole from Hell questions:
no information what DOS we are talkink about.
no information whatsoever about CONFIG.SYS/AUTOEXEC.BAT.
> In DOS I was able to press and hold a key and the key would repeat.
> Great for arrow and page keys. For some reason this stopped workin
wow. one of these Asshole from Hell questions:
no information what DOS we are talkink about.
no information whatsoever about CONFIG.SYS/AUTOEXEC.BAT.
On Fri, Jun 10, 2022 at 1:47 PM Daniel wrote:
>
> In DOS I was able to press and hold a key and the key would repeat. Great
> for arrow and page keys. For some reason this stopped workin and I can only
> press a key once and holdin a key would do nothin.
>
> Does anyone know how to fix this?
In DOS I was able to press and hold a key and the key would repeat. Great
for arrow and page keys. For some reason this stopped workin and I can
only press a key once and holdin a key would do nothin.
Does anyone know how to fix this?
On Fri, Jun 10, 2022 at 08:27
wrote:
> Send Freedos-user
Hello,
On Fri, 9 May 2014 at 18:21, Bret Johnson wrote:
> If so, (or perhaps even if not so), you might try the MS KEYB program. It
> completely replaces the BIOS keyboard driver. None of the other keyboard
> drivers replace the BIOS like MS KEYB does, they just indirectly extend the
>
Hi,
First of all, thank you for reporting this!
On Sun, May 18, 2014 at 3:02 AM, Shane shan...@hotmail.com wrote:
I downloaded the demo Vision Edit from the site below, and was able to patch
the overlay VED.OVL after downloading bp7_tpl.zip from Alexei A. Frounze's
site alexfru.chat.ru and
About (de)compressors: have you checked with UPX (it's quite heavily
used nowadays) and LZEXE (this one was kind of popular in old days...) ?
Maybe could you check with a hex editor for some compressor signature?
As for patching the borland runtime 200 error, TPPATCH always worked
fine for
FWIW, the one that works for me is called PROT200. I only have a couple of
programs that need it (and they aren't Editors).
Another possibility might be to use my SLOWDOWN program, which will let you
change the effective CPU speed on the fly with keyboard hot-keys. The
Runtime Error 200 fix
I believe the exe is self extracting zip file. Its safer to open with
winzip in case of a bug.
Just run the exe in a directory and it should expand itself.
DS
On Fri, 16 May 2014 10:06:21 -0300 Marcos Favero Florence de Barros
fav...@mpcnet.com.br writes:
Hi,
This is just an update on the
Dennis:
There are a number of editors that will run under FreeDOS. If
Marcos can tell us what he really wants in an editor, it might
be possible to suggest a replacement that won't have the
problems.
Don't worry! As my work always involved massive amounts of
writing, I have tried many,
Hi Dennis,
Another you might find of interest is TPE , the Turbo Powered
Editor. It's a freeware offering from Brian Foley at TurboPower
software, based on a couple of different Borland components.
One interesting feature is that it can swap most of itself out,
leaving only a stub in
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 11:02 AM, Marcos Favero Florence de Barros
fav...@mpcnet.com.br wrote:
Another you might find of interest is TPE , the Turbo Powered
Editor. It's a freeware offering from Brian Foley at TurboPower
software, based on a couple of different Borland components.
One
There is a good program avaiable for download from a German site. It's a
TSR that traps
runtime 200 errors and puts your computer back on track. Go to Google and
search runtime 200 errors.
The name begins with TP. When software is written with Turbo Pascal, a
timing delay command
uses do loops
On Sun, May 11, 2014 at 12:58 PM, Rugxulo rugx...@gmail.com wrote:
P.S. The worst advice is just don't use that program! But (as you
most definitely are already aware) ... TDE has Ctrl-b and VILE has
Ctrl-A f }, etc. (not to mention classic vi [e.g. Elvis]'s friend
fmt, often invoked via '='
Hi,
Since I'm having almost no spare time these days, I'll have to
do the various suggested tests little by little.
Tom:
please try running ONLY HIMEM and MKEYB (or the other keyboard
driver), and see if the problem vanishes.
I did a test *without* loading HIMEM, JEMM, KEYB/MKEYB,
Hi,
Eric Auer wrote:
The ACPI throttle FDAPM SPEEDn thing? Which n value?
I was using FDAPM SPEED1, in order to drop CPU speed from 1000
MHz to under 200 MHz to prevent the Borland runtime 200 bug.
Bret Johnson wrote:
Just as another troubleshooting item, does it happen even when
you
Hi,
you might have stated your keyboard driver first ...
but as you later state that the problem occurs with MKEYB as well,
here's my educated guess what happens:
the UP, DOWN, LEFT, RIGHT keys in the cursor block are similar to the
UP, DOWN, LEFT, RIGHT in the numeric key pad as they send
Hi Tom,
something in your machines blocks interrupts for too long, and
keys get lost - most likely some TSR or driver, ...
In addition to reducing processor speed with FDAPM, I was using
Japheth's HDPMI16.EXE, as well as DPAKBD.COM to provide processor
idling.
please try running ONLY HIMEM
As an extension to what Tom stated, it is most likely a timing issue, though I
don't necessarily think it's the 'E0' scancode getting lost. The cursor
movement number pad keys do some weird things in the background that you
don't normally see.
E.g., even when NumLock is on, and you hold down
You can download my SCANTEST program
good idea;
MKEYB BR /T
does something similar
(it's included with the USB drivers)
that gives us the idea to ask:
is this a PS/2 or USB keyboard ?
Just as another troubleshooting item, does it happen even when you
don't have a special keyboard driver
Hi,
A couple of years ago I noticed that, in some computers, when
the Up, Down, Left or Right keys were held pressed for several
seconds, sometimes they acted as numeric keypad keys, i.e.,
instead of just moving the cursor in these directions, they
actually *wrote* the characters 8, 2, 4 or 6
Your problem with Bordland. There might be a fix for it. A web
downloadable TRS
can catch the error when it happens and correct it. It occurs when
software was written with PASCAL.
Do a Google search for it It was written by a German.
DS
On Thu, 8 May 2014 19:19:28 -0300 Marcos Favero
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