So today, I decided to see how Word Perfect 5.1 and Ed.exe would
read files saved as .txt in Notepad and .txt (MS-DOS format) in
Wordpad.  The only difference that I noticed is that the lines started
and stopped at different points so that a sentence that began on one
line in one format might have already begun on the line above that in
the other.  In both cases, VocalEyes didn't read the sentences
properly in Ed.exe.  The words at the end of each line would cut off.
But in Word Perfect 5.1, it read the lines perfectly.  I'm baffled by
this, since Ed is from Word Perfect Corporation and even uses the same
commands as 5.1.  The only difference is that it saves as .txt and not
as .wpd and it doesn't convert the .txt files to .wpd when you open
them.  I then checked the settings in VocalEyes in both programs and
they were the same.

  I'm completely confused here.  Why is it doing this?  I would gladly
use NoteWorthy, as I love that program, but the file was too large for
it to handle.  I'd like to try Microsoft Word 5.5, but for some
reason, it's only downloadable as an .exe file and it's over 1.44mb.
The DOS machine that I'm using right now only has a floppy drive (the
pcmcia slot is taken up by the KeyNote Voicecard synth, which I won't
remove unless absolutely necessary) so I have no way of getting the
program on there.  It also doesn't have the regular editor that's
supposed to come with MS-DOS 6.21 and I can't seem to find that
anywhere!  I on't even know if it's accessible.  Can anyone help me or
recommend another editor for me to try?  Should I use JAWS or ASAP to
see if I get different results or are the settings in the program
rather than in the screen reader?

Thanks,
Eleni

On 7/14/10, Eleni Vamvakari <[email protected]> wrote:
>   Last night, I went to
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_file#Formats
>
> and still don't completely understand this.
>
> "Most Windows text files use a form of ANSI, OEM or Unicode encoding.
> What Windows terminology calls "ANSI encodings" are usually
> single-byte ISO-8859 encodings, except for in locales such as Chinese,
> Japanese and Korean that require double-byte character sets. ANSI
> encodings were traditionally used as default system locales within
> Windows, before the transition to Unicode. By contrast, OEM encodings,
> also known as MS-DOS code pages, were defined by IBM for use in the
> original IBM PC text mode display system. They typically include
> graphical and line-drawing characters common in full-screen MS-DOS
> applications. Newer Windows text files may use a Unicode encoding such
> as UTF-16LE or UTF-8."
>
>   So, what's the difference between a Windows and a DOS .txt file.
> Does it matter, when reading with a DOS text editor or wordprocessor,
> whether I saved the file with Notepad as .txt or saved it with Wordpad
> as .txt (MS-DOS format)? If not, then why does Wordpad have a MS-DOS
> format option? I'm pretty sure that Notepad doesn't use unicode
> because I can't save Greek files with it and always have to use
> Wordpad and save them as rtf. I know that files saved as either type
> of .txt will read under Word Perfect and NoteWorthy but WP (including
> the text editor) acts strangely with VocalEyes at times, not reading
> complete lines and sometimes skipping lines, and I'm trying to find
> out why it does this. I've installed the set files for Word Perfect
> Office, hoping that it would solve this problem, but it hasn't done
> so.  Interestingly enough, it doesn't do this with all files. I
> thought that perhaps it was word wrap, but apparently, it's
> automatically set to on, so that might not be the case. I need this
> sorted so that I can decide how to save my documents that I'll be
> transferring over to the DOS machine, or if it's not the formatting,
> then I need to learn what changes have to be made either in VocalEyes
> or in Word perfect so that it reads properly..  I'm currently using a
> KeyNote Gold laptop, which doesn't have the built-in MS-DOS editor, so
> I can't test my files there and NoteWorthy can't handle large files.
> I need to save the tutorials that I found for QuickBASIC and for batch
> programming, so the sooner this can be resolved the better.
>
> Thanks,
> Eleni
>

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