Well, first off, the use of cwdaemon and Tlf via Hamlib on the same serial port (real motherboard port) worked perfectly without a problem throughout my operating time. I missed Saturday evening due to having aggravated my hip yesterday and had to lay down. I was up around 0830z this AM and worked a bit over an hour and had to lay down for a while and then again from about 1140z to 1420z or thereabouts. The hip is feeling batter!
My CT changes didn't get used much as I saw I had Alt-1 set for the exchange I wanted to send in S&P mode so that I didn't have to edit the F3 message all the time. Making sure that Enter didn't log an incomplete contact did prove useful in the wee hours... ESM mode for running worked perfectly. Combining Escape to halt the CW message and clearing the input fields is a double edged sword. When there is text in the call and exchange fields and the cursor is in the exchange field and a CW message is in progress, the first ESC stops the TX and the second clears the exchange field and the third clears the call field. This is fine so far as it goes. When the call field has characters in it and the cursor is in the call field and the exchange field is empty, a single ESC stops the TX AND clears the call field! That led to several ARGH! moments. I think that a better algorithm could be worked out. Scoring is completely wrong but ARRL 160 is difficult to score. Tlf several times counted an incorrect multiplier. For one I worked a KG4 in VA and Tlf scored it as the KG4 mult when it should have determined that the VA meant it was conus. Another time or two I fat fingered an exchange and removed the text from the mult column but even a :RES command had no apparent effect. Also, it seemed as though coming back from an :EDI command resulted in Tlf forgetting any previous dupes even though they're marked as zero points. In the end, the main thing is that the Cabrillo file is correct and ARRL will take care of the scoring. Overall, I enjoyed using Tlf again. 73, Nate -- "The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true." Web: https://www.n0nb.us Projects: https://github.com/N0NB GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41 F689 BBA6 FB2C 5130 D55A 8819
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