Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!bionet!agate!ucbvax!pnet01.cts.com!cwr From: cwr@pnet01.cts.com (Will Rose) Newsgroups: comp.os.cpm Subject: Wordstar and the high bit Message-ID: <009414CF0E8414E0.000010C0@dcs.simpact.com> Date: 17 Dec 90 09:11:42 GMT Sender: usenet@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 31 Generally the first thing you need on a cpm/m machine is a comms program, to dig around BBSs for old software - and the second thing is a filter to strip the junk out of the capture buffers. You can write it in any language you like, but you will surely need it; quite often pip..[Z] makes an acceptable substitute. Wordstar obviously had this question come up too often, because they put a 'print to ASCII file' output into CP/M 4.0, and into all subsequent (MSDOS) versions. If you are editing, not telecommunicating, and don't want the stuff there in the first place, you can set a flag in Wordstar so it comes up in the N mode as a default; then you can only do D editing from the main menu. Or use vde, which doesn't put junk in the file until you tell it to. I've never had Wordstar (3.0 or 3.3) set a bit in an N-edited file at the cursor position; which version were you running? The real problem is a file with a premature ^Z, so that nothing beyond that point can be seen by an editor. DDT is then the only cure. Good luck, anyway - Will ----------------------------------------------------------------------- "If heaven too had passions | Will Rose even heaven would | UUCP: {nosc ucsd hplabs!hp-sdd}!crash!pnet01!cw grow old." - Li Ho. | ARPA: crash!pnet01!cwr@nosc.mil | INET: cwr@pnet01.cts.com UUCP: {nosc ucsd hplabs!hp-sdd}!crash!pnet01!cwr ARPA: crash!pnet01!cwr@nosc.mil INET: cwr@pnet01.cts.com