,gg """"Y$b ,d$P""Y$b ,d$P ,d$P""Y$$' ,d$P""Y$$' ,$$' `""" ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ",$$' ",$$' ,$$' ",$$' ,$$' ,$$' ",$$' """"""""""""""""""""" " "" "" " """ " ,$$' .$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$ ,d$"""Y$b ,$$' ,$$' ,$$ `"""""""' `"""""""' `"' `"""""""' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$""""""' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' " " "" "" """ """"""""""""""" ,$$' ",$$' ,$$ ,$$' ",$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' ,$$' `"""""""' `"' `"""""""' `"""""""""""' ACiD Productions(tm)' Acquisition Enhanced File Viewer Coded by Skull Leader and Tasmaniac Screens by Lord Jazz Ú¿ÄÄÄ ÄÄ Ä Ä ÄÄ ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄ ùù ÀÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ³³ Documentation and Update History of ACiD Productions' ACiD View ³ù :³ ³: ù³ By SiDS and RaD Man of ACiD Productions(tm) ³³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÅ¿ ùù ÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ ÄÄ Ä Ä ÄÄ ÄÄÄÀÙ [ Current version of ACiD View : 4.00 / 11-01-1995ù04:00 ] Note: This version of ACiD View IV is still in beta stages. If you have any questions, comments, suggestions or bug reports regarding this release, please direct them to us at acid-public@acid.extern.ucsd.edu via the internet, or on the Utilities Discussion base on AgoraNet. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Introduction to ACiD View º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ ACiD View welcomes you to the most comprehensive Art View- er in production. This innovative program is capable of dis- playing ANSI, BIN, RIP, GIF and PCX graphics. In addition, the viewer has been designed with a special interest for those who multi-task. ACiD View utilizes its own internal ANSI routines, making it capable of viewing ANSI without a separate device driver. We hope that ACiD View provides you with as much pleasure as we intended with its creation. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Features º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ þ Now supporting our very own special SAUCE þ Command Line Viewing þ Variable Speed ANSI Viewing þ Modem-Simulation for both ANSI, BIN and RIP Viewing þ File Masking þ Drive and Directory switching þ Level 0-1 RIP Viewing þ Smoothscroll, Textscroll, and Autoscroll ANSI and BIN Viewing þ 25-, 28-, 30-, 35-, 43-, and 50-line mode ANSI and BIN Viewing þ Fully-Features ANSI Scroll Back in several different video modes þ ANSI and BIN Viewing in 80x25 or 80x50 text modes þ ANSI and BIN Viewing in 320x200x256 MXGA mode þ ANSI and BIN Viewing in 320x400x256 XGA mode þ ANSI and BIN Viewing in 640x480x16 VGA mode þ ANSI and BIN Viewing in 640x400, 640x480, 800x600, and 1024x768x256 SVGA modes þ GIF and PCX Viewing þ Support for most SVGA chipsets and VESA þ Number of ANSI lines and files in a directory limited only by how much memory is avaible. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Requires º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ þ EGA graphics (preferably SVGA) þ 386 or better processor þ about 500K of conventional memory (more memory = bigger ANSIs) ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ What ACiD View Displays º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ þ ACiD View will display ANSI screens in several different video modes. These modes include the default, text mode, 640x480x16 VGA, 320x200x256 MCGA, 320x400x256 XGA, 640x400, 640x480, 800x600, and 1024x768x256 VESA SVGA modes. ACiD View also supports most SVGA chipsets. þ ACiD View displays most low level (0-1) RIP screens. Although it will show all of the RIPs presented in the Acquisition, it may not display some of the other RIPS you own. This is due to the fact that some of the higher level RIP commands have not been implemented. þ ACiD View is capable of displaying ANSI or RIP files at sim- ulated modem speeds. To ensure that these files display at the same speed on all computers, the timer interrupt is altered. This can create a possibility for problems while running ACiD View under a multi-tasking operating system, such as DesqView. In order to prevent this problem, these modem simulation routines have been disabled within all multitasking environ- ments. þ ACiD View can show GIF and PCX graphics files. The video mode for these formats is selected automaticly. If a mode that is capable of showing the entire picture is not found, the picture is not shown. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ ACiD View Functions º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ Funtion Keys Esc KeyPad ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ÚÄÄÄÄ¿ ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ³ F1 = Help ³ ³Exit³ ³ Num ³ Next ³ Prev ³ - ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ÀÄÄÄÄÙ ³ Lock ³ Font ³ Font ³ Res ³ ³ F2 = Switch Video Mode ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄ´ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ Tab ³ Home ³ Up ³ Page ³ ³ ³ F3 = Switch Font Size ³ ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ³ ³ ³ Up ³ ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ Tab ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ + ³ ³ F4 = Switch Line Mode ³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ ³ Left ³ Tag ³ Right³ Res ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ ³ File ³ ³ ³ ³ F5 = Toggle Smoothscroll ³ Enter ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄ´ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ³ End ³ Down ³ Page ³ ³ ³ F6 = Toggle Autoscroll ³ ³View File³ ³ ³ ³ Down ³ ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄ´Enter³ ³ F7 = Toggle BPS ³ ³ Insert ³ Del ³ ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ F8 = Toggle Color/Grey/B&W ³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÙ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ F9 = Toggle Ext/Blinking ³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F1 º Quick-Help : Brief description of the keys. ÀÍÍÍͼ ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F2 º Video Mode : Selects the video mode that the selected ANSI ÀÍÍÍͼ or BIN is to be viewed in. Note: GIF and PCX will auto detect the appropriate mode, if a mode large enough to fit the entire picture is not found, the file is not displayed. þ Text - 80x25 or 80x50 (VGA) text mode, depending on the aspect ratio. þ XGA - Displays in 320x200x256 tweaked "Mode X" mode. þ MXGA - Displays in 320x400x256 tweaked "Mode X" mode. þ VGA - Displays in 640x400x16 VGA mode. þ SVGA1 - Displays in 640x400x256 SVGA mode þ SVGA2 - Displays in 640x480x256 SVGA mode þ SVGA3 - Displays in 800x600x256 SVGA mode þ SVGA4 - Displays in 1024x768x256 SVGA mode ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F3 º Font Size : This determines the font size to be used while ÀÍÍÍͼ displaying an ANSI in a VGA mode. ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F4 º Line Modes : Toggles which line mode will be used while ÀÍÍÍͼ displaying ANSI in Text Video Mode. ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F5 º Smoothscroll : Toggles if the ANSI will be displayed line-by-line ÀÍÍÍͼ or pixel-by-pixel in Text Video Mode. ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F6 º Autoscroll : Toggles if the ANSI will scroll down automatically ÀÍÍÍͼ or if you must control the viewing manually. ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F7 º BPS Simulation : Changes the BPS simulation speed for ANSIs in ÀÍÍÍͼ View mode. ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F8 º Color Mode : This is usually set to Color, however it can be ÀÍÍÍͼ set to Grey to do greyscale or ASCII to strip the color from ANSIs and BINs. ÚÄÄÄÄ· ³ F9 º Toggle Blink : Determines if 16 background colors instead of ÀÍÍÍͼ blinking will be used for ANSI and BIN display. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ What is SAUCE? º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ Recipe for SAUCE Chef cuisinier : Tasmaniac / ACiD Maitre d'h“tel : Rad Man / ACiD ANSi's used to be just ANSi's, pictures were just pictures, loaders were just loaders and quite frankly, every file was just as plain tasting as every other. This is about to change, how- ever, because ACiD has decided to give their files an extra "je-ne-sais-quoi." In reality, we'll be adding SAUCE to every file you can imagine. Now, before we thoroughly confuse you, let us explain what we are doing here. SAUCE stands for "Standard Architecture for Universal Comment Extensions." Although originally intended for personal use in ANSi's and RIP screens, early in the developement of EFI (Extended File Information) it was decided that EFI should be extended to have support for more than just ANSi and RIP screens. Our brainchild was born and the specs were designed. The only aspect left undecided was the name, and after rejecting some very funny candidates, SAUCE was unanimously chosen. This leads us to the big question in the sky, "What is sauce?" SAUCE is a universal process to incorporate a full description for any type of file. The most outstanding aspect of this concept is that you have access to the complete file name, the file's title, the creation date, the creator of the file, the group that the creator is employed by, and much, much, more. A full explanation on how you can implement SAUCE is described at the end of this document in the PLATES (Programming Language Architecture To Extract SAUCE) section. Although you can create your own programs to implement SAUCE to your files, we recommend that you use the SPOON.EXE program to ensure a greater universal compatibility. SAUCE already supports a plethora of filetypes (See PLATES). If you have a need for the SAUCE specifications, please contact us before you make the changes yourself. We will accomodate your needs as soon as possible. After all, SAUCE is designed to become a standard, and if people change the specs without allowing us to make a complete update, there will be no standard. In the event that we change SAUCE, we will quickly release a public update which will most definately include an improved and updated SPOON.EXE. SAUCE has advantages over any other system in use. Each description will be added to the file and will provide a file description no matter what computer it is used for. SAUCE, how- ever, also provides a back compatibility that uses a file with descriptions for those files that do NOT already have a SAUCE description. Processing in this manner is fully implemented in SPOON.EXE and one can extract embedded SAUCE to this data file and add SAUCE to files from this data file. PLATES ------ Let us begin with a description of the record layouts used. The record layouts and code examples are in a variated pascal pseudo code, and should be transferrable enough to implement in most other programming languages. For ease of reading, the examples assume that the file is correct and that no error- checking need be included. How rigorous you check for errors is completely up to you, and will most likely depend on the file type you are describing. SAUCE RECORD ------------ This portion of the documentation is about the SAUCE record. The SAUCE record describes the file in short, and provides other information not included in the SAUCE record itself. A sauce record is _EXACTLY_ 128 bytes in size. Fieldname : Name of the field. Size : Size of the field in BYTES Type : Type of data. This can be : BYTE : One byte unsigned numeric value (0 to 255) WORD : Two byte unsigned numeric value (0 to 65535) INTEGER : Two byte signed numeric value (-32768 to 32767) LONG : Four byte signed numeric value (-2147483648 to 2147483647) CHARACTER : One byte ASCII value. Longer character fields are padded with spaces. It is _NOT_ a PASCAL string (with a leading length byte), and it's _NOT_ a C-Style string (with a trailing nul-byte). A 10 byte character field holding the text 'ANSI' would look like this. 'ANSI '. Numeric fields should be zero when not used, character fields should be all spaces when not used. V# : SAUCE Version number. This indicates the version of SAUCE when the field was implemented. Description : Complete description of the field. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! No fields are REQUIRED to be filled in except for ID, Version, FileSize, DataType and FileType. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! FieldName Size Type V# Description --------- ---- --------- -- ----------- ID 5 Character 00 SAUCE Identification. This should be equal to 'SAUCE' or the record is not a valid SAUCE record. Version 2 Character 00 Version number of SAUCE. Current version is '00'. As new features are added to the specifications of SAUCE, this version number will change. Future versions SHOULD remain compatible with version 00 only ADDING on the specifications, it is however not unlikely that this compatibility is impossible to maintain, but this is of no concern now. Title 35 Character 00 Title of the file. Author 20 Character 00 Name or handle of the creator of the file. Group 20 Character 00 Name of the group the creator is employed by. Date 8 Character 00 Date the file was created. This date is in the format CCYYMMDD (Century, year, month, day). There is a good reason why the date is in this format, but it's not used in version '00' of SAUCE. It will be used in a future version of SAUCE. FileSize 4 Long 00 Original filesize NOT including any information of SAUCE. DataType 1 Byte 00 Type of Data. (See DATATYPES further on) FileType 1 Byte 00 Type of File. (See DATATYPES further on) TInfo1 2 Word 00 Numeric information field 1 (See DATATYPES) When used, this field holds informative values. Any program using SAUCE should not rely on these values being correct or filled in. TInfo2 2 Word 00 Numeric information field 2 (See DATATYPES) TInfo3 2 Word 00 Numeric information field 3 (See DATATYPES) TInfo4 2 Word 00 Numeric information field 4 (See DATATYPES) Comments 1 Byte 00 Number of Comment lines (See COMMENTS) Flags 1 Byte * 00 Flags indication optional settings/switches These flags have different meaning depending on the data type. The flags weren't originally in the concept for Version 00 of SAUCE. but since the specification of SAUCE expects all filler bytes to be binary zero, the flags should be set to ZERO in all previous files, and cause no significant harm. An Example PASCAL record looks like this: TYPE SAUCERec = RECORD ID : Array[1..5] of Char; Version : Array[1..2] of Char; Title : Array[1..35] of Char; Author : Array[1..20] of Char; Group : Array[1..20] of Char; Date : Array[1..8] of Char; FileSize : Longint; DataType : Byte; FileType : Byte; TInfo1 : Word; TInfo2 : Word; TInfo3 : Word; TInfo4 : Word; Comments : Byte; Flags : Byte; Filler : Array[1..22] of Char; END; An Example C record looks like this: typedef SAUCEREC { char ID[5]; char Version[2]; char Title[35]; char Author[20]; char Group[20]; char Date[8]; signed long FileSize; unsigned char DataType; unsigned char FileType; unsigned int TInfo1; unsigned int TInfo2; unsigned int TInfo3; unsigned int TInfo4; unsigned char Flags; char Filler[22]; } SAUCEREC; DATATYPES --------- DataType and FileType hold the information needed to deter- mine what type of file it is. There are 5 DataTypes, these are (with their respective numeric values) : 0) None : Undefined filetype, you could use this to add SAUCE information to personal datafiles needed by programs, but not having any other meaning. 1) Character : Any character based file. Examples are ASCII, ANSi and RIP. 2) Graphics : Any bitmap graphic file. Examples are GIF, LBM, and PCX. 3) Vector : Any vector based graphic file. Examples are DXF and CAD files. 4) Sound : Any sound related file. Examples are samples, MOD files and MIDI. 5) BinaryText: This is RAW memory copy of a text screen. It's basically the BIN format you can save from whitin TheDraw. Each character is built up of two consecutive bytes. The first is the character to be displayed. The second is the Attribute byte. None ---- When using the 'None' datatype, you should have FileType set to zero also. This is a compatibility issue as it's not unlikely, the 'None' datatype will have filetypes in the future. Character --------- When using the 'Character' datatype, you have following filetypes available : 0) ASCII : Plain text file with no formatting codes or color codes. TInfo1 is used for the width of the file. TInfo2 is used to hold the number of lines in the file. 1) ANSi : ANSi file. With ANSi color codes and cursor positioning. TInfo1 is used for the width of the file. TInfo2 is used to hold the number of ANSi screen lines in the file. 2) ANSiMation: ANSi Animation. With ANSi color codes and cursor positioning. While an ANSi file can also have animated sequences, there is a clear distinction. While an ANSi may or may not have a beginning animated sequence introducing the group or artist the rest is just a sequence of colored characters. An ANSiMation on the other hand is a more like a text mode cartoon. TInfo1 is used for the width of the file. TInfo2 is used to hold the number of ANSi screen lines the ANSiMation was created for. A program using SAUCE may use these two values to switch to the appropriate video mode. 3) RIP : Remote Imaging Protocol (RIP) graphics file. TInfo1 holds the width (should be 640) TInfo2 holds the height (should be 350) TInfo3 holds the number of colors (should be 16) 4) PCBoard : File with PCBoard style @X color codes and @ macro's and ANSi codes. TInfo1 is used for the width of the file. TInfo2 is used to hold the number of ANSi screen lines in the file. 5) AVATAR : A file with AVATAR and ANSi color codes and cursor positioning. FLAGS for the Character Datatype. ----- ÚÄ 7 ÄÂÄ 6 ÄÂÄ 5 ÄÂÄ 4 ÄÂÄ 3 ÄÂÄ 2 ÄÂÄ 1 ÄÂÄ 0 Ä¿ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ A ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÙ All non-used bits should be ZERO. A) Non-Blink mode (iCE Color). When this bit is SET (equal to 1) The ANSi is created using iCE color codes. This is a special mode where the blinking is disabled, and you have 16 background colors available. Basically, you have the same choice for background colors as for foreground colors. Please note: When the picture does not make specific use of the iCE color, you should NOT have this bit set. When you do not support the iCE color mode, you should probably not display the file as it could look pretty weird in normal mode. Graphics -------- For all graphics types, TInfo1 holds width of the image, TInfo2 holds the Height of the image and TInfo3 holds the number of bits per pixel (a 256 colour image would have 8 bits per pixel, a TrueColor image would have 24); Following Graphics filetypes are available : 0) GIF (CompuServ Graphics Interchange format) 1) PCX (ZSoft Paintbrush PCX format) 2) LBM/IFF (DeluxePaint LBM/IFF format) 3) TGA (Targa Truecolor) 4) FLI (Autodesk FLI animation file) 5) FLC (Autodesk FLC animation file) 6) BMP (Windows Bitmap) 7) GL (Grasp GL Animation) 8) DL (DL Animation) 9) WPG (Wordperfect Bitmap) 10) SBM (SUN BitMap) 11) JPG (JPeg compressed File) 12) MPG (MPeg compressed animation/video) 13) AVI (Audio Visual Interlace) FLAGS ----- Not used, should be all zeroes. Vector ------ Following Vector filetypes are available : 0) DXF (CAD Data eXchange File) 1) DWG (AutoCAD Drawing file) 2) WPG (WordPerfect/DrawPerfect vector graphics) 3) SVI (Sun VectorImage) FLAGS ----- Not used, should be all zeroes. Sound ----- Following sound filetypes are available : 0) MOD (4, 6 or 8 channel MOD/NST file) 1) 669 (Renaissance 8 channel 669 format) 2) STM (Future Crew 4 channel ScreamTracker format) 3) S3M (Future Crew variable channel ScreamTracker3 format) 4) MTM (Renaissance variable channel MultiTracker Module) 5) FAR (Farandole composer module) 6) ULT (UltraTracker module) 7) AMF (DMP/DSMI Advanced Module Format) 8) DMF (Delusion Digital Music Format (XTracker)) 9) OKT (Oktalyser module) 10) ROL (AdLib ROL file (FM)) 11) CMF (Creative Labs FM) 12) MIDI (MIDI file) 13) SADT (SAdT composer FM Module) 14) VOC (Creative Labs Sample) 15) WAV (Windows Wave file) 16) SMP8 (8 Bit Sample, TInfo1 holds sampling rate) 17) SMP8S (8 Bit sample stereo, TInfo1 holds sampling rate) 18) SMP16 (16 Bit sample, TInfo1 holds sampling rate) 19) SMP16S (16 Bit sample stereo, TInfo1 holds sampling rate) 20) PATCH8 (8 Bit patch-file) 21) PATCH16(16 Bit Patch-file) FLAGS ----- Not used, should be all zeroes. BinaryText ---------- The Binary Text format, basically has no Filetype, since the datatype has already defined how the file will look. The FileType however specifies the WIDTH of the BinaryText screen. Only the Width is required, as the Height can be calculated by dividing the filesize by the Width. In an attempt to provide as much WIDTH as possible in a possible 256 values of the Byte-sized FileType. The width is specified in Multiples of 2. The fact that the Width is specified in multiples of 2 isn't really a problem, since you also need to define the effective screen size in multiples of 2. An example : For normal 80*25 binary images as made with TheDraw the FileType value would be 40 (since 2*40 equals 80 ) All you need to do is divide the width of the binary text image by 2. This gives a maximum width of 510 characters. Although currently not supported, should there be a need for even bigger images, this can be arranged. Please note. BinaryText expects the character-attribute pairs to be stored one row at a time. If you wanted to create a 80*100 Image, you could do this by just copying 4 80*25 or 2 80*50 together to form one bigger image. If for example you wanted to create a 160*25 image from 2 80*25 images, you would need to write a little program which would copy line 1 from image 1, line 1 from image 2, Line 2 from Image 1, Line 2 from Image 2 and so on. Basically, you should have all character-attribute pairs from one line of the COMPLETE image one after the other, followed by all char-attribute pairs from the next row, and so on. If the picture does not fit this format. You should use the NONE datatype. Besides, you'd probably want to have it in this format anyway, as it seems to be the most logical approach to have these kind of images. FLAGS for the BinaryText Datatype. ----- ÚÄ 7 ÄÂÄ 6 ÄÂÄ 5 ÄÂÄ 4 ÄÂÄ 3 ÄÂÄ 2 ÄÂÄ 1 ÄÂÄ 0 Ä¿ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ 0 ³ A ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÙ All non-used bits should be ZERO. A) Non-blink mode (iCE Color). This bit has exactly the same meaning as for the Character datatype. It indicates whether the picture uses iCE color. COMMENTS -------- The comment block is an addition to the SAUCE record. It holds up to 255 lines of additional information. Each line 64 characters wide. When the Comments field is not zero, it holds the number of additional comment lines are available. A single comment line is 64 characters long. Like the character fields in the SAUCE record, it is padded with spaces, and has no leading length byte or trailing null-byte. The comment block is preceded with a 5 character identifi- cation mark. This identification mark is 'COMNT'. SAUCE IN FILES -------------- A file with SAUCE added to it. Will look like this: ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ³ ³ ³ FILE DATA ³ Actual file data. As if it would be without SAUCE. ³ ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ ³ ³ EOF MARKER ³ EOF marker. This will assure character files can ³ ³ easily determine the end of file. ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ ³ ³ COMMENT BLOCK ³ Optional Comment block. ³ ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ ³ ³ SAUCE RECORD ³ SAUCE record. ³ ³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ The Comment block ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ³ ³ ³ 'COMNT' ³ Comment block ID bytes ³ ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ ³ ³ COMMENTLINE 1 ³ First comment line ³ ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ ³ ³ COMMENTLINE 2 ³ Second comment line ³ ³ ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ... ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ´ ³ ³ ³ COMMENTLINE N ³ n-th comment line, n equals the Comments field ³ ³ in SAUCE record. ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ EXAMPLE CODE TO READ SAUCE -------------------------- Variables: Byte : Count; Long : FileSize; file : F; Code: Open_File(F); | Open the file for read access FileSize = Size_of_file(F); | Determine filesize Seek_file (F, FileSize-128); | Seek to start of SAUCE (Eof-128) Read_File (F, SAUCE); | Read the SAUCE record IF SAUCE.ID="SAUCE" THEN | ID bytes match "SAUCE" ? IF SAUCE.Comments>0 THEN | Is there a comment block ? Seek_File(F, FileSize-128-(SAUCE.Comments*64)-5); | Seek to start of Comment block. Read_File(F, CommentID); | Read Comment ID. IF CommentID="COMNT" THEN | Comment ID matches "COMNT" ? For Count=1 to SAUCE.Comments| \ Read all comment lines. Read_File(F, CommentLine) | / ENDFOR ELSE Invalid_Comment; | Non fatal, No comment present. ENDIF ENDIF ELSE Invalid_SAUCE; | No valid SAUCE record was found. ENDIF SAUCE DATAFILE -------------- The full specifications of the SAUCE datafile are not ready yet. INFORMATION OR UPGRADES ----------------------- If you have a need for additional information on SAUCE, or need modifications, you can contact me at these places... Leave a message to TASMANIAC on any of these boards : Neo Tokyo +32-50-620112 USR 28800 Dual +32-50-625717 ZyXEL 19200 Sushi Bar Z +1-619-438-0114 USR 28800 Dual +1-619-438-2879 USR 28800 Dual Succotash +1-XXX-XXX-ACiD USR 33600 Dual or contact one of our coders in the Utilities base via AgoraNet. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 4.00b º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) Re-written from scratch, ACiD View presents a completely new version of ACiD View. This edition offers all the features of previous versions combined and more, with and interface that has the look and feel of The Hit Man's final version of The Viewer. Although virtually all the features are still here, the memory and disk space requirements have been cut down to one third of it's predecessor. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 3.99 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) Finally detected and removed bug which causes the screen to shake while using the bouncing interface. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 3.06 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) Changes to multifriendly environment made. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 3.05 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) ACiD View now loads maximum lines of text or ANSI, according to free memory available rather than crashing to OS. 2) Other minor cosmetic changes made. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 3.04 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) ACiD View reimplements imbedded RIP fonts, resulting in slightly faster display, ease of configuration, but reducing available memory by another 120k. 2) Fixed minor bug in the RIP parser. 3) Interface modified to display cleaner. 4) ACiD View forces multi-friendly mode when a Trident video card is dectected due to its history of problems with the split screen "bouncing" interface. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 3.03 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) Support for Tab characters in ANSi parser (Tab stops every 5 columns) 2) Help screen is now avaible in multi-friendly mode ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 3.02 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) No longer uses a EGA text mode when VGA is avaible. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 3.01 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) More code reduction, less memory used for code and smaller file. 2) File and directory indexing added. Entering a lowercase charactor brings the selection bar to the first file begining with that letter. A uppercase charactor does the same, except with directories. 3) Fixed a bug in the CFG parser. Did not recognise custom MASKs. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 3.00 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) Initial release of a completely new ACiD View, coded by SiDS & Tasmaniac. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 2.02 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) New RIP routines by Cap'n Crunch used in part with already exist- ing source to accelerate display speed. 2) ACiD View now uses Tasmaniac's assembly source for SAUCE reading, and increases the speed of on-the-fly definition loading. 3) Fixed ansimation mode bug. 4) Fixed mouse bug and other minute flaws. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 2.01 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) New pull-down interface by Icy of ACiD Productions. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 2.00 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) ACiD View takes on a hot new look in its new interface created by Dr. Tongue of ACiD Productions. The layout has been completely reconstructed, and now provides the end user with pull-downs and the same familiar hot keys. 2) ACiD View now makes use of on-the-fly SAUCE definition loading. This process will greatly increase your initialization speed on computers that contain a multitude of files. 3) ACiD View now caters to mouse users, supporting a wide spectrum of different mouse types. 4) ACiD View has recently been implemented with progress bars. Your estimated position in the list of files or directories can now be visually monitored with the help of the elevator located to the right of the file/directory listing. 5) VESA SVGA viewing updated for 640x480, 800x600, and 1024x768x256 modes. ACiD View supports the following chipsets as well as the VESA standard mode: Ahead, ATI, Chips & Tech, Everex, Genoa, Paradise, Oak, Trident, TSeng, and Video7. If you have trouble viewing in SVGA mode, try loading your video cards VESA driver. 6) All setup changes made during the run-time of ACiD View will be saved upon exiting the program. 7) More minor bugs fixed. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 1.50 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) ACiD View Control File support Added. ACiD View will now load defaults from ACIDVIEW.INI. 2) Screen now displays the current directory. 3) Drive switching now added. ACiD View will show drives A: - Z:. (Including FLOPPY, SUBST, RAM, and other drives.) 4) Command line Viewing is now supported! (Type "ACiDView /?") 5) ND CHECK (NO DELAY mode w/Error Checking) display speed added. This speed is the same as NO DELAY except it checks if ANSIs con- tain lines with more than 255 characters per line. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 1.40 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) Multitasking environment awareness implemented (ie. DesqView and OS/2.) 2) Modem simulation routines are now disabled when ACiD View is loaded under multitasking environments. 3) Directory switching added. Change directories simply by pressing the return key. 4) "File jumping" and auto-sorting added. ACiD View will now jump to the first file that begins with the character entered by the user. 5) 640x480 viewing is now two times faster than version 1.32. 320x200 Normal Wide have also been optimized for speed. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 1.32 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) Major bug erradicated in file reading routines. 2) Fixed the problem with the Viewer exiting if no files were found matching the default mask. ACiDView will now simply display the normal interface with no files, allowing you to MASK or exit until you specify a valid file mask. 3) Fixed the key-reading loop with the 320x200 and 320x200 WIDE emu- lations when ScrollBack was turned off. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 1.30 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) File Masking added, allowing the user to select files within the mask. 2) Added 320x200x256 ansimation mode. 3) Added modem simulator which emulates user-defined bps rate. 4) Minor bug corrected in the scroll back of large ANSIs. 5) Removed slow panning upon exit. 6) 640x480x16 now FULLY supports ansimations. Small bug fixed. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Acquisition Viewer 1.20 º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ 1) Maximum number of files in one directory has been increased to 2,000. 2) A bug in the RIP portion of the viewer which caused the colors of plotted objects to display improperly has been squashed. 3) RIP code has been optimized for speed, and it is now possible to abort the screens. 4) Scrolled viewing has since been implemented, and 320x200x256 MCGA display modes are now supported. 5) The old font has been replaced with a new character set, and a new interface has been added which features icons. ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Credits º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ Interface by: RaD Man and Skull Leader Screens by: Lord Jazz File Handling & Baud Simulation by: Tasmaniac ANSI and BIN display and GIF Mode Detect by: Skull Leader RIP Display routines by: Capn' Crunch & SiDS XGA Primatives by: Matt Pritchard Other Graphics Primatives, GIF & PCX from Fastgraph by TGS Compiled with Turbo Pascal v7.0 ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ· ³ Bugs? º ÀÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ Did you find any bugs? If so, please write us at acid-public@acid.extern.ucsd.edu, or mail Skull Leader on any ACiD affiliated system via AgoraNet. Greetings go out to... Mindcrime ACiDic Keep up the great work... Cthulu ACiD Press The one who gives lit honor in the scene. RaD Man ACiD I kneel before yo-- This AGAIN!? SAUCE00ACiD View Documentation RaD Man ACiD Productions 19951101¡Pô