This page (revision-13) was last changed on 03-Feb-2023 15:21 by Roland B. Wassenberg 

This page was created on 19-Dec-2010 21:06 by Carsten Strotmann

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Version Date Modified Size Author Changes ... Change note
13 03-Feb-2023 15:21 5 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous
12 05-Jul-2015 13:26 5 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
11 08-Feb-2011 19:49 5 KB Gromit to previous | to last
10 08-Feb-2011 19:48 5 KB Gromit to previous | to last
9 08-Feb-2011 19:47 5 KB Gromit to previous | to last
8 08-Feb-2011 19:46 5 KB Gromit to previous | to last
7 03-Feb-2011 13:45 133 bytes Gromit to previous | to last
5 03-Feb-2011 13:45 176 bytes Gromit to previous | to last ACTION Toolkit ==> ACTION Toolbox
6 03-Feb-2011 13:45 191 bytes Gromit to previous | to last ACTION Toolkit ==> ACTION Toolbox
3 03-Feb-2011 13:43 161 bytes Gromit to previous | to last ACTION Wordfind and Matchup ==> ACTION Toolkit
4 03-Feb-2011 13:43 176 bytes Gromit to previous | to last ACTION Wordfind and Matchup ==> ACTION Toolkit
2 19-Dec-2010 21:08 161 bytes Carsten Strotmann to previous | to last
1 19-Dec-2010 21:06 106 bytes Carsten Strotmann to last

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At line 6 added one line
* [Link|http://www.atarimagazines.com/v7n6/actiontoolbox.html]
At line 9 added 7 lines
!! ATR-Image
* [Toolbox.atr]
!! ACTION! file (ACT)
* [TOOLBOX.ACT]
!! PDF file
* [actiontoolbx.PDF] ; PDF-file of the ACTION! Toolbox
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At line 12 removed one line
Whether you're using ACTION! to build "The Wizards of Zondar" or "The Ultimate Chef's Companion," your programming toolbox will be incomplete without a procedure that removes individual words from a string you've entered - and a procedure that compares those words with a list of known words in hopes of a match.
At line 21 added 3 lines
Whether you're using ACTION! to build "The Wizards of Zondar" or "The Ultimate Chef's Companion", your programming toolbox will be incomplete without a procedure that removes individual words from a string you've entered - and a procedure that compares those words with a list of known words in hopes of a match.
At line 18 changed one line
This procedure strips each Word, one at a time, from String--which is a global __BYTE ARRAY__ similar to a BASIC string variable. In the process it discards the spaces between Words, no matter how many times you pressed the [SPACEBAR].
This procedure strips each Word, one at a time, from String--which is a global __BYTE ARRAY__ similar to a BASIC string variable. In the process it discards the spaces between Words, no matter how many times you pressed the [[SPACEBAR].
At line 33 changed one line
In Comlist1 the Increment is five--meaning that a new command begins every five characters. Comlist2 has shortened those same commands to two characters. In either case, __Matchup()__ must be called using three parameters: the potential Command to be compared, the List of known commands and the Increment of the list.
In Comlist1 the Increment is five - meaning that a new command begins every five characters. Comlist2 has shortened those same commands to two characters. In either case, __Matchup()__ must be called using three parameters: the potential Command to be compared, the List of known commands and the Increment of the list.
At line 35 changed one line
__Matchup()__ then jumps through the list by Increments, searching the first character of each command for a match. Upon finding one, it compares the remaining characters. If all the characters match, it alters the global variable Match to show where in the list the command was found. For example, after calling __Matchup(Word, Comlist1 ,5)__ you find that Match=6. You then know that "Word" matched the command beginning at character 6 - in this case, WEST.
__Matchup()__ then jumps through the list by Increments, searching the first character of each command for a match. Upon finding one, it compares the remaining characters. If all the characters match, it alters the global variable Match to show where in the list the command was found. For example, after calling __Matchup(Word, Comlist1, 5)__ you find that Match=6. You then know that "Word" matched the command beginning at character 6 - in this case, WEST.
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PDF: [actiontoolbx.PDF]