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Encyclopedia > XyWrite

XyWrite is a word processor for DOS and Windows produced by XyQuest in the mid 1980s and later by The Technology Group. It was the "official word processor" of the New York Times from 1989 to 1993. A word processor (also more formally known as a document preparation system) is a computer application used for the production (including composition, editing, formatting, and possibly printing) of any sort of viewable or printed material. ... ‹ The template below has been proposed for deletion. ... Microsoft Windows is the name of several families of operating systems by Microsoft. ... The 1980s refers to the years of 1980 to 1989. ...

Contents

Features

  • Its file format consists of plain text (IBM437, or so-called "extended ASCII") with markup (within guillemets « »). This capability is useful for typesetters who need to convert various formats to LaTeX.
  • Written in assembly allowing it to run faster than similar word processors [citation needed]
  • It has a flexible (if somewhat arcane) macro programming language (XPL) that offers many advantages for quick searching, copy-editing and reformatting of raw text. Users including Distefano and Holmgren (cited below) continue to write and share macros extending XyWrite features (printing to USB devices, for example).
  • User-editable configuration files allow free remapping of the keyboard for execution of complex commands with individual keystrokes.
  • Commands can be typed in directly on a command line, without the use of a mouse.
  • Up to 10 files can be opened for editing at one time in separate "windows" that allow quick copy-and-paste among several files. Two files may be opened on the same screen for easy comparison of changes.
  • WYSIWYG editing which ensures that the screen layout of documents look the same as the printed version [citation needed]

IBM PC or MS-DOS Codepage 437, also known as DOS-US or OEM-US, is the original character set of the IBM PC, from 1981. ... The LaTeX logo, typeset with LaTeX , written as LaTeX in plain text, is a document preparation system for the (TeX) typesetting program. ... WYSIWYG (IPA Pronunciation [] or []), is an acronym for What You See Is What You Get, used in computing to describe a system in which content during editing appears very similar to the final product. ...

History and current usage

After IBM canceled an agreement to create a new GUI version of XyWrite for DOS, XyQuest released the product as Signature. This version was buggy and slow and this eroded the user base [citation needed]. A debugged version was released by the Technology Group (which had bought XyQuest) as XyWrite IV, but this did not increase XyWrite's share of the word processing market [citation needed] despite added versatility and customization potential.


Several versions of XyWrite for DOS and Windows were also localised for use in European countries. For example, the programs were offered in Germany under the name "euroscript" by North American Software GmbH.


A descendant of XyWrite called Nota Bene is still being actively developed. This evolution of the original program is popular among academics, including many biblical scholars who use Greek and Hebrew characters in their work [citation needed]. Nota Bene is a Latin phrase meaning Note Well, coming from notâre -- to note. ... Hebrew redirects here. ...


Thanks in large part to the work of users of XyWrite, the program is still very usable with Windows (or MS-DOS, and thus Linux). Even on Pentium and similar hardware, it remains noticeably faster than MS Word or OpenOffice. Despite these advantages in speed, XyWrite does not have as many features as Word or Open Office. For example, XyWrite is unaware of Windows ANSI or Unicode character sets and Nota Bene does not support languages (such as Chinese) that require double-byte characters. Microsoft Word, or Microsoft Office Word, is Microsofts flagship word processing software. ... OpenOffice. ...


See also

The following is a list of word processors. ...

External links

  • Nota Bene (corporate site)
  • xyWrite resources by Diane Fischer (concentrating on XyWrite III)
  • XyWrite history within Diane Fischer's site
  • XyWWWeb by Carl Distefano and Robert Holmgren (concentrating on XyWrite IV)
  • XyWrite.com A General XyWrite Resource by Brian Henderson
  • The Xy Files Feature article on Salon.com about people who continue using XyWrite.

  Results from FactBites:
 
A Zimmerman Bibliography (575 words)
Written by Bob Zimmerman, who is always reachable at zimmerman@nasw.org.
This webpage was created using Xywrite 3.55, the best word processing program ever written.
The webpage was also written to be as simple and as straightforward as possible, avoiding frames and gratuitous graphics.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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