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decus/20-0135/vista.man
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1976-03-01 LAST UPDATE: 1977-11-23
Swedish National Defense Research Institute FOA Report
S-104 50 Stockholm 80 D10007-M3(E5)
SWEDEN March 1976
VISTA - FOR FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS
BY JACOB PALME
ABSTRACT
VISTA is a program package for controlling the input and output
to an alphanumeric display terminal from a SIMULA program on
the DECsystem-10 computer. VISTA allows full program control
over the contents of the display screen. The package can for
example be used to produce "moving pictures" on part or whole
of the display screen, or to allow the terminal user to move
around the screen inputting data in various screen fields. A
special subpackage FORM allows data input by letting the user
fill in fields in a "form" displayed on the screen. Full
validity check is done immediately for each field input from
the user. VISTA recognizes terminals of type INFOTON VISTA and
VISTAR SATTELITE, DEC Vt52, TANDBERG TDV 2000, MINITEC,
TELETEC, DATAMEDIA ELITE 2500 and 1520, BEEHIVE B 100,
CDC 713-10, but will work on most other alphanumeric display
terminals.
SEARCH KEY: Computer, Terminal, Display terminal, Alphanumeric
terminal, Conversational program, Dialogue program, Input,
Output, Man-computer interaction, SIMULA programming language,
Picture, Video, Graphic.
SWEDISH ABSTRACT
VISTA {r ett programpaket f`r styrning av inmatning och
utmatning till en alfanumerisk sk{rm fr}n ett SIMULA-program
som k`rs p} datorn DECsystem-10. VISTA m`jligg`r full
programkontroll `ver inneh}llet p} sk{rmen. Man kan t.ex.
anv{nda paketet f`r att producera "r`rliga bilder" p} hela
eller delar av sk{rmen, eller f`r att till}ta terminal-
anv{ndaren att flytta sig runt sk{rmen medan han matar in data
i olika f{lt p} sk{rmen. Ett speciellt underpaket FORM till-
}ter datainmatning genom att en blankett visas p} sk{rmen och
anv{ndaren fyller i f{lt i denna blankett. Fullst{ndig validi-
tetskontroll kan d} g`ras omedelbart efter varje inmatat f{lt-
v{rde fr}n anv{ndaren. VISTA k{nner igen terminaler av typ
INFOTON VISTA, DEC VT52, MINITEC och DATAMEDIA ELITE 2500 and
1520, men kan anv{ndas {ven p} de flesta andra textsk{rms-
terminaler.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 2
0. TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION
2. OUTPUT TO THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
3. INPUT FROM THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
4. DATA AVAILABLE TO THE USER
5. PREAMBLE FOR PROGRAMS USING THE VISTA PACKAGE
6. SWITCHING BETWEEN SEVERAL SCREEN CONTENTS
7. CAT AND SHIP - EXAMPLES OF USE OF THE VISTA PACKAGE
8. FORM - A SUBPACKAGE FOR FORM-FILL-IN DATA ENTRY
9. FORMT AND TABLE - EXAMPLES OF USE OF THE FORM
PACKAGE
10. DEBUGGING PROGRAMS USING THE VISTA PACKAGE
11. MODIFYING VISTA FOR A NEW KIND OF TERMINAL
Appendix A: NEW FEATURES IN VISTA RELEASE 1976-11
Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
1. INTRODUCTION
An alphanumeric display terminal allows the cursor to be moved
freely around the screen, and information to be input and
output at arbitrary positions on the screen.
This can be used to produce pictures or tables on the screen,
where objects or figure change or move during the execution of
a program. Data can also be input at arbitrary positions on
the screen as guided by the terminal user.
A special application of this is the "form fill-in" method of
data entry into a program, where a form is displayed on the
screen, and the terminal user fills in empty fields in this
form.
The VISTA package makes it simple to write such programs in the
SIMULA programming language on a DECsystem-10 computer.
The package is written for use with VISTA INFOTON alpha-numeric
display terminals, but the package can be modified for use with
other display terminals. (The cursor control commands are
unfortunately not yet standardized for display terminals.)
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 3
2. OUTPUT TO THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
WARNING: If you do any output to the terminal not
using these procedures, the screen may be garbled. You
can then restore the screen by calling the procedure
"restore_the_whole_screen".
PROCEDURE move_the_cursor_to(horiz, vertic);
INTEGER horiz, vertic;
COMMENT This procedure will move the cursor to the
indicated position on the display screen. The screen
is indexed with [0,0] equal to the upper left corner of
the screen, and with "horiz" increasing leftwards and
"vertic" increasing downwards from this origin.
PROCEDURE home_the_cursor;
COMMENT This procedure will move the cursor to position
[0,0], that is the upper left corner of the screen.
PROCEDURE local_home_the_cursor;
COMMENT will move the cursor to a terminal-dependent home
position, usually [0,0] but the lower left corner on CDC 713-10
in scroll mode.
PROCEDURE outchar(setchar);
CHARACTER setchar;
COMMENT This procedure will output the character
"setchar" onto the cursor position on the screen. The
cursor is moved past the outputted character.
PROCEDURE set_char_on_screen(setchar,horiz,vertic);
CHARACTER setchar; INTEGER horiz, vertic;
COMMENT This procedure will output the character
"setchar" in the position [horiz,vertic] on the screen.
The cursor is left referring to the [horiz,vertic]
position (not the next position).
PROCEDURE breakoutimage;
Breakoutimage should be called if the execution of your program
is stopped or interrupted (e.g. at end of execution, with the
system procedure sleep, for conversation with another terminal,
for a long timeconsuming task not including any terminal
output) and you want to ensure that all text printed before the
stop is output to the terminal. It is n o t necessary to call
breakoutimage before inputting data from the terminal using the
input procedures defined below, since all these input
procedures will automatically commence with breakoutimage.
This means that many programs never have to call breakoutimage.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 4
2. OUTPUT TO THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
PROCEDURE synchronize(horiz, vertic);
INTEGER horiz, vertic;
COMMENT This procedure is to be called if there is a
risk that the correct cursor position on the screen,
and the position where the program believes the cursor
to be, is not the same. The cursor is moved to the
indicated position even if such was the case. Such a
risk is most often common after inputting data from the
user terminal when "echoenabled" is TRUE. In such
cases, VISTA will usually automatically call
synchronize.
PROCEDURE outtext(t);
VALUE t; TEXT t;
COMMENT This procedure will output the text t on the
terminal beginning at the cursor position on the
screen. The programmer must ensure that there is
enough space left on the current line of the screen for
the entire length of the TEXT "t".
PROCEDURE outfix(a,i,j);
REAL a; INTEGER i, j;
COMMENT Almost same as standard SIMULA outfix on the
screen. The programmer must ensure that there is space
for j more characters on the current line of the
screen.
PROCEDURE outreal(a,i,j);
REAL a; INTEGER i, j;
COMMENT Almost same as standard SIMULA outreal on the
screen. The programmer must ensure that there is space
for j more characters on the current line of the
screen.
PROCEDURE outfrac(k,i,j);
INTEGER k, i, j;
COMMENT Almost same as standard SIMULA outfrac on the
screen. The programmer must ensure that there is space
for j more characters on the current line of the
screen.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 5
2. OUTPUT TO THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
PROCEDURE outint(i,j);
INTEGER i, j;
COMMENT Almost the same as standard SIMULA outint on
the screen. The programmer must ensure that there is
space for j more characters on the current line of the
screen.
PROCEDURE outimage;
COMMENT Will output any characters in the sysout.image
and then move the cursor to the beginning of the next
line on the screen.
PROCEDURE blank_line(vertic);
INTEGER vertic;
COMMENT Will make line "vertic" on the screen fully
blank. The cursor is left at the first position of the
blanked line.
PROCEDURE make_blank(size);
INTEGER size;
COMMENT Will make size number of characters blank on
the screen, starting at current position. Trailing
blanks in the screenfields are not reblanked, which
means that the cursor is left at the first blank which
need not be reblanked. Cursor position after this
procedure will thus depend on how much need be blanked
on the screen.
PROCEDURE blank_the_screen;
COMMENT Will make the entire screen blank. This is
done automatically when a new VISTA object is created.
PROCEDURE restore_the_whole_screen;
COMMENT If there is any risk that the data on the
screen does not agree with what the program belives to
be there, this procedure will restore the screen to
what the program belives to be there. This risk can
happen if you have input or output data with procedures
not part of the VISTA package, or if "echoenabled" is
TRUE and the terminal user has done "type ahead" on the
terminal keyboard. "restore_the_whole_screen" is
called by the VISTA package if the terminal user pushes
the FORMFEED (=CONTROL-L) key on his terminal keyboard.
ALTMODE (ESCAPE) has the same effect as FORMFEED, but
must be pushed twice on VT52 terminals.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 6
2. OUTPUT TO THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
PROCEDURE restore_one_char(horiz, vertic);
INTEGER horiz, vertic;
COMMENT Will restore the character in the position
horiz, vertic on the terminal to what the program
believes to be there.
PROCEDURE cause_real_time_delay(number_of_fillers);
INTEGER number_of_fillers;
COMMENT this procedure will transmit
"number_of_fillers" fill characters to the screen.
These characters are not output to the screen. This
procedure can be used to delay moving pictures from
moving too fast on the screen. The number of fillers
transmitted depends on the speed of the terminal line -
more characters for faster terminal lines. Example:
With a 2400 baude terminal line, 120 fillers will cause
a half-second delay. Warning: This procedure, and not
the SLEEP procedure, is recommended if you want
smoothly moving pictures on the screen. This procedure
is however rather CPU-time-consuming.
PROCEDURE cancel_display;
COMMENT The screen will be blanked. Further calls on
the output procedures in the VISTA package will only
change the internal copy of the screen, nothing will be
output to the terminal.
This procedure can be used if you want to display
another VISTA picture or if you want to talk to the
terminal not using the VISTA package.
WARNING: The input procedures in the VISTA package may
not be used on cancelled VISTA pictures.
PROCEDURE resume_display;
COMMENT The screen is restored to the internal copy of
the screen, and further output procedures in the VISTA
package will affect both the terminal and the internal
copy of the screen.
Note that if you have used the VISTA output procedures
on a cancelled picture, then the internal version of
that picture is changed. Thus, when you call
resume_display, the modified picture is shown.
WARNING: If you are keeping several VISTA objects to
switch between pictures, then a l w a y s cancel the
previous display before resuming the next. More than
one VISTA object should never be resumed at the same
time.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 7
2. OUTPUT TO THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
BOOLEAN PROCEDURE displaying;
COMMENT Will return TRUE if this picture is displaying
(not cancelled with the procedure cancel_display).
HOW TO CREATE BLINKING TEXT
Blinking text is not available on all terminals. The
procedure for getting a terminal to blink is very
different on terminals of different make. If you want
to write programs which create blinking text in a way
which will work on most terminals, then follow this
procedure:
> Reserve a space immediately in front of and after the
blinking text segment.
> Move the cursor to the position after the blinking text
segment and call the procedure stop_blink.
> Move the cursor to the position in front of the
blinking text segment and call the procedure
start_blink.
> Write the blinking text segment.
> Call the procedure stop_blink again.
If you want text on several lines to blink, then regard
each continuous blinking text segment on each line as a
separate text segment, and the procedure above must be
followed for each such text segments.
HOW TO STOP BLINKING TEXT FROM BLINKING
Rewrite the same or other text on top of each blinking
text segment including the character immediately in
front of and immediately after the blinking text
segment.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 8
2. OUTPUT TO THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
PROCEDURE start_blink;
COMMENT this procedure will start a section of blinking
text on terminals where blinking text is allowed, and
will sound the bell on terminals which have a bell.
(Bell is optional on Infoton terminals, the VT52 does
not allow blinking text.) The procedure will also
output a space on the screen, since certain terminals
require a space in front of blinking text. Warning:
On infoton terminals, start_blink need not be called
when you are chanching the contents of the blinking
text, but if you do not call start_blink in such cases,
your programs will only work as intended on Infoton
terminals.
PROCEDURE stop_blink;
COMMENT this procedure will stop a section of blinking
text on terminals where blinking text is allowed. The
procedure will also output a space on the screen, since
certain terminals require a space after blinking text.
Warning 1: Call stop_blink after changes in blinking
text if you want terminal-independent programs. (The
infoton does not require this.)
Warning 2: Call stop_blink before every command to
move the cursor on the screen. (This is not necessary
on some terminals, but is necessary on Infoton
terminals.)
3. INPUT FROM THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
WARNING: If you do any INPUT from the terminal not
using these procedures, then the screen contents may be
garbled. In that case, the screen can be restored by
calling the procedure "restore_the_whole_screen".
If the terminal user pushes the ALTMODE (ESCAPE) or
FORMFEED (=CONTROL-L) button on his terminal, then the
procedure restore_the_whole_screen will be called from
the program, the next time the program tries to make
input from the terminal through the routines described
below. (On VT52 terminals, the ALTMODE must be pushed
twice.)
A note on the DATAMEDIA ELITE 1520 terminal: If you
have this terminal without the optional "numeric"
keyboard, then your terminal does not have the special
keys for moving the cursor up, down, left and right
which are often used as input from the user terminal.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 9
3. INPUT FROM THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
However, there are ways of inputting these codes from
such ELITE 1520 terminals. Use the following keys:
UP = CONTROL-
DOWN = LINE FEED
LEFT = BACKSPACE
RIGHT = CONTROL-@ or CONTROL- (test yourself)
HOME = CONTROL-Y
ERASE SCREEN = CONTROL-L
PROCEDURE echon;
COMMENT will make echoenabled TRUE, which means that
characters input from the terminal are echoed by the
terminal control handler of the computer and not by the
vista package.
Advantage: Faster echoing when the computer is heavily
loaded.
Disadvantage: Risk that the screen contents do not
agree with what the program believes to be there,
especially if the terminal user has done "type ahead".
WARNING: With monitor echoing, the inputting of CR
from the user will erase the next line on the screen,
and inputting LF will erase part of the next line on
the screen. You can avoid this problem by either a)
using program echoing (echoff), or b) keeping the next
line blank when inputting data from the user or c)
restoring the erased line in your program.
The combination of monitor echoing and a Tandberg TCD
2000 terminal may also give problems if the "cursor up"
key is pushed by a user on his terminal when the cursor
is at the last line of the screen.
PROCEDURE echoff;
COMMENT will make "echoenabled" FALSE. See "echon"
above.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 10
3. INPUT FROM THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
CHARACTER PROCEDURE insingle(echo);
BOOLEAN echo;
COMMENT will input one character directly from the
terminal keyboard, bypassing sysin.image entirely. The
user need not push carriage return on his terminal, the
program will get direct control every time the user
pushes a terminal key.
"echo" has effect only if "echoenabled" is FALSE. In
that case, if "echo" is FALSE, the input character is
not echoed at all on the terminal screen. The
programmer must thus ensure that user input characters
are echoed correctly.
If "echo" is TRUE, but "echoenabled" FALSE, then the
VISTA package will try to echo input characters.
Terminal keys like the four keys for moving the cursor
up, down, left and right, the carriage return, line
feed, home and rub out(delete) keys are all echoed
correctly. (They are usually echoed correctly also
when echoeanbled is TRUE.)
Insingle will set the global BOOLEAN variable
"controlchar" to TRUE if the character read was a
terminal control character. Thus, to test if the
character read was the key with a downdirected arrow on
the terminal, you can write "c:= insingle(TRUE); IF
controlchar AND c = down THEN".
PROCEDURE inimage;
COMMENT inimage will input a line of text from the
terminal into the buffer sysin.image. IF "echoeanbled"
is TRUE, inimage works just like the ordinary SIMULA
inimage. If "echoenabled" is FALSE, inimage is
different in that every character with RANK less than
32 will act as a "break" characters, that is signifying
end of the data input with this call to the inimage
procedure.
INTEGER PROCEDURE inint;
COMMENT will search for and read an integer from the
terminal. If the data input from the terminal is not
readable as an integer, then the input field is filled
with question marks.
Note: Not identical to SIMULA inint, since only one
integer can be read before the user pushes the RETURN
key on his terminal.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 11
3. INPUT FROM THE DISPLAY TERMINAL
REAL PROCEDURE inreal;
COMMENT will search for and read a real item from the
terminal. If the data input from the terminal is not
readable as a real, the the input field is filled with
question marks.
Note: Not identical to SIMULA inreal, since only one
real can be read before the user pushes the RETURN key
on his terminal.
TEXT PROCEDURE inword;
COMMENT will search for and read a word from the
terminal. A word is any sequence of non-blank
characters.
BOOLEAN PROCEDURE inyes;
COMMENT will search for either "yes" or "no" from the
terminal, and will return TRUE if "yes" is found.
4. DATA AVAILABLE TO THE USER
WARNING: Never change these variables directly. Always use
the procedures described above.
SCREEN CONTENTS:
INTEGER PROCEDURE horizontalpos;
COMMENT Position of the cursor on the screen.
INTEGER PROCEDURE verticalpos;
COMMENT Position of the cursor on the screen.
TEXT ARRAY screen[0:height-1];
COMMENT contents of the display screen;
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 12
4. DATA AVAILABLE TO THE USER
CHARACTER PROCEDURE get_char_from_screen(horiz, vertic);
INTEGER horiz, vertic;
COMMENT will return the character in the indicated screen
position. Will return CHAR(0) if [horiz,vertic] is outside
the available screen.
TERMINAL INTERFACE MODES:
BOOLEAN echoenabled;
COMMENT if TRUE, input characters are echoed by the monitor,
if FALSE by the VISTA package or by you. See further the
description of the procedure "echon" above.
USEFUL CHARACTER VARIABLES:
up = what is input when user pushes the key with an upward
pointing arrow (usually indicating wish to move the
cursor upwards on the screen).
down = same for downward pointing arrow.
left = same for left-pointing arrow.
right = same for right-pointing arrow.
tab = same for tab key on terminal. (On Tandberg TDV 2000,
the blink key can be used instead of the tab key.)
home = what is input when user pushes the home key on the
terminal, (usually indicating wish to move the cursor to
a "home" position on the screen. On most terminals, the
home position is the upper left corner of the screen. On
CDC 713-10 terminal in scroll mode, the home position is
the lower left corner.)
formfeed, carriagereturn, altmode, linefeed, verttab, null,
fill, tab, startblink, stopblink = what is input when the
user pushes these respective terminal keys.
BOOLEAN controlchar = TRUE if the previous character input
with INSINGLE was a terminal control character. Thus, to
check if the previous character was the key on the
terminal to move the cursor down (with a downdirected
arrow on it) you can write in your program:
c:= insingle(TRUE);
IF controlchar AND c = down THEN ...
BOOLEAN scrollallow = TRUE stops the automatic inhibiting of
screen scrolling when you push the CR och LF key at the
bottom of the screen. However, the internal screen copy
is not scrolled properly.
BOOLEAN addaltmode = TRUE if the type of terminal is of a kind
where each special terminal control character is preceded
by an altmode. You need normally not trouble yourself
with this, since the procedure "insingle" and the other
input procedures in the vista package will remove this
altmode (and make CONTROLCHAR = TRUE).
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 13
4. DATA AVAILABLE TO THE USER
DISPLAYING ON OTHER TERMINALS THAN THE CONTROLLING TTY
It is possible to use the VISTA package to display pictures on
other terminals than the controlling TTY.
Important: Ensure that you always make outimage on every
picture displayed on different terminals, before any input
break in your program. Otherwise you may get half-finished
pictures on some TTY:s. Note that the procedure "outimage"
built into the VISTA package should be used.
Output to other TTY:s is no problem.
Input from other TTY:s through the VISTA package causes some
problems. The echo parameter must be TRUE when creating VISTA
objects, and insinglechar cannot be used.
VISTA can be combined with the REALTIME package to allow
simultaneous dialouge on more than one terminal.
5. PREAMBLE FOR PROGRAMS USING THE VISTA PACKAGE
The following example of a very short complete program using
the VISTA package shows what you have to do:
BEGIN
EXTERNAL CHARACTER PROCEDURE getch, fetchar;
EXTERNAL PROCEDURE depchar, forceout, outstring;
EXTERNAL INTEGER PROCEDURE trmop, gettab, checkreal,
checkint;
EXTERNAL PROCEDURE echo, abort, outchr;
EXTERNAL CLASS vista;
INSPECT NEW vista(78, 19, sysin, sysout, FALSE,
0, NOTEXT, NOTEXT) DO
BEGIN
INTEGER h, v, sign;
blank_the_screen;
FOR sign:= rank('A') STEP 1 UNTIL rank('Z') DO
FOR h:= 1 STEP 1 UNTIL 10 DO
FOR v:= 1 STEP 1 UNTIL 10 DO
set_char_on_screen(char(sign),h,v);
breakoutimage;
END;
END;
The parameters in the "NEW vista" statement are:
> Width of the screen. Subtract 1 or 2 from the real width.
> Height of the screen. Subtract 1 from the real height.
> Sysin = the infile connected to the terminal.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 14
5. PREAMBLE FOR PROGRAMS USING THE VISTA PACKAGE
> Sysout = the outfile connected to the terminal. (The package
will probably only work if sysout is the controlling
terminal.)
> TRUE if you want automatic echoing of characters by the
monitor, FALSE if you want echoing by the VISTA package.
FALSE is usually safer. If you only use the VISTA package for
output to the terminal, not for input from the terminal, then
TRUE has certain advantages. TRUE may give special problems
on TANDBERG terminals, see the description of the procedure
"echon" above.
> The next parameter indicates terminal type.
IMPORTANT: If you want the same program to be runnable on
different kinds of terminal, then you should either ask the
user for a value for this parameter, or (usually easiest) let
this parameter be 0, so that the VISTA package will ask the
user for his terminal make.
If this parameter is 0, the user at the terminal will be asked
what kind of terminal he is using. The other valid values for
this parameter are 1 for INFOTON VISTA terminals, 2 for DEC
VT52 terminals, 3 for Minitec terminals, 4 for ELITE 2500 with
auto-lf, 5 for ELITE 2500 without auto-lf, 6 for ELITE 1520
with auto-lf, 7 for ELITE 1520 without auto-lf, and a large
value for your own special kind of terminal. If you are
buying a DATAMEDIA ELITE terminal, the version witout auto-lf
is much better the VISTA package.) The parameter can also have
the same negative values to enable Direct Cursor Addressing.
DIRECT CURSOR ADDRESSING:
NOTE: The version of the VISTA package on November 11, 1976,
can only handle direct cursor adressing on DEC VT52 terminals.
Some terminals (e.g. DEC VT52) allow the program to move the
cursor directly to certain screen positions. This is
triggered by negative value on the terminal type number.
Advantage: A little faster and safer access to screen
positions. Disadvantage: Does not work on some installations
where special character conversion is done. (The program is
however able to cope correctly with the TTY QZ character
conversion at the QZ computer centre in Stockholm. However,
with TTY QZ, your programs will be much faster if you are NOT
using direct cursor adressing.)
YOUR OWN SPECIAL KIND OF TERMINAL
You can use the last two parameters to the VISTA package to
specify the characteristics of another terminal than those
which the package already knows about.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 15
5. PREAMBLE FOR PROGRAMS USING THE VISTA PACKAGE
Necessary is that there are keys on your terminal to move the
cursor down, up, right, left, to home the cursor(move it to
the upper left corner of the screen, and to erase the screen).
Pushing these keys should transmit to the computer either a
single ASCII character or an altmode(escape) character
followed by a single ASCII character.
(On some terminals these special keys can be simulated using
other keys, often in combination with the CONTROL key.)
> The next to last parameters to the CLASS VISTA should in this
case contain the name of your kind of terminal.
> And the last character should contain a text with the
character codes to move the cursor down, up, right, left, home
and to erase the screen (in that order, no blanks between
them).
You can get the program to use your special kind of terminal
in two ways. Either let the third to last parameter to VISTA
be 0, and the computer will ask the user at his terminal what
kind of terminal he has. Or let the third to last parameter
to VISTA have a large value, and the computer will assume that
the terminal is always of your special kind.
All the source programs of the VISTA package are at the QZ
data center available on the H97T86 and H40I48 DEC tape.
VISTA.ATR, VISTA.REL, FORM.ATR and FORM.REL will at the QZ
data center be available in LIBSIM on either SYS: or
[106,346].
6. SWITCHING BETWEEN SEVERAL SCREEN CONTENTS
It is easy with the VISTA package to have several pictures,
and switch between them. You just allocate one object of the
CLASS vista for each picture. You can then have a reference
variable referring to each picture. Suppose that you have
REF (vista) first_picture, second_picture;
You can then switch from displaying the first to displaying
the second picture on the screen by simply executing the
statements:
first_picture.cancel_display;
second_picture.resume_display;
Note: More than one picture may never be active at the same
time. Therefore always cancel the previous picture before
resuming the next. VISTA objects just generated with NEW are
always active, and if you do not want them active you should
cancel them before generating the next picture.
It is however legal to have no picture active. This is what
you do if you want to talk to the terminal without using the
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 16
6. SWITCHING BETWEEN SEVERAL SCREEN CONTENTS
It is legal to use all the procedures in the VISTA package
except the input procedures even on a cancelled picture. The
VISTA output procedures on a cancelled picture will then
change an internal copy of the terminal screen, and this
internal copy will be shown to the user again when the program
calls the procedure "resume_display" on that picture.
Example of a complete, executable program using two pictures
to switch between:
BEGIN
EXTERNAL CHARACTER PROCEDURE getch, fetchar;
EXTERNAL PROCEDURE depchar, forceout, outstring;
EXTERNAL INTEGER PROCEDURE trmop, gettab, checkreal,
checkint;
EXTERNAL PROCEDURE echo, abort, outchr;
EXTERNAL CLASS vista;
REF (vista) first_picture, second_picture;
INTEGER h, v, sign, casedifference;
casedifference:= rank('a') - rank('A');
second_picture:- NEW vista
(78, 19, sysin, sysout, FALSE, 0, NOTEXT, NOTEXT);
second_picture.cancel_display;
first_picture:- NEW vista
(78, 19, sysin, sysout, FALSE, 0, NOTEXT, NOTEXT);
first_picture.blank_the_screen;
second_picture.blank_the_screen;
FOR sign:= rank('A') STEP 1 UNTIL rank('Z') DO
BEGIN
IF mod(sign,3) = 0 THEN
BEGIN
IF mod(sign,2) = 0 THEN
BEGIN
second_picture.cancel_display;
first_picture.resume_display;
END ELSE
BEGIN
first_picture.cancel_display;
second_picture.resume_display;
END;
END;
FOR h:= 1 STEP 1 UNTIL 10 DO
FOR v:= 1 STEP 1 UNTIL 10 DO
BEGIN
first_picture.set_char_on_screen
(char(sign),h,v);
second_picture.set_char_on_screen
(char(sign+casedifference),h+20,v);
END;
END;
first_picture.outimage;
second_picture.outimage;
END;
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 17
7. CAT, SHIP AND VIDED - EXAMPLES OF USE OF THE VISTA PACKAGE
7. CAT, SHIP AND VIDED - EXAMPLES OF USE OF THE VISTA PACKAGE
CAT, SHIP and VIDED are three demonstration examples to
illustrate how the VISTA package can be used.
CAT is a program in which a cat tries to catch a number of
rats in a square cage. The cage and the two animals are shown
in a map of the cage on the terminal screen, where the user
can see how they move about the cage. The user at the
terminal can guide the movement of the cat with four keys for
up, down, left and right. (On certain terminal without these
keys, they can be simulated with combinations of other keys.)
The program makes the rat more intelligent if the terminal
user catches many rats. A score of escaped and caught rats is
caught on the screen.
SHIP is a simplified simulation program. A number of ships
try to move soldiers from one side of a lake to the other
side. A number of destroyers hunt the ships. The user can
see at the terminal how the ships move across the lake, how
the destroyers move, how troups accumulate on the other side
of the lake, how ships and destroyers fight. A portion of the
screen shows the number of ships in various states: Loading,
unloading, moving, killed etc.
VIDED is a very simple text editor for display terminals. The
screen will always show exactly the contents of the text you
are editing.
NOTE: VIDED works at present (November 5, 1976) only on
INFOTON VISTA terminals).
CAT, SHIP and VIDED are at the QZ computing center available
on [106,346] and if you have a VISTA terminal, you can run the
programs by the command
.RUN CAT[106,346] or
.RUN SHIP[106,346] or
.RUN VIDED[106,346]
The source programs CAT.SIM and SHIP.SIM are at the QZ
computing center available on DEC-tape H40I48.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 18
8. FORM - A SUBPACKAGE FOR FORM-FILL-IN DATA ENTRY
FORM is a subclass to VISTA to allow the writing of programs in
which the terminal screen is made to look like a form with
various empty fields. The terminal user then inputs data by
filling in the fields of the form.
You define your form by generating an object of the CLASS FIELD
for each field in the form. For each field you indicate its
position on the screen and the header in front of the input
part of the field. The order in which you generate the NEW
FIELD objects is important. They must be generated according
to their position on the screen, left to right, top to bottom.
You can also use any of the VISTA procedures on parts of the
screen where you are not using the FORM package, e.g. you can
use OUTTEXT to print a header on top of the form.
When you have generated all the objects, you can call the
procedure SHOW_PAGE which will display all the headers on the
screen. You can then call the procedure ASK_PAGE which will
ask the terminal user input for each field in the form.
If you want to allow the user a chance to change his form
entries after completing the answer, you can write
"RESUME(FIRST_FIELD);"
If you want to put in extra data collection, reliability test
etc. then you define subclasses to the class field.
Four such useful subclasses are already available in the FORM
package. They are INTFIELD, REALFIELD, CHOICEFIELD, ALPHA-
FIELD. INTFIELD is for collecting integer input, REALFIELD for
collection floating point input, CHOICEFIELD for inputting data
which can only have a limited set of values, ALPHAFIELD for
inputting alphabetic data.
CLASS field(h, v, header, length, stopchar, helptext);
VALUE header;
INTEGER h, v, length; CHARACTER stopchar; TEXT header;
COMMENT H and V are the horizontal and vertical position on the
screen for this field. HEADER is the text to be displayed on
the screen in front of the field.
LENGTH is the maximum length of the accepted input text for
this field, and STOPCHAR is a character which ends a message.
By making STOPCHAR into CHAR(0), only terminal control
characters or exceeded length can end a message. By making
STOPCHAR into ' ', a message is automatically ended with the
first blank preceded by non-blanks.
Helptext is a help message of maximum one line, which is
displayed to the user if he types a questionmark (?) on his
terminal.
BEGIN TEXT answer; COMMENT what the user inputs comes here;
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 19
8. FORM - A SUBPACKAGE FOR FORM-FILL-IN DATA ENTRY
PROCEDURE change_answer(new_answer);
VALUE new_answer; TEXT new_answer;
COMMENT will change both the internal and
screen-displayed answer. Can be used for automatic
correction of input values.
PROCEDURE error(errmess);
VALUE errmess; TEXT errmess;
COMMENT will write a blinking error message on line 18 of
the screen;
END of field;
field CLASS int_field(min, max, rangerror);
VALUE rangeerror;
INTEGER min, max; TEXT rangeerror;
COMMENT if the data input by the user is not an integer, then
he is given an error message. If the data is not between min
and max, then the error message RANGERROR is given to him.
BEGIN INTEGER intvalue;
COMMENT INTVALUE will contain the data input by the user;
END of intfield;
field CLASS realfield(min,max,rangerror);
VALUE rangerror;
REAL min, max; TEXT rangerror;
COMMENT same as INTFIELD for floating point input;
BEGIN REAL realvalue;
COMMENT realvalue will contain the data input by the user;
END of realfield;
field CLASS choicefield(nonemessage);
VALUE nonemessage; TEXT nonemessage;
COMMENT Will allow the user to chose between a limited number
of alternatives;
BEGIN
CLASS choice(choicetext);
VALUE choicetext; TEXT choicetext;
COMMENT you must yourself generate an object of the class
choice for each alternative, e.g. "NEW choice("first
alternative"); NEW choice("Second alternative");" etc.
END of choicefield;
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 20
8. FORM - A SUBPACKAGE FOR FORM-FILL-IN DATA ENTRY
field CLASS alphafield; COMMENT will only accept input containing
nothing but letters and blanks;
PROCEDURE show_page;
COMMENT All answers in all the fields will be erased and the
form will be displayed on the terminal;
PROCEDURE ask_page;
COMMENT the terminal user is asked to fill in the form on his
terminal;
PROCEDURE stopasking;
COMMENT this procedure causes the procedure ASK_PAGE to return
from where it was called. Can be used if you under certain
conditions wish to allow partly filled-in forms;
A complete example of a simple program using the FORM package:
OPTIONS(/l);
BEGIN
EXTERNAL TEXT PROCEDURE frontstrip, upcase;
EXTERNAL CHARACTER PROCEDURE getch, fetchar;
EXTERNAL PROCEDURE depchar, forceout, outstring;
EXTERNAL INTEGER PROCEDURE trmop, gettab, checkreal,
checkint;
EXTERNAL PROCEDURE echo, abort, outchr;
EXTERNAL CLASS vista;
EXTERNAL CLASS form;
form(79,19,sysin,sysout,FALSE,0,NOTEXT,NOTEXT) BEGIN
REF (field) givenname, surname, nationality,
birthyear, eyes;
REF (intfield) height;
givenname:- NEW alphafield(0,6,"given names:",60,char(0),"");
surname:- NEW alphafield(0,8,"surname:",22,char(0),"");
nationality:- NEW alphafield(35,8,
"nationality:",10,' ',"");
birthyear:- NEW intfield(0,10,"birthyear:",20,' ',"",1800,
1975, "Birthyear should be between 1800 and 1975.");
INSPECT NEW choicefield(35,10,"eyecolour:",10,' ',"",
"Accepted eyecolours: brown, blue and grey.") DO
BEGIN
eyes:- THIS choicefield;
NEW choice("brown"); NEW choice("blue");
NEW choice("grey");
END;
blank_the_screen;
outtext("INPUT OF PERSONAL DATA:");
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 21
8. FORM - A SUBPACKAGE FOR FORM-FILL-IN DATA ENTRY
outimage;
show_page;
ask_page;
END;
END;
WRITING YOUR OWN SUBCLASSES TO FIELD:
If you want to do your own validity checking of data input
from the user, or your own automatic correction of data input
from the user, then you write your own subclasses to FIELD.
Include in the body of the subclass the error corrections you
want. If you want to display an error message to the user,
then call the procedure "ERROR". If you want to change the
data input from the user, then call the procedure
"CHANGE_ANSWER".
By writing your own version of the virtual procedure HELP in
the class FIELD, you can determine yourself what shall happen
when the user inputs a questionmark (?) on his terminal.
Example of how you can write your own subclass to field:
intfield CLASS evenmod10;
COMMENT will give errors for odd numbers and
take any input number modulo 10;
BEGIN
IF mod(intvalue,
2) NE 0 THEN error("Odd number illegal.");
answer.setpos(1);
answer.putint(mod(intvalue,2),1);
change_answer(answer.sub(1,1));
END;
FORM is available at the QZ computing center on DEC-tape
H97T86 in the packed file "FORM.PAK". Unpac with
.R UFLIP
**.*/E=FORM.PAK
^C
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 22
9. FORMT AND TABLE - EXAMPLES OF USE OF THE FORM PACKAGE
FORMT and TABLE are two simple demonstration programs. FORMT
shows the use of FORM for input of a simple form from a
terminal. TABLE shows how a table of values can be input from
a terminal in a similar manner.
FORMT.SAV and TABLE.SAV are available for running at the QZ
computing center on [106,346] and you can test it by writing
.RUN FORMT[106,346] or
.RUN TABLE[106,346]
FORMT.SIM and TABLE.SIM are available at the QZ computing
center on DEC-tape H97T86 in the packed file FORM.PAC. Unpac
with:
.R UFLIP
**.*/E=FORM.PAK
10. DEBUGGING PROGRAMS USING THE VISTA PACKAGE
VISTA programs are difficult to debug for two reasons:
> DEBUG output will destroy the picture on the screen.
> VISTA usually stops echoing characters from the terminal,
which means that characters input to SIMDDT will not be
echoed.
Here are some ways to overcome these problems:
You can direct the debugging output to another device than the
terminal, for example to another terminal or to a disk file.
A good way to DEBUG programs using the VISTA package is to use
the controlling terminal for SIMDDT and a second terminal for
the VISTA package. Add the following code to your program:
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 23
10. DEBUGGING PROGRAMS USING THE VISTA PACKAGE
REF (infile) newsysin;
REF (printfile) newsysout);
IF debug THEN
BEGIN
newsysin:- NEW infile("sysin *");
newsysout:- NEW printfile("sysout *");
newsysin.open(blanks(80));
newsysout.open(blanks(80));
END ELSE
BEGIN
newsysin:- sysin; newsysout:- sysout;
END;
INSPECT NEW vista(width,maxheight,
newsysin,newsysout,
NOT debug,terminaltype,NOTEXT,NOTEXT) DO
After a debugging session, you can restore the screen by
calling the procedure restore_the_whole_screen. There are two
ways to get the VISTA package to call this procedure. One way
is to write the SIMDDT statement "INPUT BADSCREEN:= TRUE".
The next time a call is made on the procedure
"MOVE_THE_CURSOR_TO" the screen will be restored.
Another way is push the ALTMODE(ESCAPE) or FORMFEED (=^L)
character on your terminal, the next time when your program
tries to make input from the terminal using the input
procedures within VISTA. This will also cause the screen to
be restored. (On VT52 terminals, ALTMODE must be pushed
twice.)
The problem that SIMDDT does not echo its input can be
overcome by changing the switch on your terminal to local
echo. Do not forget to set it back to no local echo before
typing the SIMDDT "PROCEED" command.
Another way to know what you have typed to SIMDDT is to push
the CTRL-R combination on your terminal.
COMMON CAUSES OF ERROR:
The most common cause of bad picture on the screen is that
your program tries to make some kind of input from or output
to the terminal screen without using the input and output
procedures which are part of the VISTA package. Your program
may for example contain statements like "INSPECT SYSOUT DO" or
"SYSOUT.SETPOS(0)" or "SYSOUT.OUTIMAGE".
Another common trouble is that you are accepting input from
the user on the last line of the screen. This may in certain
cases cause the picture on the terminal screen to roll.
If you are using a DEC VT52 terminal, then a common cause of
error is that the monitor is doing some kind of character
conversion when transferring characters from the your program
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 24
10. DEBUGGING PROGRAMS USING THE VISTA PACKAGE
to the terminal. Since ordinary characters are used as screen
addresses, this will cause screen addressing to go wild.
Example: At the QZ computing center in Stockholm, the .TTY QZ
setting will cause this kind of problem, but the VISTA package
has been modified to handle the TTY QZ problem by TRMOP-ing
away the conversion before direct cursor addressing is done.
If you have this problem, use positive terminal numbers to
disable direct cursor addressing or modify the VISTA program
package in a way similar to the modification to cope with the
TTY QZ problem which is already done in the program.
11. MODIFYING THE VISTA PACKAGE FOR A NEW KIND OF TERMINAL
The simplest way to make the VISTA package usable on a new
kind of terminal is either
> let the terminal type number in the NEW VISTA statement be 0,
and let the user at his terminal input his terminal
specifications, or
> use the two last parameters in the NEW VISTA statement to give
the terminal characteristics. The next two last parameter
should include a text with the name of the terminal. The last
parameter should include a text containing in sequence the
character codes to move the cursor down, up, right, left, home
and to erase (clear) the screen of the terminal.
If, however, you want to change the VISTA source program to
permanently include a new terminal, then read the following
text. This may be necessary to get VISTA working on certain
terminals, and this is also the only way to be able to handle
blinking text on new kinds of terminals.
The VISTA package will not work on terminals on which there are
no character codes to be sent from the computer to the terminal
to move the cursor down, up, right, left, to home the
cursor(move it to the upper or lower left corner of the screen)
and to erase (clear) the screen (either the whole screen or the
part of the screen following the cursor position will do, since
the VISTA package always outputs the home character before the
erasescreen character.)
You should adjust the following sections of the source code in
the SIMULA source code of the VISTA package:
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 25
11. MODIFYING THE VISTA PACKAGE FOR A NEW KIND OF TERMINAL
In the NOT HIDDEN PROTECTED and INTEGER declarations of the
variables "infoton, vt52, minitec, elite, kthelite, newelite,
kthnewelite" in the preamble of the source code, add an
INTEGER for your new kind of terminal.
In the "PROCEDURE start_blink" you should adjust depending on
how your terminal works. INFOTON VISTA has a special
character on the screen, and everything after this character
is blinking upto a stopblink character on the screen. Most
other terminalsi (e.g. MINITEC) have a special character sent
from the computer before outputting blinking text and before
outputting steady text again. Follow the example in the code
for these terminals.
In the "PROCEDURE stop_blink", corresponding change to the
change in "start_blink".
In the "PROCEDURE move_the_cursor_to", insert special code for
Direct Cursor Adressing if your terminal has this feature.
Follow the examples of previously known terminals.
Find the place in the source program with "maxterminals:=" and
increase this figure (one more than number of known terminal
types) by the number of new terminal kinds you want to add.
Immediately afterwards, the INTEGER variables infoton, vt52,
minitec, elite, kthelite, newelite, kthnewelite are given
initial distinct values. Assign new distinct values to your
new kind of terminal.
IF your terminal cannot handle ".TTY FILL 0", then change this
"trmop" to the acceptable setting. Warning: Only .TTY FILL 0
will work on terminals with a built-in "auto-lf" function for
carriage returns from the computer.
In the menu "1 = INFOTON" ... "7 = ELITE 1520 WITHOUT
AUTO-LF", add your new terminals.
In the special code to initialize variables for different
kinds of terminals (beginning with the text
"COMMENT Infoton Vista Standard") initialize the variables
down, up, right, left, home and erasescreen to the
corresponding character codes on your terminal. If any of
these six character codes must be preceded by
"altmodei=escape", then set the Boolean variable "addaltmode"
to TRUE.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 26
11. MODIFYING THE VISTA PACKAGE FOR A NEW KIND OF TERMINAL
Also initialize the variables startblink and stopblink if
there are such character codes on your terminal.
If your terminals has a built-in "auto-lf" function (that is
that every carriage return from the computer causes an
implicit line feed to be generated in the terminal, then you
will have to set the Boolean variable "allow_cr" to FALSE.
Otherwise, make this variable TRUE, since this gives much
faster execution and less i/o.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 27
Appendix A: NEW FEATURES IN VISTA RELEASE 1976-11-05.
MINIMAL NECESSARY CHANGES TO GET OLD PROGRAM WORKING WITH THE NEW
PACKAGE
1) Change "EXTERNAL INTEGER PROCEDURE trmop" into "EXTERNAL INTEGER
PROCEDURE trmop, gettab" in the preamble of your program. Also
change "EXTERNAL CHARACTER PROCEDURE getch" into "EXTERNAL CHAR-
ACTER PROCEDURE getch, fetchar" and add "EXTERNAL PROCEDURE
depchar, forceout, outstring;".
2) There are two new TEXT parameters to the CLASS VISTA. Thus, for
every "NEW VISTA" or "NEW FORM" statement in your program, you
must add ",NOTEXT,NOTEXT" immediately in front of the ")".
If you have written your own subclasses to the classes VISTA or
FORM, corresponding changes must be made in NEW statements
generating your subclasses.
3) Only for users of the class FORM: There is one new TEXT
parameter to the class FIELD (and its subclasses). The new
parameter can be given the value NOTEXT in "NEW field", "NEW
alphafield" etc. statements in your program.
4) All program modules using the VISTA package must be recompiled.
NEW FEATURES IN THE VISTA PACKAGE
1) The package is much more independent of terminal make. It works
on INFOTON VISTA, DEC VT52, MINITEC and DATAMEDIA ELITE 2500 and
1520 terminals. It will also work on many other kinds of display
terminals, since the program can query the user about his
terminal characteristics. With the pushing of just 7 keys on the
terminal, the user can tell the program how his terminal works,
and the program can then work on almost any terminal having
special functions for moving the cursor around the screen.
2) The two new text parameters to the class VISTA can be used by a
user programmer to describe the characteristics of his special
kind of display terminal.
3) The new parameter to objects of the class FIELD in the FORM
package is a help text, which is displayed automatically to the
user when he types in a questionmark on his terminal. By writing
your own version of the virtual procedure HELP in the FIELD
class, you can handle help texts longer than one line or other
special help facilities.
4) To get machine-independent handling of blinking text on the
screen, two new procedures start_blink and stop_blink have been
added. Always use these procedures to create blinking text. See
the manual for further explanations. Whenever you call
start_blink, the bell will also be sounded on terminals which
have a bell function.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 28
Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
Swedish National Defense Research Institute FOA Rapport
S-104 50 Stockholm 80 C 10075-M3(E5, H9)
Sweden September 1977
(1)
HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
By Jacob Palme
(1) DEC, INFOTON, TEC, TANDBERG, CDC, DATAMEDIA, BEEHIVE, SIMULA
ABSTRACT:
This is the story of the development of a utility program to
simplify the writing of programs using alphanumeric display
terminals.
The basic program is very simple, and most of the programming
time was not spent on this, but in a cloak-and-dagger game with
other hardware and software products involved, trying to induce
or cheat these products into doing what was needed, and not
perform various unwanted and disruptive "niceties".
SEARCH KEY:
Computer, Program, Computer program, Programming, Computer
Programming, Software, Software development, Software
engineering, Terminal, Computer terminal, Conversational
terminal, Display terminal, CRT terminal, Alpha-numeric
terminal, Cursor control, Man-Computer interaction.
SWEDISH ABSTRACT:
Detta {r historien om programmeringen av ett hj{lpprogram f`r
att underl{tta skrivandet av program som anv{nder sig av
textsk{rmsterminaler.
Det grundl{ggande programmet {r mycket enkelt, och huvuddelen
av programmeringsarbetet {gnades inte }t det, utan }t en
gerillakamp med annan maskinvara och programvara som var
inblandad, f`r att f`rm} eller lura dessa produkter att g`ra
vad som beh`vdes, och inte utf`ra skilda icke `nskade och
skadliga "v{nligheter".
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 29
Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
0. TABLE OF CONTENTS.
1. WHAT IS THIS?
2. HOW IT ALL STARTED.
3. MYSTERY: SUDDEN UNEXPECTED CURSOR MOVEMENTS.
4. MYSTERY: SUDDEN SMALL SHIFTS IN THE PICTURE.
5. INPUTTING OF CONTROL CODES FROM THE TERMINAL.
6. TRYING OTHER TERMINAL MODELS.
7. BLINKING TEXT AND BELL FUNCTION.
8. THE HORIZONTAL TAB CHARACTER CODE.
9. AUTO LINE FEED FEATURE.
10. BLOCK MODE TERMINALS.
11. DIRECT CURSOR ADRESSING.
12. THE TYPE AHEAD PROBLEM.
13. PROGRAM OPTIMIZATION.
14. CONCLUSION.
15. BIBLIOGRAPHY.
1. WHAT IS THIS?
This report is the story of the development of a computer
program. The goal is not to tell you about technical details of
the program or application. Rather, the goal is to tell you
about the problems I met, and how I overcame them. Central to
these problems were the interface between my program and
hardware and software modules produced by various
manufacturers.
This is not a paper about the beautifully logical development
of a program through perfect applications of structured
programming techniques. But it is a true story. I made many
mistakes through ignorance, and I intend to admit them candidly
in this report.
My hope is that many programmers will recognize that they have
met similar problems. This recognition may help to give a
better understanding of the role of existing hardware and
software in program development.
This report will name the manufacturers and software and
hardware products involved. Problems associated with them will
be mentioned. This should n o t be construed as meaning that
these named manufacturers and products are especially bad. My
experience is the opposite, that the named products are very
good compared to some other similar products. The fact that I
tested them indicates that they were common in my work
environment.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 30
Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
2. HOW IT ALL STARTED.
In 1973, we got our DECsystem-10 computer together with a
number of Infoton VISTA alphanumeric display screens. These
screens had 20 lines of 80 characters per line.
The terminal has a so-called "cursor", which indicates the
position on the screen where forthcoming text will be placed.
The terminal can receive control codes from the computer to
move the cursor around the screen. When new text is inserted at
the cursor position, previous text at that position will be
erased.
On the Infoton VISTA, the cursor can be moved through controls
to move it up one line, down one line, left one character and
right one character. There are also codes to move the cursor to
the upper left corner of the screen (the "home" position on
most terminals) with or without simultaneous blanking of the
screen.
This terminal is typical of many other terminals, with small
technical differences. (See further Palme 1977B.)
By moving the cursor around the screen, erasing and replacing
existing portions of the screen, many nice applications are
possible. You can have a table on the screen, where the user
and the computer can continously update entries in the table.
You can create a "moving picture" on the screen etc. This is
further described in Palme 1977A.
To simplify the writing of various application programs using
this technique, a useful utility package would take commands
from the application program to move the cursor to given
positions on the screen, input or output data at that place
etc. I began to write such a utility package.
The basic principle of such a package is very simple. To move
the cursor to a given position, the program generates the
proper number of up, down, left, right or home codes to get
there. The program need not be very long or complex.
3. MYSTERY: SUDDEN UNEXPECTED CURSOR MOVEMENTS.
My first problem was that the cursor suddenly moved to the
beginning of the next line on the screen. This happened now and
then in the middle of the execution, with disastrous results to
the screen picture.
I simply could not understand why the cursor moved in this way.
But after some time I found the cause. The DECsystem-10
operating system has a built-in facility to protect users from
outputting too long lines. Thus, the operating system keeps a
count of on which horizontal position it believes the writing
position to be. When this count becomes larger than the line
length of the terminal, the operating system outputs a carriage
return and a line feed to the terminal.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 31
Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
Thus, the operating system just tries to be nice to you. It
tries to help you out of trouble, if your program by mistake
outputs too long lines. But of course the operating system does
not know about the cursor controls on display terminals. So its
cursor position count will be wrong, and the carriage return-
line feed produced by it will occur at unpredictable times
destroying the picture.
My solution to this problem was simple, but not very neat. I
counted the number of characters being output to the terminal.
Before this count exceeded 80, I output a carriage return
myself, and then moved the cursor back again to where my
program knew it to be.
In this way I cheated the operating system into believing that
the cursor never was more than 80 characters from the beginning
of a line.
When I had written and tested the code for this solution,
someone told me "Why don't you just make a TTY NO CRLF". TTY NO
CRLF is a command which can be given from a user or program to
switch off the monitor facility which caused my trouble. A
simple addition of a monitor call to the program, and all the
newly written code for my ingenious solution could be removed
from my program!
4. MYSTERY: SUDDEN SMALL SHIFTS IN THE PICTURE.
My next problem was that suddenly, now and then, the text I
output was shifted just a little on the screen, one or two
screen positions, but enough to cause double images, ghost
pictures and other problems.
After some time I found the solution. The SIMULA procedures for
outputting text, "outimage" and "breakoutimage" were programmed
in such a way that blanks at the end of output lines were never
output. The SIMULA system thus omitted blanks when these
happended to be at the end of what SIMULA believed to be output
lines. (In fact, my applications were based on the idea of not
outputting whole lines of text at a time. But the SIMULA system
did not know this.)
Another case, where a software product, in this case SIMULA,
tried to be nice to me, with disastrous results.
I solved the problem, again by cheating the system I was using.
Before outputting a line, the program always checked if the
last position to be written was a blank. If so, the program
changed the output so that the last character to be output was
a "NULL" character code (this is ignored by the terminal).
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Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
Sometime later, other users complained of the same problem, and
the definition of the "breakoutimage" procedure in SIMULA was
changed so that the program could indicate if ending blanks
were to be output (with the "image.pos" setting). This was a
much neater solution, and again I could remove some code which
I had inserted to cheat the system. How happy I felt when, for
the second time, I removed code which I had spent a lot of time
inventing.
5. INPUTTING OF CONTROL CODES FROM THE TERMINAL.
All 128 codes in the ISO-ASCII character set are not printable.
Therefore, when you push a terminal key which causes the
terminal to send a non-printable code, this cannot be directly
printed on the terminal. However, the DECsystem-10 operating
system again tries to be nice to you. To enable you to see
these characters, the operating system outputs the character "^"
followed by another character, so that you can see on your
screen what has been input. For example, the character with
numerical value 1 is output as ^A, 2 as ^B etc.
Exceptions from this are the control codes "carriage return",
"line feed" and "form feed". But the special terminal control
codes, such as "up" or "home" are not known to the monitor.
A similar problem was caused by the DELETE (RUB OUT) and NAK
(Control-U) characters. To help people correct small typing
errors, the monitor interpreted these as to take back the last
character (DELETE) or the last line (NAK). These were thus
never transmitted to my program, so the program did not know
that the cursor was not where it believed it to be.
My first crude solution to this problem was to reserve certain
lines in the application programs for input from the terminal,
and to always synchronize the cursor after terminal input. (By
synchronizing the cursor I mean ensuring that the cursor is
where the program believes it to be. This is done by moving the
cursor first to the home position, and then to the desired
position. On some terminals, direct-cursor-addressing can be
used instead.)
However, I was now aware that many times, when the monitor
caused trouble by being too "nice", the niceties could be
switched off through various monitor switches. So I went
through the list of terminal control monitor switches to see if
there was one I could use. All these switches are set by the
TRMOP supervisory call, I believed. So I looked through the
list of options to the TRMOP supervisory call.
There was one switch which looked nice. TTY NO ECHO it was
called. Just my problem - switch off echoing of characters.
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Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
Happily, I tried TTY NO ECHO. It nicely suppressed monitor
echoing of all printable characters. But - the echoing of
non-printable characters, which I wanted to suppress, was not
suppressed.
The complete information on all the options in the operating
system can be found in the "DECsystem-10 Software Notebook",
consisting of eleven very thick volumes and costing about a
thousand dollars a year to keep.
Sometime later, I learned that there was an obscure table in
quite another part of the notebook, indicating a different
setting, which did just what I wanted. It could either cause
all input characters to be echoed unchanged by the monitor,
without any "nice" modifications, or it could suppress all
echoing even of non-printable characters, so that my program
could do the echoing instead.
Why this setting was not part of the TRMOP supervisory call,
which handles other switches controlling terminal handling, is
a mystery to me.
6. TRYING OTHER TERMINAL MODELS.
Now came the time when I wanted to run my programs on terminals
of other makes than the INFOTON VISTA terminal. I happily ran
my programs, and a curious mixture of jumbled characters
appeared on the screen.
Apparently, the control codes to move the cursor up, down,
left, right and to the home position, and to erase the screen,
are not standardized. I found out that even two different
models from the same manufacturer often have different control
codes! (This is true for example for some DEC, TEC and ELITE
terminals.)
This means that every program must be different for each
terminal model. A way to alleviate this problem would be if all
terminal differences could be collected into my utility
package, so that no modifications would be necessary in the
application packages.
I have tried to achieve this goal, but the terminal differences
are so cleverly devious that I have not always succeded. As
one of many examples of curious terminal behaviour, the line
feed character on the TANDBERG TDV 2000 terminal blanks the
rest of the next line on the screen.
There are other subtle differences between terminal types. For
example, what should happen if you send an "up" character on
the first line of the screen, a "down" character on the last
line, a "left" character at the beginning of a line or a
"right" or any printable character at the end of a line.
Some terminals do nothing in these cases, other terminals "wrap
around" to the other end of the screen.
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Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
On some terminals, the control codes to move the cursor are
one-character codes. On other terminals, they are two character
codes, first the ESCAPE character, and then a second character.
(The latter practice is more in accordance with the standard
for those controls which do not have single character
representations in the standard.)
This is mostly a problem when inputting these codes from the
terminal. To get the application programs totally independent
of terminal type, these programs cannot themselves check if the
input character was e.g. an "up". This checking must be done
indirectly through the utility package, which requires a change
in all existing application programs. (And you know how happy
application programmers are when changes in utility packages
they use force them to change their application programs. I
have not yet dared to make this change!) But application
programs that wish to be terminal independent can achieve this
by writing the checking code in this way:
"IF controlchar AND c = up" instead of just "IF c = up".
To get terminal independence, I invented what I thought was a
very clever solution. I let the characters go through a
conversion table, so that only the conversion table need be
different for different terminal models.
Later I skipped the conversion table, since I found during
optimization that direct code was much faster.
7. BLINKING TEXT AND BELL FUNCTION.
Some terminals allow you to mark special sections on the screen
by blinking text. Many terminals allow you to send the bell
character, which causes a beep at the terminal to catch the
attention of the terminal user.
Since the purposes of both are similar, and some terminals have
one of these features, some the other, I made a single "alarm"
procedure which sent both the bell character and the blink
control depending on terminal model. In this way most
application programs will be more terminal independent.
However, the logic of the blink control was different in a
devious way. On some terminals, all characters s e n t to the
terminal between "start blink" and "stop blink" are blinking.
On other terminals, all characters p o s i t i o n e d
between "start blink" and "stop blink" on the screen are
blinking.
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Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
My package does not yet enforce complete terminal independence
here. Application programmers who desire terminal independence
can get it by ensuring that they call "start blink" before each
element of text to blink, and "stop blink" after each such
element.
8. THE HORIZONTAL TAB CHARACTER CODE.
One character code causing much trouble is the HT or
"horizontal tab" code. On some terminals, this character code
is ignored. On other terminals, the cursor moves to fixed tab
positions. On still other terminals, the cursor moves to
settable tab positions. The worst terminal is MINITEC, where
the cursor moves to the next settable tab position on the whole
screen, and scrolls the screen if there is no such position.
Thus, on MINITEC, I had two possibilities. One was to let my
program set 240 tab positions all over the screen, the other
was a monitor switch to control the echoing of the HT character
code (TTY NO TAB).
This monitor switch causes the monitor not to send or echo any
HT characters to the terminal. Unfortunately, the monitor
instead moves to where it believes the next tab position to be,
using blanks to get there and thus erasing part of the screen.
Therefore, after each HT I have to let my program correct the
wounds which the monitor has caused on the screen.
9. AUTO LINE FEED FEATURE.
The standardized character set does not include any character
to do what the RETURN key does on type-writers: move to the
first position of the next line. The carriage return code only
moves to the first position of the current line.
Thus, an extra line feed has to added. Sometimes this line feed
is added by the computer, sometimes by the terminal, just to
make things more difficult.
A connected problem is that some terminals (mostly printing
terminals) cannot perform carriage return and line feed as fast
as other functions. The DECsystem-10 operating system solves
this problem by repeating a received carriage return character
several times.
If the terminal adds a line feed to each such extra carriage
return character, then the screen will begin to scroll because
of all the line feeds, and the picture is destroyed. Happily,
there is a supervisory call to set off also this nicety of the
operating system.
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Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
For my application, it is better if the computer does this
adding of a line feed, since then the action is easier
controlled by the program than if the addition is done by the
terminal.
10. BLOCK MODE TERMINALS.
Some terminals are mainly constructed for block mode
transmission, where text is edited locally on the terminal and
then sent as a block to the computer. Some such terminals are
also marketed for character mode transmission. Beware of such
terminals. (Example: INFOTON VISTAR II, some models of STANSAAB
ALFASKOP.)
On such terminals, cursor control wholly or partially acts only
locally on the terminal. This is the only problem I have not
been able to overcome at all. My package cannot be made to work
on such terminals at all.
11. DIRECT CURSOR ADDRESSING.
Some terminals have a so-called "direct-cursor-addressing"
feature. By this is meant that the computer can send a special
control code, which tells the terminal that the two next
characters are not to be printed. Instead, the two next
characters are to be interpreted as horizontal and vertical
screen adresses, to move the cursor directly to this position.
This feature has two advantages. The first is that you are
always sure where your cursor is after this terminal command.
The second is that fewer codes have to be sent to the terminal.
The second advantage is only important for lines slower than
120 characters/second.
However, the algoritm to decide which character means which
screen adress is of course different for each terminal model,
although BEEHIVE B 100 and DEC VT52 by a curious circumstance
have happended to chance on the same algorithm.
Another problem with direct cursor addressing is that some of
the characters used for screen addressing are characters which
are reserved for national use in the ISO character set. And
often, these characters are converted in different ways by
networks and transmission system, causing jumbled screens
again.
This is again a case where the systems try to be nice to you -
helping to convert between different national character sets -
but instead causing trouble when the characters are used as
screen addresses.
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Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
12. THE TYPE AHEAD PROBLEM.
The DECsystem-10 computer has a nice feature allowing
"type-ahead". By this is meant that the terminal user can type
input before the program has asked for it. This allows advanced
users to save time by typing while the program is doing things
for them.
Unfortunately, this nicety again causes problems for my
program. The problem is that when the user types characters
ahead, these are not received by my program when they are
needed. Thus, the program does not know when and where on the
screen they will appear.
One solution to this is to let all characters go through my
program before echoing them to the screen. This solution has
the disadvantage that echoing will be rather slow, since at
rush hour time, the program may only get swapped in every five
seconds or so.
In the most advanced of my application programs, this problem
is circumvented by switching back and forward between program
and monitor echoing of characters. When the package smells
trouble, it switches to program echoing. When the package
smells really bad trouble, it has to restore the whole screen.
In some cases, the program has to skip existing type ahead to
avoid this problem.
13. PROGRAM OPTIMIZATION.
Finally, I found that the CPU time for some of the application
programs which I and other people had written using the utility
package was rather long. By performance measurement tools the
critical sections were identified. It was found that the SIMULA
procedures for terminal input and output were rather slow.
For example, the output procedure always blanks the text which
is output. In this way, the text is cleared for the next line
to be output. Unfortunately, I want to keep a copy of the
screen in memory, so I do not want the text to be cleared. To
avoid unnecessary copying, special output procedures in
assembly language were written. The CPU time was lowered 25% by
this single change!
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Appendix B: HOW I FOUGHT WITH HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AND SUCCEEDED
14. CONCLUSION.
The conclusion to this story might be: Beware of niceties! My
story can be seen as a series of cases where I banged my head
into walls put up by hardware and system designers who just
wanted to be nice to me. My first problem was to recognize that
I had banged my head into such a wall. The second problem was
to find a way to remove or get around the wall. In most cases I
succeeded.
The execution of a program on a computer will usually involve
many different modules. There may be a network, a terminal
control system, a file handling system, compilers and prog-
ramming language systems, other operating systems, the app-
lication program itself, utility software used by it etc. All
these modules are programmed to perform their own tasks, but
without full knowledge of the other tasks. And most of the
modules have various checks to prevent misuse.
Very often, a module will, because of its lack of knowledge of
the actual usage, not do what is required. Other modules using
it can then in various ways correct or circumvent this. In the
worst case, we will have a series of modules not helping each
other, but doing and undoing and circumventing and cheating the
actions of each other. In my case, the mayor task of the prog-
rammer was not to solve the basic programming task, which was
rather simple, but rather to be successful in this new kind of
cloak-and-dagger game. Programming has then become quite a new
kind of art!
15. BIBLIOGRAPHY
Digital Equipment Corporation: DECsystem-10 Software Notebook.
(eleven volumes.)
DECsystem-10 SIMULA Language Handbook, part I, II and III.
Palme, Jacob 1976: VISTA - For Full Control of Text Display
Terminals. To be submitted to the DECUS program library.
Palme, Jacob 1977A: Moving Pictures Show Simulation to User. FOA 1
Report C 10068, April 1977. (A presentation of the uses of the
program, the development of which you have just read about.)
Palme, Jacob 1977B: Conversational Computer Terminals. FOA 1 Report
C 10074, August 1977.
Technical user's manuals for the following terminal models: Infoton
Vista, Infoton Vistar II, Infoton Vistar Sattelite, Tandberg
TDV 2000, Minitec, Teletec, Elite 1520, Elite 2520, Beehive
B100, CDC 713-10 (published by the terminal manufacturers).
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
ABSTRACT
One of the most difficult problems with a simulation program is
to gain confidence in the accurateness and reliability of the
model. If the program is to be used for important decisions,
the decision makers must feel sure that they can depend on the
model. To do this, they have to understand what is happening in
the program.
One way of making the users of the simulation more sure about
what is happening in the program is to show what is happening
during a simulation as a "moving picture" on a terminal. This
can easily be done on a simple standard alphanumeric display
terminal.
Our experience is that the extra programming effort is small
and that the gain in understanding of the model is high both
for the programmer himself and for other users.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
METHODOLOGY
An ordinary simple alphanumeric terminal is used. There must be
codes which can be sent from the computer to the terminal to
move the cursor (writing position) around the screen. Most
terminals have such codes.
A picture is designed for the terminal which shows what is
happening during the simulation. The terminal screen can be
divided into several areas, containing tables, written text and
simplified pictorial information.
During the simulation, all information on the screen is
continually kept updated, so that the screen at each instant
shows the status of the simulation at that time.
The user can start and stop the simulation instantly by
inputting CONTROL-S (=STOP) and CONTROL-Q (=CONTINUE) from his
terminal.
Some application programs also allow the user to take part in
the simulation from his terminal. Sometimes, a special area on
the terminal screen is reserved for interaction with the user.
PROGRAMMING
A package of utility routines is included in a separately
compiled CLASS, itself almost entirely written in the
programming language SIMULA on a DECsystem-10/20 computer. This
package will simplify the addition of moving-picture output
to a simulation program.
Unfortunately, the codes to move the cursor are not the same
for all kinds of terminals. However, the package recognizes
eight wellknown terminal types, and will work for most other
terminals after inputting a simple input sequence from the
user. The package can easily be modified for new terminal
makes.
The programmer writes on the screen by using a few simple
procedures. Examples of these are "move_the_cursor_to(i,j)"
which moves the cursor to a certain position on the screen, and
commands to output a character, a number or a text beginning at
the current cursor position on the screen.
To cause an object on the screen to "move" geographically, you
erase it in its previous position and write it anew at the new
position. This is done so fast that the terminal user percieves
it as fluid motion.
A value which changes with time moves by rewriting it with new
values at the same place of the screen whenever the value is
changed or at constant time intervals.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
The program also allows switching between several pictures
(controlled by the program or the user) on the same terminal or
outputting pictures on several terminal screens simultaneously.
Our experience is that to add "moving picture" output to an
existing simulation program does not have to require more than
about 5 days of work.
APPLICATIONS
The package has been used for several simulation programs.
These include:
- A simulation of ships transporting troups across a lake, with
enemy destroyers combatting the troup transport ships
- A simulation of a military aerodrome, showing the position of
the aircraft and the effect of bombing on the aerodrome
- A simulation of icebreaker operations in the northern part of
the Baltic. The positions of icebreakers and ships requiring
assistance is shown on a simplified map on the screen
- Several game programs in which the user interacts with the
simulation. One cat-and-mouse game, one football-type game with
two simultaneously used terminals, one for each side, and one
chess game.
- Nonsimulation applications, for example a budgeting
application in which the budget table is shown on the screen, the
user being able to change and to input data to the table, and all
the sums in the table are updated every time the user changes a
number on the screen.
- A text editor based on the idea that the terminal screen always
shows exactly the text being updated. The effect of each
editing operation directly changes the text shown on the
screen.
EXPERIENCE
Our experience is that this is a very powerful way of making it
easier for people to understand what is happening in a
simulation model.
In a very short time, users understand enough to ask question
they could not ask before, like:
Why is that aeroplane so seldom attacked?
That ice-breaker seems to get hung at that port. Why?
Faults in the simulation models show up very clearly as curious
or inconsistent events on the "moving picture screen".
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
EXAMPLES
This example shows part of the screen for the ship-and-
destroyer simulation. To the left is a list of the ships, to
the right a map of the lake, simplified to a rectangle.
----------------------------------------------------------------
! SHIP NO 1, SPEED 2.0 ! 1 !
! SHIP NO 2, SPEED 4.0 ! *** 2& !
! SHIP NO 3, KILLED ! *** !
! SHIP NO 4, UNLOADING ! *** 4!
! SHIP NO 5, UNLOADING ! 5!
! SHIP NO 6, UNLOADING ! & 6!
! SHIP NO 7, KILLED ! !
! SHIP NO 8, KILLED ! !
! SHIP NO 9, SPEED-18.0 ! 9 !
!---------------------------------------------------------------
Table of ships Map of the lake
Each digit in the map is the position of a ship. Each "&" is
the position of a destroyer. The square of asterisks is shown
for one second each time a ship is sunk by a destroyer.
The screen also includes (not shown above) an area for
inputting commands, a clock for simulated time, and areas
showing troup transport results and a summary table of ship
states.
Below is an excerpt from the picture for the icebreaker
simulation. The arrow indicates a convoy of three ships moving
upwards on a simplifed map of the Baltic. Ship no. 37 is
destined for the port of Lule}, ships no. 36 and 38 for the
port of Pite}.
'!| 37
! 36 38
!
Below is an excerpt of the airport simulation. The airport is
divided into several areas where airplanes can be placed, the
front area, the forest area, the underground shelter area.
In each area, there are several airplane platforms, and on each
platform a code indicates the status of the plane. During the
simulation, the user can see the airplanes move from shelter to
shelter, see them being bombed and repaired.
Front: VU VU = Sheltered platform under repair
- - VB = Blocked sheltered platform
Forest: A1 = Atack plane no. 1
- - R48 = Will be repaired in 48 hours
- - AJ5, AJ2 = Hunter aircrafts no. 5
VB VU and 2
Rock:
V A1 R48 V
Flying: AJ5 AJ2
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
COMPLETE SCREEN SAMPLES
THE TROUP TRANSPORT APPLICATION
Here is a pictorial description
of the lake, with freighters. Here you
1 = position of ship no 1 can see
Here is These data & = position of destroyer a ^ for each
a table show the *** when a ship is killed, unloaded
of the status of *** = this is shown for one shipload of
ships. each ship. *** second on the screen troops
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
SHIP NO 1, SPEED 2.0 ! 1 ! Troops moved
SHIP NO 2, SPEED 4.0 ! *** 2& ! ^
SHIP NO 3, KILLED ! *** !
SHIP NO 4, UNLOADING ! *** 4!
SHIP NO 5, UNLOADING ! 5!
SHIP NO 6, UNLOADING ! & 6!
SHIP NO 7, KILLED ! !
SHIP NO 8, KILLED ! !
SHIP NO 9, SPEED-18.0 ! 9 ! TIME: 0:05
Commands: START new ship NO OF SHIPS:
GIVE COMMAND: DESTROYER start 9 STARTED
START KILL old ship 0 LOADING
Speed of new ship? HOLD ship 2 FORWARD
20 RANDOM ship speed 3 UNLOADING
WAIT delay time 1 BACKING
BEGIN new run 0 HOLDING
<CR> for intetrupt 3 KILLED
<FF>(=CONTROL-L) for bad picture
CONTROL-S and CONTROL-Q for stop-start
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The area above is used to input commands from the This table (above)
terminal and give error messages for unacceptable shows the number of
input data. ships each of various
states.
In this example, the user can input commands in the lower left
part of the screen, and a short list of the available commands is
shown on the screen. <CR> is short for the carriage-return key,
<FF> for the form-feed key, CONTROL for the CONTROL key on the
user terminal.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
THE ICEBREAKER SIMULATION
(Programmed by @rjan Leringe)
Har- Each number represents a freighter
bours * indicates a freighter ready-to-go Clock
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Lule} 30* 12 23
Pite} 31* 34
Skell 26* 32*
'!| 33 35
!
!
! 28
! 29 27
|!'
'!| 37
! 36 38
!
Holm`
Gadd 39 40
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Freighters arrive at Holm` Gadd and wait for asistance in
entering one of the northern harbours. After loading or
unloading they need assistance back to Holm` Gadd, where they
vanish from the screen.
The large arrows represent convoys of freighters, assisted by
an icebreaker, moving through the ice. To the left in the
screen are two icebreakers with convoys moving to the north,
and to the right in the picture is a southbound icebreaker with
convoy.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
THE MILITARY AERODROME
(Programmed by Lars-$ke Larsson)
Clock and day
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Front: Day 15:45 OP 4
_ _ _ VU VBA6
Forest:
_ _ _ A4 Cl _ A3 Cl _
_ _ _ _ _
VB VU VB VB V
Rock:
V A1 R48 V V V
Flying: AJ5 AJ2
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Planes on front platforms can start immediately after an
alarm.
_ is an unsheltered platform.
V is a sheltered platform.
B is a platform blocked after an attack.
Example: VBAC is attack-plane number 6 which is blocked in a
shelter after bombing.
U identifies a platform under repair at time shown (15:45).
A4Cl says that attack plane 4 is cleared from obstructions and
can be used for attack missions.
R48 is a plane under repair, to be ready in 48 hours.
OP 4 says that there are 4 operative planes on the base at
time shown.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 46
Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
A CHESS GAME
(Programmed by Mats Wallin)
-----------------------------------------
8 ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! !
-----------------------------------------
7 ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: !
-----------------------------------------
6 ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! Ra6-a4
----------------------------------------- Your move: b3
5 ! ! :: ! ! BK ! ! :: ! ! :: !
-----------------------------------------
4 ! WR ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! !
-----------------------------------------
3 ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: !
-----------------------------------------
2 ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! !
-----------------------------------------
1 ! WK ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: ! ! :: !
-----------------------------------------
a b c d e f g h
Many chess programs have been written. The TORN program can at
present only handle a special kind of end game. The interesting
part is that the program illustrates
a) How a user can play a part in the simulation,
b) How the chess board can be displayed on the screen and
updated with each move.
BK = Black king
WK = White king
WR = White rook
Ra6-a4 = Computer move, rook from square a6 to square a4.
PALME: VISTA - FULL CONTROL OF TEXT DISPLAY TERMINALS Page 47
Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
A SIMPLIFIED FOOTBALL GAME
HSPEED: 1 VSPEED: 1
-------------
! !
GOAL 1 ! ! GOAL 2
1 o
2
! !
! !
-------------
0 - 1
This very simple program will just illustrate a combination of
the DECsystem-10 SIMULA Real Time package with the display
package. The simulation contains three processes, one for the
ball and one for each of two players.
Codes in the picture: 1 and 2 are the two players, o is the
ball.
Two users can run the program simultaneously, at two different
terminals. Each terminal shows the same picture. Each user can,
whenever he wants, input commands on his terminal to move the
player controlled by him. There are keys on the terminal for
moving the player up, down, left and right.
Note that there is no requirement that every second move should
be made by one and every other second move by the other player.
Both can make moves as fast as they wish. The program handles
the commands in the order in which they are typed by the users.
This is only a test program to show that it works. No real
application has yet used this combination of the real time
package and the display package.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
TABLE FILL-IN BUDGETING
The screen shows a table. The user can input data to the fields in
the table in arbitrary order, and change previous data at wish. The
totals are updated for every new or changed field value. The user
can thus adjust the table to a desired total by succesively
modifying the individual field values.
------------------------------------------------------------------
TABLE FILL-IN DEMONSTRATION EXAMPLE: (Type ? for HELP)
Type of Number of Price per Total
unit units unit price
Chairs 35 123.00 Kr 4305.00 Kr
Tables 4 789.00 Kr 3156.00 Kr
Lamps 7 134.00 Kr 938.00 Kr
Curtains 6 five
Beds 35 456.00 Kr 15960.00 Kr
----------------------------------------------------
Sum 87 24359.00 Kr
-> Integer input was expected.
------------------------------------------------------------------
When the user wrote "five" in a field where a number was expected,
the error message above was automatically displayed.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
A DISPLAY ORIENTED TEXT EDITOR
The great advantage with a display terminal for text editing is
that the computer can so easily change and erase the
information on the screen. This means that after each edit
operation, the user can immediately see on the screen the text
as it will appear after this edit operation.
VIDED is such a text editor based on the same basic package as
the other programs described in this report.
Example; The screen contains the text:
Jack and Jill went up the hill. Jack fell down, and Jill
came tumbling after.
Now, you might want to change the second phrase to "Jack fell
down from the hill". You move the cursor to the position of the
insertion and make an insertion command, and you get:
Jack and Jill went up the hill. Jack fell down from the hill, and Jill
came tumbling after.
But now, the first line is too long, so you make a "justify"
command to adjust the line lengths of the paragraph, and get:
Jack and Jill went up the hill. Jack fell down from the
hill, and Jill came tumbling after.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
VIDED simplifies the production of character drawings, which
are almost impossible to produce with many other text editors.
Examples:
(1) ^ (2) __________
' | ! !
' o | --------<---NO-<---! READY? !--->-YES---
' o o | ! !________! !
' o o o | V ! V
'_________| _________ ________ ! ________
! O O O O ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
! O O O O ! ! START !----->! EDIT !-->--- ! STOP !
! O O O O ! !_______! !______! !______!
! O O O O ! ^ !
! O O O O ! ! V
(3)
!
1.00 -!- - - - - - oooooo - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
! oo oo
! oo oo
! o o
! oo oo
! o o
! o o
0.00 -!-------------------------------------------------------
! ^o o
! The curve intersects ! o o
! zero at this point ---->-- oo oo
! o o
! oo oo
! oo oo
-1.00 -!- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - oooooo - - - - - -
!
The curve above was originally produced by a plotting program,
but without axes or explanations. The axes and the explaining
text was thereafter added to the plot using the VIDED text
editor.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
EXAMPLES OF HOW TO USE THE PROGRAM
The program is controlled from the application by simple
procedure calls. Examples:
MOVE_THE_CURSOR_TO(h,v) will move the cursor to the screen
position with the address (h,v), as counted from the upper left
corner of the screen.
OUTCHAR, OUTTEXT, OUTINT, OUTREAL etc. will work as standard
SIMULA output procedures, but the text is output at the place
of the screen where the cursor is. Thereafter, the cursor will
be at the screen position following the output text.
OUTIMAGE will move the cursor to the first position of the next
line of the screen.
At first, we found debugging of application programs using this
facility difficult, since the debugging output mixed up the
picture. The solution was to use two terminals, one for the
picture and another for the debugging output.
TERMINAL CHARACTERISTICS
Unfortunately, there is no standardization at all of the codes
to control a conversational display terminal. Each terminal has
its own set of control codes.
The VISTA program package has (in november 1977) built-in
knowledge of the following terminals:
INFOTON VISTA
INFOTON VISTAR SATTELITE
MINITEC AND TELETEC
DEC VT52
DATAMEDIA ELITE 2500 AND ELITE 1520
TANDBERG TDV 2000
BEEHIVE B 100
CDC 713-10
In addition to this, the program is easy to adjust to other
terminals, since on most terminals there are keys for trans-
mitting to the computer the codes to move the cursor around the
screen. By pushing these keys you can from an unknown terminal
tell the computer program which codes to send to move around
the screen.
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Appendix C: MOVING PICTURES SHOW SIMULATION TO USER
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Dahl, Myhrhaug and Nygaard 1970: SIMULA information Common Base
Language. Norsk Regnesentral, Forskningsveien 1b, Olso
3, Norway, Publication no. S-22.
Birtwistle and Palme 1974, 1975: DECsystem-10 SIMULA Language
Handbook Part I. Swedish National Defense Research
Institute, S-104 50 Stockholm 80, Sweden, Report no.
C8398-M3(E5).
Arnborg, Bj`rner, Enderin, Engstr`m, Karlsson, Ohlin, Palme,
Wennestr`m and Wihlborg 1974, 1976: DECsystem-10 SIMULA
Language Handbook Part II. Swedish National Defense
Research Institute, Report no. C8399-M3(E5).
Arnborg, Enderin, Ohlin, Oldgren and Palme 1976: DECsystem-10
SIMULA Language Handbook Part III. Swedish National
Defense Research Institute, Report no. C10045-M3(E5).
Palme 1975: Interactive Software for Humans. Swedish National
Defense Research Institute, Report no. C10029-M3(E5).
Ohlin 1976: Safe Conversational SIMULA Programs Using Class
SAFEIO. Swedish National Defense Research Institute,
Report no. C10044-M3(E5).
Palme 1976: VISTA - For Full Control of Text Display Terminals.
Swedish National Defense Research Institute, Report no.
D10007-M3(E5). (Contains a programmers manual to the
program described in this report.)
Jennergren, Lundh and Wandel 1976: Icebreaking operations in the
Northern Baltic - A Simulation Study. FOA 1 report
88-8246:1/1976.
Palme 1977: VIDED - A Display-oriented Text Editor.