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RE: More on Tame



I don't believe TAME is helping. I run Xy 4.018 DOS in Windows 2000, full
screen, not in a window. My biggest complaint is, like yours, the repeat
arrow key pause, then jerky movement, then overshooting the target letter.
I've speeded up the rest of the keyboard movement by modifying the settings
in the Control Panel's Keyboard and Accessibility Options. I am definitely
interested in a fix.

Jim Eberle
-----Original Message-----
From: Martin J. Osborne [mailto:osborne@xxxxxxxx]
Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2003 11:46 AM
To: xywrite@xxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: More on Tame



[If you are satisfied with the way XyWrite for DOS runs under W2K, press the
delete
key now...]

I will write to David Thomas. Before I do so, I'd like to get a measure of
the
extent to which list members find the existing version of Tame less than
fully
satisfactory. Currently, I see the following two problems with XyWrite for
DOS
version 4.018 running under W2K SP3 in a window:

- Actions assigned to cursor keys don't occur instantaneously when the keys
are
pressed. The problem is illustrated on my system as follows: open a largish
file,
put the cursor at the bottom of the first screen, hold down the cursor-down
key,
and then, after the screen has started scrolling, release the key. On my
system
the screen continues to scroll for about half a second after the key is
released.

- Tame doesn't seem to reduce the jerkiness of keys with assignments
starting NI.
(On my system, it's necessary to put NI at the start of most key assignments
involving the Alt key and a key on the cursor or number pads (e.g.
Alt-[cursor-right], which I use for NW).)

(Maybe these problems can't be fully "solved"; I will ask Thomas.)

If these, or related problems, occur on your system, and you are interested
in
finding a solution, please let me know (either by writing to the list, or to
me
privately (martin.osborne@xxxxxxxx)---I don't know what is the proper
list
etiquette). Please tell me whether the problems I describe are the ones
from which
you suffer; if you see other problems, tell me what they are.

--
Martin J. Osborne
Department of Economics
150 St. George Street
University of Toronto
Toronto
M5S 3G7
Canada
http://www.economics.utoronto.ca

martin.osborne@xxxxxxxx
http://www.economics.utoronto.ca/osborne
+1 416-978-5094