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WordStar and Command
The other WordStar emulation utility created was the WordStar Command Emulator for Microsoft Word, also known as " WordStar for Word ," by Mike Petrie.
Designed to work in conjunction with CtrlPlus, the Command Emulator adds many more WordStar commands to MS Word than CtrlPlus by itself, and also changes Word 97-XP's menus to be more like those of WordStar 7. 0 for DOS, the last DOS version of WordStar.

WordStar and Emulator
Hitting these commands in the WordStar Emulator within Word runs Word's equivalent commands.

WordStar and is
WordStar is a word processor application, published by MicroPro International, originally written for the CP / M operating system but later ported to DOS, that enjoyed a dominant market share during the early-to mid-1980s.
Although no current version of WordStar is available for modern operating systems, some former WordStar users still prefer WordStar's interface, especially the cursor diamond commands described earlier in this article.
One such program is CtrlPlus by Yoji Hagiya, which remaps the standard PC keyboard, making many WordStar commands available in most Windows programs.
* There is no WordStar 2000 for Windows.
* WordStar for Windows was also released under the name WordStar Personal Writer, and is a development of WordStar Legacy itself developed from a program called Legacy.
* WordStar Resource Site — featuring a full ( as far as is known ) history of WordStar
Another is WordStar, the most popular word processor during much of the 1980s.

WordStar and written
Although Seymour I. Rubinstein was the principal owner of the company, Rob Barnaby was the sole author of the early versions of the program ; starting with WordStar 4. 0, the program was built on new code written principally by Peter Mierau.
WordStar was deliberately written to make as few assumptions about the underlying system as possible, allowing it to be easily ported across the many platforms that proliferated in the early 1980s.

WordStar and Microsoft
Compared to other word processors of the day such as Micropro WordStar 3. 3, WordPerfect 4. 2, and Microsoft Word 2. 0, Symphony's word processing environment was simple, but effective and uncomplicated.
While many potential customers believed that the smaller computer could run most IBM PC software and an important market for the PCjr was executives who took data home to work on, in practice it proved incompatible with about 60 % of PC applications including WordStar and two programs often used to test PC clones ' compatibility, Lotus 1-2-3 and Microsoft Flight Simulator.
On start-up LocoScript displayed a file management menu, like WordStar but unlike WordPerfect, Microsoft Word and other modern word processors, which start with an empty document.
The first screenwriting software was SmartKey, a macro program that sent strings of commands to existing word processing programs, such as WordStar, WordPerfect and Microsoft Word.

WordStar and for
Other add-on programs included SpellStar, a spell checker program, later incorporated as a direct part of the WordStar program ; and DataStar, a program whose purpose was specifically to expedite creating of the data files used for merge printing.
Installation of early versions of WordStar, especially for CP / M, was very different from the approach of modern programs.
DOS versions of WordStar at least had standardized the screen display, but still had to be customized for different printers.
WordStar version 3. x used the MS-DOS File control block ( FCB ) interface, an early data structure for file input / output which was based closely on CP / M's file input / output functions.
) WordStar 4. 0 does not have this problem because it uses the newer MS-DOS interface for input / output.
WordStar for Word also adds WordStar's block commands, namely Ctrl + KB to mark the beginning of a block, Ctrl + KK to mark the end, and Ctrl + KV to move it.
WordStar for Word works on all versions of Word from Word 97 through 2010.
* DOS WordStar files by default have no extension ; some users adopted their own conventions, such as the letters WS followed by the version number ( for example, WS3 ), or just plain WS.
* WordStar for Windows files use the extension WSD
* WordStar for Windows templates use the extension WST
* WordStar for Windows macros use the extension WMC

WordStar and macro
JOE comes with macro files that emulate Emacs keybindings ( when invoked as jmacs ), Pico ( when invoked as jpico ), or WordStar ( when invoked as jstar ).

WordStar and programming
It could survive being accidentally dropped and included a bundled software package that included the CP / M operating system, the BASIC programming language, the WordStar word processing package, and the SuperCalc spreadsheet program.
The WordStar word processor, SuperCalc spreadsheet, and the CBASIC and MBASIC programming languages were the leading applications in their respective niches at the time.
It was also bundled with a number of software packages: WordStar, the popular word processing package ; SuperCalc, a spreadsheet ; MBASIC, a programming language ; Osboard, a graphics and drawing program ; TurnKey, a system utility ; MediaMaster, a data interchange program that allowed compatibility with over " 200 other computers "; and Desolation, a game.

WordStar and language
Software: A typical 820-II came with the CP / M 2. 2 operating system, a diagnostic disk, a copy of WordStar word processor software, and Microsoft's BASIC-80 computer language.

WordStar and on
WordStar 5 introduced a document-mode " print preview " feature, allowing the user to inspect a WYSIWYG version of text, complete with inserted graphics, as it would appear on the printed page.
Because FCB compatibility has not been maintained, WordStar 3. x will not function properly on modern versions of Windows.
The 500 + page Osborne 1 user manual contained instructions on the hardware, WordStar, Supercalc, MBASIC | BASIC software and the CP / M operating system and utilities
It was one of the earliest killer applications in the CP / M world, along with WordStar and ( on other platforms ) VisiCalc, and was able to make the transition to the IBM PC to maintain its dominance.
" So while WordMaster, SuperSort, and WordStar were developed on IMSAIs ( I used mine til I got an IBM PC ), few customers used them.

WordStar and Word
XOOM also released a version of WordStar for Windows 2. 0 called Xoom Word Pro.
This was the time of European development for Borland: SideKick and Turbo Pascal had been founded in Denmark ; and the management of the European subsidiary comprised former Micropro France managers ( Micropro was at the time the world leader in Word processing software with the famous WordStar line-up.

WordStar and customization
Researching, testing, and proving out such installations was a time-consuming and knowledge-intensive process, making WordStar installation and customization a staple discussion of CP / M users ' groups during that time.

WordStar and .
Some editors, such as WordStar, have dual operating modes allowing them to be either a text editor or a word processor.
MicroPro began selling the product, now renamed WordStar, in June 1979.
MailMerge was an add-on program ( becoming integrated from WordStar 4 onwards ) which facilitated the merge printing of bulk mailings, such as business letters to clients.
A companion spreadsheet, CalcStar, was also produced using a somewhat WordStar-like interface ; collectively, WordStar ( word processing ), DataStar / ReportStar ( database management, a. k. a. InfoStar ), and CalcStar ( spreadsheet ) composed the first-ever office suite of personal computer programs.
As a product enhancement, in the late 1980s WordStar 5 came bundled with PC-Outline, a popular DOS outliner then available from Brown Bag Software, Inc. in California.
WordStar identified files as either " document " or " nondocument ," which led to some confusion among users.
" Document " referred to WordStar word processing files containing embedded and hidden word processing and formatting commands.
Using WordStar in " Nondocument Mode " was essentially the same as using a traditional text editor, but with more advanced text editing features than found in some mainframe-based editors.
Occasionally short machine-language programs had to be entered in a patch area in WordStar, to provide particular screen effects or cope with particular printers.

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