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6.1 | How to use KEYWORDS by Pam Levine (from FELINE_V1) | NEGD::SKALTSIS | | Wed Nov 13 1991 20:42 | 41 |
|
I'd like to make the readership of FELINE aware of a very useful
feature of NOTES - namely keywords. At a very basic level, keywords
make it easy to find things quickly in the notesfile - more quickly
than using the SEARCH command or the DIRECTORY command. Deb and I
try very hard to keep keywords up to date and current and there are
a wealth of them in this file. To see all the keywords in the file,
issue the following command:
SHOW KEYWORDS
This will give you a very long list of all the keywords in the file.
You can then find notes associated with a particular keyword. For
example, if you wanted to see all the notes associated with the LITTER
keyword, you could issue the command:
SHOW KEY/FU LITTER
This will return a list of notes that have the keyword LITTER associated
with them. You can then access the individual notes to see what's been
written on the subject.
You can also use the wildcard character, *, if you don't know how to
spell something or if you want to see multiple listings. For example,
SHOW KEY/FU LITTER*
will return all entries for both LITTER and LITTERBOX_PROBLEMS.
This gives you a basic idea of what can be done with keywords. The
documentation on NOTES or the HELP KEYWORD command in NOTES can also
provide you with more information.
There's a wealth of information in this notesfile. It's been around for
4-1/2 years and has 3200 notes in it. Just about every common problem
relating to cats has been discussed in it. Knowing how to find it will
make it much more useful to you and keywords are a real good way to easily
access the information.
Pam
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6.2 | How to find out where SOMEOTHERCONFERENCE went to | NEGD::SKALTSIS | | Wed Nov 13 1991 20:43 | 21 |
| From time to time, someone will ask "where did SOMEOTHERCONFERENCE go"?
Please point anyone that asks that question to this note.
The conference EASYNOTES_CONFERENCES exists for conferences announcements.
When a conference moves, archives, changes it's name or is deleted an
annoncement is made in this conference. Press KP7 to select this conference
for you notebook. Every couple of weeks a file called EASYNOTES.LIS is generated
to contain current information about every announced conference on the net.
A VMS user can copy this file to their default directory by issing the
following DCL command:
$ COPY ANCHOR""::NET$LIBRARY:EASYNOTES.LIS []
The file is a bit long to eyeball, so if you are looking for something specific
we suggest that you use the SEARCH command or your favorite editor. Anyhow, the
number in the far right hand column is the note in EASYNOTES_CONFERENCES
that corresponds to the conference listed on that line.
Jo Cordes-Brown, Mary Tamir & Deb Skaltsis
FELINE co-moderators
|
6.3 | from CAFEIN::NOTES$LIBRARY:NOTES_PROBEMS.HINTS | NEGD::SKALTSIS | | Wed Nov 13 1991 20:44 | 172 |
| -----------------------------------------------------------------------
This message has been prepared in advance for people asking questions
about accessing conferences. I maintain and publish EASYNOTES.LIS as
a spare time activity. Keeping track of conferences is not part of my
official job at Digital.
There are several common problems accessing conferences which I will
discuss. The first thing you should do toward resolving your problem
is determine what the problem is. After Notes tells you it has been
unable to open a conference or has had any problem, you should type the
SHOW ERROR command. This will usually give you a more detailed error
message.
The list below contains some common error messages and the actions you
can take for them. The remedies suggested are designed for new users
of the network -- most problems are either temporary or can be dealt
with by asking your system manager to fix the problem. More
complicated information and explanations for some of the actions
follows the list. Also, be sure to check your spelling carefully.
A warning: This message is quite long. You may just want to look at
the list below and skip the rest. If you do look at the rest, it would
be best to print this message (and perhaps keep it for the future)
rather than reading it on a terminal. I am trying to write to help
beginning users or users with problems, so your comments on the
usefulness of this message would be appreciated.
-- Alfred Thompson
Error Message(s) Action
---------------- ------
Insufficient resources at remote node
Try again later.
Link disconnected by third party
Try again immediately. If the
problem persists, try again later.
Login information invalid at remote node
Network partner exited
Network partner aborted logical link
Try again a few times. If the
problem persists, send MAIL.
Path to network partner lost
Try again immediately. If the
problem persists, try again later.
Remote node is unknown
Report the problem to your system
manager and tell them to make sure
the node in question is defined
properly in the DECnet database.
If you are adventurous, see "Finding
an Unknown or Unreachable Node",
below.
Remote node is unreachable
Try again. If the problem persists
for several days, see the message
"Remote node is unknown". If the
node is defined properly, post a
note about the problem in
ANCHOR::EASYNET.
Remote node no longer accepting connects
Try again later.
Sending MAIL and Where to Get More Information
You can find more information about the error messages in the VAX/VMS
System Messages and Recovery Procedures Reference Manual, and you can
always ask questions in the ANCHOR::EASYNET conference. Another thing
to do is send mail directly to the moderator or the person who put the
conference announcement in EASYNET_CONFERENCES. Read the note
carefully; sometimes the person entering the announcement is not
connected with the conference but is just answering somebody's question
or moving notes around in EASYNET_CONFERENCES. You can use the Notes
command SEND to send mail. You can usually also send mail to the
SYSTEM account on the node you are trying to reach, such as
ALIEN::SYSTEM for the ALIEN::CARNIVAL conference.
How to Ask for Help
If you do ask questions in ANCHOR::EASYNET or of the moderator, please
include as much information as you can. Give the full name of the
conference you are trying to access. If you have entered it in your
notebook, type SHOW ENTRY "name" where "name" is the name of the
conference. The information that appears after "File:" is the name you
wish to give to other people when you ask about the conference. Check
the spelling carefully. Also use the SHOW ERROR command immediately
after you get an error opening the conference and copy the message
Notes gives you. This information is important to people trying to
help you with your problem.
How to Find the Location or Moderator of a Conference
Each conference listed in EASYNET_CONFERENCES has a note all its own.
When information about the conference changes, the new information
should be added as a reply to the note instead of starting a new note.
To find the current location and moderator of a conference, you should
go to this note and read it and all of its replies (usually there are
only a few).
How do you know which note in EASYNET_CONFERENCES is the proper note?
You can get a list of all the announced conferences by opening
by reading ANCHOR""::NET$LIBRARY:EASYNOTES.LIS (a text file). When you
find a conference in the list, there will be a number on the right-hand side
of the line describing the conference and giving its location. That
number is the note number (in TURRIS::EASYNET_CONFERENCES) for information
about the conference. That note should tell you the full name of the
conference. If none of the replies say otherwise, the person who entered
the announcment should be the moderator.
Finding an Unknown or Unreachable Node
One of the most common errors is "Remote node is not currently
reachable". Another is "Remote node is unknown". One thing that can
cause either of these messages is that your node's database may be out
of date. You can check this very easily. Suppose the conference you
wish to get to is ALIEN::CARNIVAL. This means it is on node ALIEN.
You would type these two commands: MCR NCP SHOW NODE ALIEN and MCR NCP
TELL ANCHOR SHOW NODE ALIEN. You will get output like this:
$ MCR NCP SHOW NODE ALIEN
Node Volatile Summary as of 19-AUG-1986 09:56:01
Node State Active Delay Circuit Next node
Links
2.226 (ALIEN) UNA-0 2.3 (LANRTR)
$ MCR NCP TELL ANCHOR SHOW NODE ALIEN
Node Volatile Summary as of 19-AUG-1986 09:56:44
Node State Active Delay Circuit Next node
Links
19.351 (ALIEN) UNA-0 24.224 (PKO24D)
The first command tells your node to tell you the information it has on
ALIEN. The second command tells your node to find out what information
the node ANCHOR has on ALIEN. ANCHOR is a special node; it should
always have the most current information available. What you need to
do now is compare the two node addresses, which are the numbers under
the "Node" heading. In the above example, they are 2.226 and 19.351.
As you can see, they are different. If this happened to you, it would
mean node ALIEN had moved at some time in the past, and the person who
maintains your node's database has not updated the data yet.
If the two address are different, as in this example, or if your node
doesn't know where the desired node is (but ANCHOR does), you can still
access the conference you wish to get to. To do this, you will have to
use a number instead of a name. Suppose the address is m.n -- To get
the number you must use, multiply m by 1024 and add n to it. In the
example above, multiply 2 by 1024 and add 226 to it. You can do this
by hand, with a calculator, or with DCL:
$ WRITE SYS$OUTPUT 19*1024+351
19807
When you have the number, use it instead of the node name. In the
example, you would use 19807::CARNIVAL.
If ANCHOR does not show a different address than what your node shows,
an out-of-date database is not your problem.
|
6.4 | Using NEXT UNSEEN to read notes | NEGD::SKALTSIS | | Wed Nov 13 1991 20:58 | 35 |
| <<< VAXWRK::$1$DUS6:[NOTES$LIBRARY]FELINE.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Meower Power is Valuing Differences >-
================================================================================
Note xxxx.x TECHNICAL QUESTIONS ANSWERED HERE x of n
WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO "set home/cat_max=infinity" 34 lines 10-MAY-1991 22:16
-< Using next unseen to read notes >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Using the "next unseen" command to read notes would mean that any note
in this conference would be seen during a session of reading Feline,
regardless of whether that note was a new topic, or a reply to an
existing topic. When you read notes using "next unseen", you will see
every entry into this file, in order of the time it was entered.
Next unseen is the comma key (,) or paste key on your keypad on most
keyboards. If you haven't read notes using this method in the past,
you may want to issue a set seen command first. This will mark all the
notes prior to the date that you choose as "seen", and will not pull
them up when you use the next unseen command. Since this file was
created in 1984 or thereabouts, this might be a desireable thing to do.
For example, if you wanted to start reading notes using next unseen,
and wanted to mark any notes entered prior to January 1, 1991 as seen,
you would type the following command:
notes> set seen/before=01-jan-1991
Then, when you used the next unseen key to read notes, the first note
you would come to would be the first one entered on January 1st, 1991.
From there you could continue to use next unseen until all new notes
had been read. Eventually you would get to a point were you were
reading only the notes entered that day, since you would have seen
everything else.
Jo
|
6.5 | command file to compress your notebook | NEGD::SKALTSIS | | Thu Nov 14 1991 15:10 | 18 |
| $! $COMP*RESS :== @compress
$!
$!and extract the following command file into COMPRESS.COM, and you can say
$!
$! $COMPRESS NOTES$NOTEBOOK.NOTE
$!
$!and it will probably get smaller. (I've seen notebooks several thousands
$!of blocks long shrink to fewer than 100 blocks.) Please note that default
$!protection on your notebook will keep you from purging the old one.
$!
$ if P1 .eqs. "" then inquire P1 "file to compress"
$ name = f$parse(P1,,,"NAME")
$ analyze/rms/fdl 'P1
$ edit/fdl/nointer/anal='name.fdl 'name.fdl
$ convert/fdl='name.fdl 'p1 'p1
$ delete 'name.fdl;*
$!Compresses, optimizes, and reorganizes ISAM files
$exit
|
6.6 | Use VTX to Find Conferences...It's FAST | CTHQ1::DELUCO | CT, Network Applications | Thu Sep 24 1992 10:50 | 31 |
| There are several ways to locate pertinent VAXnotes conferences. You
can access the EASYNOTES notes conference, do a DIR/TITLE= to search
for topics. Sometimes this takes several tries because of potential
title variations. In general this takes alot of time because of the
way NOTES does the title searching and because of the need to do
multiple searches.
You can copy and print a copy of EASYNOTES.LIS. There are batch
streams available to do this regularly so that you always have an
up-to-date copy. Searching through the list can also be time consuming
and printing kills trees.
Or....you can locate your favorite notes file using one of two
available VTX infobases which have indexed copies of the current
EASYNOTES.LIS. The two are keyworded EASYNOTES and VTX_INDEX. The
command sequence goes something like this:
VTX EASYNOTES (at DCL) or <FIND>EASYNOTES (from within VTX)
<FIND>string-of-your-search
The whole process of finding a conference takes approximately ten
seconds, including the access to the infobase. Add five more seconds
per additional search. It took me ten seconds to find FELINE by
typing...
VTX EASYNOTES
<FIND>CAT*
Jim
|
6.7 | Using a symbol to go thru EASYNOTES.LIS | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Sep 25 1992 15:30 | 19 |
| >You can copy and print a copy of EASYNOTES.LIS. There are batch
>streams available to do this regularly so that you always have an
>up-to-date copy. Searching through the list can also be time consuming
>and printing kills trees.
Searching through the list need not be time consuming. Every couple of
weeks I copy ESAYNOTES.LIS to my main directory, and I define a
symbol in my LOGIN.COM as follows:
$ FIND :== "SEARCH SYS$LOGIN:EASYNOTES.LIS"
Then when I need to find a notes file, all I have to do is enter a
"FIND string_I_am_looking_for" at the DCL prompt. In fact, I can
enter SPAWN FIND string_I_am_looking_for" at the NOTES prompt.
I find this to ba a lot faster than VTX.
Deb
|
6.8 | | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Four Tigers on My Couch | Fri Sep 25 1992 15:56 | 5 |
| Another alternative is to add TURRIS::EASYNET_CONFERENCES to your
notebook and look through the replies to topic 2.0. The conferences
are broken down by subject matter in that topic.
Jan
|