




























+@MAIN
ͻ
 [Ctrl-A] Add row                [Home],[End] Beginning, end of line       
 [Ctrl-B] Break page             [PgUp/Dn]    Scroll one screen up,down    
 [Ctrl-C] Center                 [Ctrl-Home]  Beginning of document        
 [Ctrl-D] Define a key sequence  [Ctrl-End]   End of document              
 [Ctrl-F] Format                 [Ctrl-Left]  Word left                    
 [Ctrl-G] Go to a page           [Ctrl-Right] Word right                   
 [Ctrl-I] Inhibit  page  break   [Ctrl-PgUp]  Row up   (add in top row)    
 [Ctrl-J] Justification toggle   [Ctrl-PgDn]  Row down (add in bottom row) 
 [Ctrl-K] replay a Key sequence  [Ctrl-Bksp]  Delete line                  
 [Ctrl-L] repeat Last search     [Grey +]     Quick search forward         
 [Ctrl-M] Move to right margin   [Grey -]     Quick search backward        
 [Ctrl-N] insert/edit footNote   [Grey *]     Synchronization toggle       
 [Ctrl-O] Open notepad                                                     
 [Ctrl-P] Paste                  [Ins]        Insert mode toggle           
 [Ctrl-R] Replace                [Fn] char    Type one character in font n 
 [Ctrl-S] Search                 [Fn] [Fn]    Switch to font n             
 [Ctrl-T] Tab stop toggle        [Fn] [Alt-H] Keyboard chart for font n    
 [Ctrl-W] Delete a word          [Alt-H]      (in menu) Help on menu item  
 [Ctrl-X] boX mode                                                         
 [Ctrl-Z] Zap row                [Esc]        Enter/exit menu              
ͼ
+Help
To get help on a specific command, move the menu bar onto the desired command 
and hit [Alt-H]. 
 
To get general help, leave the menu (by hitting [Esc]) and hit [Alt-H]. 

+Mark
+@MARK
To cut and paste a portion of the text, the area to be cut out must be marked. 
When the "Mark" option is selected, a marker is placed at the cursor position. 
When the cursor is moved, the marked area between the marker and the cursor is 
highlighted. 

Once the desired area is marked, it can be cut out or duplicated into the 
paste buffer. Afterwards, the Paste command [Ctrl-P] may be used to paste the 
buffer contents to a different location. 

It is also possible to write or print the marked area or to change fonts
or line spacing in it.

In synchronized mode (SYN in the status line), all text between the cursor
and the marker is highlighted. In unsynchronized mode, the rectangular area
with the cursor in one corner and the marker in the other is highlighted.

Note that a character whose bottom half is highlighted is contained 
in the marked area.

You can also change a highlighted text to all upper case or all lower case
through the command [Mark cAse]. When you choose this command, you will be
prompted whether you want the highlighted text to be changed to upper case
or lower case. Choose the case setting you want, or hit [Esc] to get out.
	We apologize for the ugly menu entry "cAse", but C is already taken
by "Cut".

 If marking was invoked by accident, use the "End" option to cancel it. 

+@WINDOW
You are currently editing a header, footer, footnote or separator. When you 
are done editing, select "Close" from the menu by hitting [Alt-C] to save the 
window text and close the window. 
+End 
The "End" option cancels the highlighting which is currently in progress. 
Use this option if you invoked highlighting by accident. 
 
+Close
You are currently editing a window (containing a header, footer, footnote 
or separator). The "Close" option saves the window text, closes the window
and returns to editing the document.
 
+Cut
The "Cut" command cuts out the highlighted area and places it into a paste 
buffer. To paste it afterwards, move the cursor to the target location and hit 
[Ctrl-P]. 
 
+Duplicate
The "Duplicate" command places a copy of the highlighted area into a paste 
buffer. To paste it afterwards, move the cursor to the target location and hit 
[Ctrl-P]. 
 
+Font chg
The "Font Change" command permits changing all highlighted characters or just 
the highlighted characters in a specific font to a different font. 
 
When prompted "From font?", hit a font key to select a specific font or 
[Return] to select all fonts. 
 
When prompted "To font?", hit a font key to select the target font. 
 
For example, to change all itcs to bold, enter [F3] and [F4]. To change 
everything to standard, enter [Return] and [F1]. 
 
+Spac Chg
The "Spacing Change" command lets you change the spacing of the highlighted
text block into single, 1, double or triple spacing. 

+Reformat
The "Reformat" command reformats the highlighted area. You have two choices:

 Format the highlighted area into ONE paragraph. 
  Any hard returns are changed to soft returns. The last return marker is 
  made hard. 
       This option is useful for 
        Merging several paragraphs. 
        Cleaning up imported ASCII text. 
	 Highlight each block you wish to group as a paragraph and format.
  DO NOT highlight the entire document and reformat it unless you want to make 
  the entire document into one paragraph. (It is highly unlikely that you want
  to do that!)

 Keep the current paragraphs
  All highlighted paragraphs are reformatted. If your document contains
  formulas or irregular spacing, it is NOT a good idea to highlight the entire
  document and reformat it.
 
+Glue
The "Glue" command glues all highlighted lines together to form ONE tall 
line. 

Use this command to combine formulas or tables into one line.

+hYphen
The program has a hyphenation threshold, which is the maximum number of soft
spaces allowed on a line before hyphenation is activated. It can be changed
using this option "Layout hYphen". The default value is 9999. A threshold 
value of 4 or 5 is advised if you want hyphenation. You can make the setting
permanent by saving your configuration in ("Environment Configuration Write").

+Insert counter
The "Insert counter" option inserts a counter at the cursor position. A 
footnote counter is inserted if you are currently editing a footnote, a page 
counter otherwise. 
 
When the document is printed, the counter is replaced by the actual footnote 
or page number. 

On the screen, a footnote counter looks like a foot and a page counter looks
like a sheet of paper.
 
+Paste
The "Paste" command pastes the contents of the paste buffer at the cursor 
location. 

If synchronization is off (no SYN indicator in the status line), you can 
position the image before pasting it. Use the 4 cursor keys to position, 
[Return] to accept and paste or [Esc] to cancel the paste command.
 
 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-P] key. 
 
+Format
The "Format" command formats the remainder of the current paragraph, from the 
cursor position to the next hard return. The shape of the resulting 
paragraph is determined by the current left and right margin settings, 
the current line spacing and the justification mode. 

You can format (Ctrl-F) with hyphenation
During formatting, when the number of soft spaces to be added is more than
the hyphenation threshold, the program will prompt you to insert a hyphen if
there is no hyphen in the next word. Move the cursor with the [Left] and 
[Right] cursor keys within the legal zone where the hyphen can be. The hyphen
will be placed at the position where the cursor is when you hit [Return] or 
the [-] key. Hit [Esc] if you do not want to hyphenate the word. The hyphen
added is a soft hyphen and it will be removed if you reformat again or that
line gets too long and splits to the next line. If there is already a hyphen
in the word, it will be split automatically.
 
 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-F] key. 

+Search
The "Search" command searches the text for an occurrence of a search pattern. 
You will be prompted "Search for ?" Enter the pattern and hit [Return] to 
start the search. You may change fonts in the usual way with the [Fn] keys.
To match the end of a line, enter [Ctrl-Return]. 
 
If a match is found, the cursor is moved to it. Otherwise, the cursor returns 
to the current position. 

The search-and-replace commands reformats automatically. Only those para-
graphs that were formatted and were changed will be reformatted. If you do
not wish to reformat the paragraphs, simply turn off the justification mode
(by [Ctrl-J]) before invoking the command.

The search command (Ctrl-S) has toggles for case insensitive and font 
insensitive matching. That means, you can make "this" match "This" and an
italizied "this". Also, the search and the search-and-replace commands look
for the search string in the footnotes as it scans through the document.
 
 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-S] key. 

+Replace
The "Replace" command replaces text matching a pattern string with a 
replacement string. 
 
You will be prompted "Search for ?" Enter the pattern and hit [Return] to 
start the search. You may change fonts in the usual way with the [Fn] keys.
To match the end of a line, enter [Ctrl-Return].
 
When a match is found, you have 4 choices:
     Yes    authorizes the replacement and continues searching 
     No     disallows the replacement, but continues searching 
     Global authorizes the replacement of this and all subsequent matches 
     Cancel cancels the command 
 
You can always cancel an ongoing replacement by hitting any key. This is 
particularly useful for aborting a runaway global replace. 
 
 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-R] key. 
+Last search
This command repeats your last search or replace command. It is useful for
repeated searches for the same pattern. 

 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-S] key. 

+spellChk
+Accept
+Ignore
Check spelling of words in the document. Spell checking starts at the cursor
position. Suspect words are highlighted, and a list of suggested replacement
is displayed. You can select a replacement with the cursor keys and insert
it by hitting [Return]. 
     You can ignore the suspect word this time only. The speller will
complain when it sees it again.
     You can accept the word as is. The speller will not complain when it
sees it again.
     You can write the word to an auxiliary dictionary. That automatically
accepts the word as well. 
     Or, you can cancel the spell checker and fix the word by hand.


+Screen
The "Screen" option allows access to the most frequently used edit commands.

 It is much quicker to use the following keys instead:
 
     [Ctrl-F]  Format 
     [Ctrl-P]  Paste 
     [Ctrl-N]  footNote 
     [Ctrl-S]  Search 
     [Ctrl-R]  Replace 
     [Ctrl-L]  repeat Last search 
     [Ctrl-C]  Center
     [Ctrl-M]  Move to the right margin
     [Ctrl-A]  Add a row
     [Ctrl-O]  Open the notepad

+footNote
+footNotes
 To create a footnote:
  Move the cursor to the desired position. 
  Hit [Ctrl-N] or use the "footNote" menu option. 
  A window opens up into which the footnote text can be entered. 
  To end the footnote entry, select "Close" from the menu. 
 
 To revise a footnote:
  Move the cursor onto an existing footnote.
  Hit [Ctrl-N] or use the "footNote" menu option. 
  A window containing the footnote text opens up. 
  Select "Close" to return to the main document.
 
 To delete a footnote:
  Move the cursor onto it and hit [Del]. 
  You will be asked for confirmation.


+Notepad
The notepad is an area for temporary storage of text. You can read text into
the notepad to cut out various portions and transfer them into the main
document.  Or, you can paste portions from the main document into the
notepad and write the notepad contents to disk. 
     You can use the notepad to have a look at a second document without
having to leave the one you are working on.
     To open the notepad, hit [Ctrl-O]. To close it, select "Close".

+Center
The "Center" command centers the contents of the current line. 

After centering, the line is surrounded by two "expanding spaces".
When the line is printed, they expand to blank regions of the same length. 
The line is therefore properly centered even in proportional printing. 
 
 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-C] key. 
 
+Move right
The "Move right" command moves the contents of the current line so that its 
end is aligned with the right margin. 

Before it, an "expanding space" is inserted. When the line is printed, 
it expands this space to a blank region of a size that guarantees 
right alignment even in proportional printing. 
 
 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-M] key. 

+Add
Add a blank row below the cursor row. 

 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-A] key.

+Row
Zap (i.e. delete) the row containing the cursor. (You cannot zap a base row.)

 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-Z] key.

+Word
Delete the word containing the cursor. 

 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-W] key.

+Line
Delete the line containing the cursor. 

 Once the line is deleted, it can not be retrieved again. 

 This command is identical with the [Ctrl-W] key.

+Modes
The "Mode" command lets you change the insert, justification and 
synchronization modes through the menu. This command is usually used
inside key sequences to set a mode independent of its previous state. 

 Outside key sequences, use the toggles 
 
	  [Ins]          to toggle insert mode 
	  [Grey *]       to toggle synchronization mode 
	  [Ctrl-J]       to toggle justification mode 
 
+Menu line
The "Menu line" option allows turning the menu line on or off. If the
menu line is turned off, it will only appear when [Esc] is entered or an
option with a secondary menu is selected. 
 
+Insert mode
In insert mode, inserting characters moves the remainder of the current line 
to the right before a character is inserted. 
 
In overwrite mode, old characters are overwritten by new ones, and the 
remainder of the line does not move. 
 
+Synch mode
In synchronized mode, commands affect entire lines. In unsynchronized mode, 
they affect individual rows. 
 
When inserting or deleting in synchronized mode, all rows of the line move 
together. In unsynchronized mode, only the contents of the cursor row moves. 
When cutting and pasting in synchronized mode, any linear sequence of text can 
be specified, with all rows of the specified lines cut simultaneously. In 
unsynchronized mode, any rectangular area on the screen can be cut and pasted. 
 
+Justification mode
 
The justification mode determines whether paragraphs are formatted with a 
flush or ragged right margin. 

+Tabs
+Set
+Clear
+Reset to default
+Delete all

The tabs can be set through the "Tab" menu option or with the [Ctrl-T] command.
 
The [Ctrl-T] key toggles the tab stop at the cursor position. 

The "Set" and "Clear" options prompt for a column number and set or remove
a tab stop.

The "Reset to default" option sets tab stops at column 6,11,16,...

The "Delete all" option clears all tab stops.

Before editing a table, you may find it convenient to delete all tab stops and 
set the ones you need. Afterwards, you can restore the default positions. 
 
+Spacing
You can choose between single, 1, double or triple spacing. 
The spacing is just like on a standard typewriter. 

 Single spacing (6 lines per inch) is good for letters. 
 1, double spacing (4, 3 lines per inch) are used for scientific text
  containing super/subscripts. 

+Pagination
+Break page
+Inhibit break
+Remove break

The "Break page" option forces a page break after the current line.

The "Inhibit break" option Inhibits page breaks immediately after the current
line.

The "Remove page break" option removes any hard page break after the current
line but permits soft page breaks. It cancels both the "Break page" and
"Inhibit break" options.
 
Note that the dash separating the line from its successor is a solid dash
if page breaks are permitted, dotted otherwise. 
 
You will usually want to inhibit breaks after headings, inside tables etc. 

 Instead of the menu, you can use the following keys:
  [Ctrl-B] toggles a hard page break below the current line. 
  [Ctrl-I] toggles the line in and out of break inhibition mode.
 
+Margins
+Left margin
+Right margin
+Top margin
+Bottom margin
The Left/Right margin commands let you change the current settings of left 
and right margin. You will be prompted for a column position.

 You can use the [Ctrl-[] and [Ctrl-]] keys to set the left/right margin
  to the cursor position. 
 
The Top/Bottom margin commands let you set the number of blank rows on the top 
and bottom of the paper. There are 12 rows per inch.

+Paper length
The "Paper length" command is used to specify the total amount of rows per 
sheet of paper. There are 12 rows per inch.

The top and bottom margins are kept blank. Therefore, there are 
	Paper length - Top margin - Bottom margin 
rows available for the document, headers, footers, footnotes and a 
footnote separator.

The pagination algorithm is smart enough to handle headers and footers
of varying size and to allot space for the footnote separator only if
footnotes are present on the page.

+Separator
The separator is a line separating footnotes from the rest of the page. 
It is only printed when footnotes are actually present. 
     For example, you can fill it with 

---------


When printing endnotes instead of footnotes, the separator is printed once
before the first note. 
     For example, you can fill it with

Footnotes:

+Headers
+Footers
+Default
+Even
+1st page
+2nd
+3rd
+4th
+5th
+6th
+7th
+8th
+9th
Different headers and footers can be specified for even/odd pages and for 
the first nine pages of the document (e.g. for Roman page numbers in an 
introduction or an address header on page 1). 
 
If you create a special header or footer, it overrides the default header. 
For example, if you define a default header and an even header, the default
header appears on odd pages and the even header on even pages.

If you create a header or footer by accident, you must delete it again to 
stop the blank value from overriding the default. 
 
To print without page numbers, you can delete the default footer. 

+font for Page numbers
+font for footNote numbers
You can select the fonts in which page and footnote numbers are printed.
When prompted for the font, hit a font key ([Fn] or [Shift-Fn]). 

You can also suppress the numbers completely by hitting [Return] instead.

+Endnotes
When the document is printed, you have two choices of footnote placement.

 At the bottom of each page. (Endnotes = No)

 At the end of the document. (Endnotes = Yes)

+Graphic
Include a graphics file in the printout. You will not be able to see the
graphic on the screen. At print-time, the file you specify will be opened
and its contents dumped to the printer. (The file should contain graphics
codes that can be understood by your specific printer. Usually you create
such files with a paint or chart program.) You must add sufficient rows to
the line with the graphic filename to obtain the same size the graphic
will take. (There are 12 rows/inch)

+Environ
This menu option lets you communicate with the "outside world", i.e.
floppy or hard disks.

You can list or change the document directory, or create space by deleting
an unused file.

You can load, list and write parameters, key sequences and fonts.

You can force modes to be on or off, which is necessary for key sequences.

You can turn the menu line on or off.

+Key sequences
+Define key sequences
+Key sequence replay
Key sequences are sequences of keystrokes that can be created and replayed. 
Typical applications are formulas in math or chemistry or boiler plate phrases 
in letters (E.g. "Please do not hesitate to call me if you have any questions" 
can be programmed once and replayed with a few keystrokes). 
 
To define a key sequence, select the "Define key sequence" option or the
[Ctrl-D] key. Enter the name of the key sequence. The name is either 
a sequence of up to 10 characters followed by [Return] (e.g. INTEGRAL [Return])
or one of the keys [Alt-1]...[Alt-0]. 
 
Now enter the desired sequence of key strokes. When you are done, hit [Ctrl-D] 
to terminate the definition. While the definition is in progress, the status 
line contains a "DF" indicator. 
 
To replay a key sequence, use the "Key sequence replay" option or the
[Ctrl-K] key. Enter the name of the sequence, followed by [Return]. 
To replay one of the [Alt-1]...[Alt-0] key sequences, just hit the key.

If you want to use the key sequence in future editing sessions, you MUST 
save it before leaving the program. Use the "Environ  Key sequences  Write"
option. 
+Go
Start printing. 
 
Make sure the printer is turned on before issuing the command. 

If you want to print from a file or to a file, you must select the 
appropriate option before selecting "Go".

+Configuration
The configuration is the collection of all modes and defaults that are
currently set. 

You can save the configuration to disk with the "Configuration Write"
option and retrieve it later when you need the same collection of settings.
If you save it onto "CONFIG.PAR", it will be loaded in automatically next
time the program starts.

You can read a configuration from disk with the "Configuration Read" command.

The configuration consists of the following settings:

 Insert, justification and synchronization mode
 Line spacing, margins, paper length and tab stops
 Fonts, key sequence file and printer driver
 Printing pitch, quality and margin offset
 Menu line status (displayed/hidden)
 Fonts for page and footnote numbers
 Automatic backup frequency
 Maximum number of fonts and key sequences

+Backup frequency
You can select the number between automatic backups. The program periodically
backs up the document onto the file BACKUP.CHI to protect you against power
problems or other problems. 

If you like that kind of protection and don't mind having your work inter-
rupted occasionally, set the backup frequency to 15 or 30 minutes.

If you hate the idea of having your work interrupted, set the frequency
to a very large value. The default is 9999 minutes, more than 6 days and
22 hours.

+Change name
When you select "Write  Document" or "Write  Export ASCII", the document is
saved onto the same file it was loaded from or onto the file you specified
when creating a blank document. Use this option to change the file onto which
the document will be written. 

For example, if you read the outline of a form letter from a template,
you must use this option to change the name before writing the letter to
disk, or the template will be overwritten.

+Set extension
Set the extension for documents. The default is .CHI, but you may want to
choose different extensions to group your documents. This extension controls
which files are shown in the document directory display.

+Import ASCII
+Export ASCII
An ASCII ("American Standard Code for Information Interchange") 
file is a standard text file without special fonts or super/subscripts. 
Many word processors can read and produce ASCII files. 

Typically, the Import/Export ASCII feature is used for two purposes:
 File exchange with a different word processor
  In the ASCII Import/Export commands, the program can read and write codes
  that are greater than 128, controlled by a table (CONFIG.ASC). The program
  disk contains a table that maps the IBM extended characters to their 
  ChiWriter equivalents. That means you can ASCII import someone else's file
  containing extended characters for line drawing and the few available math
  characters.

 Editing of small configuration files, batch files etc...

When exporting a ChiWriter document as an ASCII file, special fonts,
formatting and super/subscript rows are not saved. 

+new Document
Read a new document from disk into the computer memory. The current
document is deleted.

+merge Document
Merge a document from disk into the current document. The document
is inserted at the cursor position. 

A Header/footer of the merged document is only read in if the corresponding
header/footer in the current document is blank. Otherwise it is ignored.

+Pitch
AVAILABLE OPTIONS: 
 
"Pica"           Print 10 characters per inch 
"Elite"          Print 12 characters per inch 
"Proportional"   Print using proportional fonts. 
 
Not all printers support all pitch/quality combinations. 
+Quality
AVAILABLE OPTIONS:

"Letter Quality"      Use letter quality fonts 
"Draft"               Use the fastest printing fonts possible 
"Enhanced"            Use enhanced mode (usually between draft and letter
		      quality in speed and appearance.) 
 
Not all printers support all pitch/quality combinations. 
 
+Numbering
+first Page number
+first footNote number
+Reset before printing

You can select the first page and footnote numbers to be printed.

The number you select really is the first number to be printed, even
if you start printing from the middle of the document. For example,
if you start printing from the third page of the document and specify 
starting page number 10, the first printed page (i.e. page 3 of the document)
will be numbered as page 10.

Normally, the selected first page and footnote number are used when printing
is requested. However, when "Reset before printing" is turned off, the page
and footnote numbering picks up where the previous printout ended. This is
useful when printing a chapter that has been cut into two documents. 
+From/to page
Specify the first/last page to be printed. Use the document page numbers 
(the page numbers displayed in the status line), starting with page 1,
They may be different from the printed page numbers if the starting page # 
has been changed. 

For example, if you want to print the third to fifth page of the document,
specify "From page 3 to page 5", even though you may have instructed the
printed page numbers to be different with the "first Page #" option.
 
The defaults are from page 1 to page 9999. 

+Stop between pages
Turn this option on if you feed single sheets of paper into your printer.
After each page is printed, printing will stop and you will be asked to insert
the next sheet. Hit any key to continue printing. 

+Copies
Use this option to print multiple copies of your document. 

On a dot matrix printer, the document is printed several times in a row.
On a laser printer, multiple copies of each page are printed and you have
to collate afterwards. 

 Remember to turn the copy quantity back to "1" when you are done. 

+Port
You can select the channel through which the printer codes are sent to the
printer. 

 A printer port (LPT1:, LPT2:, LPT3:) under control of BIOS
 A serial  port (COM1:, COM2:, COM3:) under control of BIOS
 The standard DOS printer port (PRN:)
 The standard DOS serial  port (AUX:)

The BIOS channels are quicker because the DOS buffering is avoided.
However, DOS is more reliable with some printers, in a network system
or in conjunction with some memory resident programs (e.g. print spoolers)

+From file
A document can be printed from a file. It is then loaded and printed one line 
at a time. Therefore, not much memory space is needed to accommodate it which 
is important if you have little memory and need the space for the printer 
fonts. 
 
The current document is deleted to create space to hold the printer fonts
and the headers/footers/footnotes of the document to be printed.

+To file
Instead of sending code to the printer, you can send the same code to a file. 
The sole use of this is that you can later copy that file to the printer from 
outside the word processor. The file will contain motion and graphics control
codes and will be unreadable by a regular word processor. 

+Change printer
Select a different printer. You will be given a list of printer descriptor 
files. Highlight the one you need and hit [Return]. You will then be asked 
whether you want to make your choice permanent or not. 

+Margin offset
This is the column position on the printer at which printing starts.
To start at the first possible position, specify column 1. To center a
66 column line on an 80 column printer, specify column 9. 

+Disk
+Display directory
+Erase file
From inside ChiWriter, you can perform several DOS functions. 
 Display any directory. 
  You will be prompted for the disk/path name.
 Change the working directory
  You will be prompted for the new disk/path name.
 Erase any file
  All files in the working directory are displayed, but you can select any
  other file as well by entering the full disk/path name. 

 Never erase the document you are working on or its backup. 

+Change directory
You may have organized your documents by placing them on separate sub-
directories. Or, you may exceptionally need to edit a number of documents
on a floppy disk rather than your hard disk. In these cases, change to the
appropriate directory (enter the full path name, e.g. \CHIWRITE\LETTERS)
or the floppy drive (enter the drive indicator, e.g. A:)

+Fonts
You can perform the following font management tasks:
 List all loaded fonts
 Erase a font from the system memory. 
 Load a new font.

 You can only load a font into an existing slot. If you need more fonts,
  restart ChiWriter with the -F option, e.g. -F20 for 20 fonts. Be sure 
  to save the configuration afterwards to make ChiWriter remember the new
  number of fonts. 

+Quit
Quit the program. If you have not saved your document, you will be asked 
whether you want to proceed to DOS or cancel the "Quit" command. 

