This is a list of the products I have available. Most of these are shareware libraries which may be found at your local BBS. Some are commercial and are available only directly through me. The CATALOG.TXT file lists the ones that are available on the Sampler disks, which are available for $5.00 (free with any registration). See REGISTER.TXT for an order form. The registered versions of each item come with full source code, which is cleanly laid out, formatted and commented. BASIC source code is designed for QuickBASIC 4.0+ or BASCOM 6.0+. Assembly language source code is designed for OPTASM and will require minor modification to assemble with MASM or TASM. Routines in the BASIC libraries may be in either BASIC or assembly language. Aside from MATHWZ, the libraries for BASIC are mostly compatible with the PDQ library by Crescent Software. More detailed compatibility notes are included with the individual libraries. ASMWIZ: The Assembly Wizard's Library This is a library for assembly language. The library will work with A86, MASM, OPTASM, and TASM. Only .COM files are supported. Routines include text displays (machine-level, BIOS, and DOS), graphics (Hercules, CGA, EGA), number base conversions, long integer math, file matching and command-line parsing, pseudo-random number generation, countdowns and delays, buffered file support with critical error handling, environment scanning, string functions, mouse support, sound generation, control over Break, loading of BSAVE-format files, and more. BASWIZ: The BASIC Wizard's Library This is a library for BASIC. It contains a numeric expression evaluator, so you can convert an equation into a number; far strings, so you'll never see "Out of String Space" again (EMS is supported too!); powerful file handling, with optional buffering and built-in critical error handling; telecommunications support, including DTR control, carrier detection and more for COM1 - COM4; pointers and memory management, giving BASIC the capability for flexible data structures long enjoyed by C, Pascal and Modula-2 programmers; a virtual windowing system that gives you much more than just windows-- change the size, move 'em around, scroll a window around on a huge virtual screen, all smoothly and at lightning speed-- the BASWIZ demo program gives some hint of what you can do. The virtual windowing system is where BASWIZ really shines. To the best of my knowledge, there is no better text display management system for BASIC. GRAFWZ: The Graphics Wizard's Library This is a library for BASIC. Besides replacements for the BASIC graphics support for CGA, EGA, VGA and Hercules modes (no TSR needed), GRAFWZ adds many new capabilities. You can print text and graphics screens on an Epson-compatible printer or treat the printer like a graphics screen with a special set of text and graphics routines. A selection of fonts is available and can be displayed in any desired size. A pseudo-graphics mode (80x50) is available for use on any display adapter. There are also two new VGA modes that will work on any register-compatible VGA, which allow 320x400 or 360x480 resolution in 256 colors (compare that to the BASIC SCREEN 13 mode, with only 320x200)! Detect the current display adapter, draw dots, lines, circles, ellipses, regular polygons... it's all here, with detailed explanations and assorted example programs. MATHWZ: The Math Wizard's Library This is a library for BASIC. It provides extensive math support in three areas: new or faster routines for BASIC's existing math, precision math using fractions, and the ultimate in numeric precision: BCD math with up to 254-digit numbers. Extensions to BASIC's existing math include inverse trig and hyperbolic trig functions, the error function, constants and conversions. Fraction math is fairly limited at the moment, supporting little more than the basic four functions. BCD math includes much more than such basics, though-- trig functions, square roots, factorials, constants with hundreds of digits of precision, etc; formatted output may be done to your specs. You can place the decimal point anywhere you want, so this is perfect whether you deal in very large or very small numbers! PBCLON: The PBClone Library This is a library for BASIC. It is the successor to my old ADVBAS library and to the commercial ProBas library. Over 300 routines and growing rapidly, this library covers a little bit of everything: mouse support, disk wrangling, string mangling, keyboard input, equipment detection, graphics, a wide variety of display management, directory searching, text compression, viewing .ARC/.PAK/.ZIP directories, matrix math, dates, times and countdowns, and... well, it's hard to describe such a collection other than to say "it's probably in here"! PTCLON: The PBClone Toolkit (*** Requires PBCLON ***) This library for BASIC is an add-on to PBCLON. For the most part, it builds on the routines in the PBCLON library; for instance, where PBCLON has routines for pop-up windows, input and mouse handling, the Toolkit has bar menu, ring menu, and pull-down menu routines which integrate these capabilities. There is also much that is entirely new, such as the date manipulation and pop-up calendar routines, ANSI display helpers, and the ability to write self-patching programs. This latter allows for program configuration, installation of serial numbers, and other possibilities. Simple BCD math support is also provided.