This is a beta release Windows NT file utility. The postscript interpreter is grafted onto a text/hex viewer. I don't know whether it will stay on there for the final release or not since the interpretation code was developed stricly around the NT CD's. Comments are welcome, preferably E-mail to CIS 73537,1203, Jeff Lundblad. Notes on viewing Postscript files: 1) LI only makes a first approximation attempt at processing a) text b) column positioning c) row positioning d) page ejects The 'interpretation' is based strictly on my examination of the files on the NT July, October and March CD's. There are no guarantees that I'm doing it right. Positioning 'resolution' is character width and line height based on the viewed font. This doesn't work exceptionally well. Proportional fonts of 8-12pts seem to work best. Row positioning is relative, not absolute. That is, I take the difference between the previous 'Y' coordinate and the current 'Y' coordinate & figure how many blank lines that is. 'X' positioning is a little closer to absolute. 2) No character substitutions are performed. Instead, where a character sub is found in the text, a binary 127 character is placed in the text. With an ANSI font, this looks like a box on the screen, with the 'terminal' font, it looks like a superscripted pyramid. Printed with a True-type font, it looks like a little bullet. I have found that the .C00 language files use substitution characters for quote marks and minus signs a lot. 3) The .C00 language doc's use a lot of subscripted 'opt's. These will show up in the line since I don't do subscripts. So you'll see a lot of: describes-an-optional-feature opt of-the-language. 4) I do not do 'page processing'. Text comes out in the order it's found in the file. The 'cursor' can only move down and to the right. You'll see some tables that look like: item 1 item 2 item 3 item 4 item 5 item 6 where if the file was printed on a native postscript printer, item 1 and item 4 would be on the same line. You may also see page headers at the bottom of the page, and the dots between table of contents entries and their page numbers at the end of the line instead of between the text and number, and some special font'ed words in unusual places - I don't try to go back & put them where they belong. For example, you'll see This has a bold "Note" at the beginningNote where the 'Note' at the end would be in the blank at the front if printed on a postscript printer. 5) If you want to print an 'interpreted' file, you will get best results with a true-type font and use 'match screen font' or a printer font in the print dialog box with an 8-12pt font. Fixed fonts tend to run off of the right edge of the paper. You may need to experiment with font size, depending on the file you're viewing. 6) If you want to automatically switch to postscript interpretation when you open one of the NT doc's, set up the extents under Options|File Types, or copy the LI.INI file in this archive to your \Winnt directory. If you're searching for text, or files containing specified text, it's best if you have the file types set up to be recognized as postscript. The View|Postscript menu item toggles between postscript interpretation and raw file output. Notes on LI & NT 1) UNICODE support is un-tested, and will probably not work 2) HPFS support is un-tested, but will possibly work. 3) NTFS support is lightly tested and seems to work. 4) I don't know why the File|Save As and Options|File Types dialog boxes look so strange. 5) Only 32bits of file and disk sizes are processed (NT stores 64 bit sizes, but I only look at the bottom 32 bits). 6) Selections larger than 64K in edit windows will not work. There may be some other remnants of 64K boundries that I haven't realized or found in my testing.