Page 1 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMApple IIe Owner's ManualChapter 1: Meet Your Apple IIeTwo words that get thrown around
Page 10 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMKeys That Control Other KeysProgrammers use CONTROL, OPEN-APPLE, and the solid Apple key in
Page 11 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMTurning the Power Off and On:If you insist on turning the power off and on as a way of swit
Page 12 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMdisk through the oval cutout or you defeat the purpose of the jacket.Both the DuoDisk and t
Page 13 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMIf you follow these guidelines, your disks will last forever. (Actually they'll last a
Page 14 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMPress Return to indicate that your controller card is in slot 6.Press Return to indicate th
Page 15 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMEscape: Gets you back to a previous menu or out of what you're doing.DELETE: Erases ch
Page 16 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMMost accounting software packages are designed around a general ledger. The other modules(a
Page 17 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMBulletin BoardsBulletin boards came into being back in 1978 as a way for local computer clu
Page 18 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMPILOT lets you design your own courseware, or CAI (Computer-Aided Instruction).More About A
Page 19 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMat the bottom line. If any number changed, or if they wanted to try out a different pricing
Page 2 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMConnecting a MonitorPlug one end of the monitor cable into the Apple IIe's monitor outl
Page 20 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMAnother advantage of integrated software is that the commands you learn for one application
Page 21 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMBehind the ScenesThe best application programs don't require you to know anything abou
Page 22 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMOne of the most important chips on the main circuit board is the microprocessor. Themicropr
Page 23 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMin a language similar to English. An interpreter program, also in ROM, then translates thos
Page 24 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMThe application program you're using will tell you how to save a file onto a disk usua
Page 25 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMWhen you're using application programs, you're working with two kinds of disks: p
Page 26 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMUtilitiesUtility disks are disks like the ProDOS User's Disk that contain a variety of
Page 27 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMSaving information: Give what you've created a name and store it in a file on a disk f
Page 28 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMCOPYRIGHT APPLE COMPUTER, INC. 1983***************************************YOUR OPTIONS ARE:
Page 29 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMNEW: Erases memory so you can start programming with a clean slate.END: Tells the computer
Page 3 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMOther Disk Drives:If you have a different type of disk drive, install it according to the in
Page 30 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMPressing Return lets the computer know when you've completed a line or instruction. Si
Page 31 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AM1 PRINT ROSES ARE PINKNow type RUN.Notice that your new line 1 replaces your old line 1, bu
Page 32 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMquestion, like:10 PRINT WHAT'S YOUR NAME?The next line of the program is an INPUT stat
Page 33 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMEXP LOG RND- FLASH LOMEM: ROT=ABS FLUSH MID$ RUNAND FN NEW SAVEAPPEND FOR NEXT SCALE=ASC FP
Page 34 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMPress V (for VOLUME COMMANDS) from the Filer Menu.Press F (for FORMAT A VOLUME) from the Vo
Page 35 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMSaving a Program on a DiskNow that you've got a formatted disk, get back into the BASI
Page 36 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMwhat you named each of them. If you find that you've forgotten the names of the progra
Page 37 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AM90 END Signals the end of the program.Once you've typed the program, you can try it by
Page 38 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AM80 INPUT N2$ Displays ? on the screen. Whatever name you type isstored in variable N2$.90 P
Page 39 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMUsing the Computer as a CalculatorWhen you're in the BASIC programming environment, yo
Page 4 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMGently push the gold fingers on the card's edge into the AUX. CONNECTOR slot, rear edge
Page 40 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMLogoLogo is a programming language that is especially suited to children and beginning prog
Page 41 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMPRINT: Displays information on the screen.INPUT: Lets you interact with someone using your
Page 42 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMTo save money, and to keep track of who's doing what at which computer, many computerc
Page 43 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMcontrol everything from sprinkler systems to coffee makers.MonitorThere are two general typ
Page 44 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMproduced with a good dot matrix printer and text produced with a daisy wheel printer.Daisy
Page 45 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMFor students, a plotter can reproduce drawings and geometric designs created with theprogra
Page 46 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMway, so mouse-driven programs tend to be quicker to master and easier to use.Here are some
Page 47 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMIn an industry as dynamic as the personal computer industry, it's inevitable that comp
Page 48 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMRAM Card: Lets you expand the memory capacity of your Apple IIe far beyond 128K to takeadva
Page 49 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMfear of pressing the wrong key and losing data, you'll have a hard time divorcing your
Page 5 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMTo clean the case, do the following:Disconnect the power plug. (Pull the plug, not the cord.
Page 50 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMcode that defines the representation of letters, numbers, and punctuation marks.assembly la
Page 51 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMCAI: See computer-aided instruction.Caps Lock: A key that you can lock into place so that s
Page 52 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMcomputer system: A collective term for the Apple IIe and everything attached to it.configur
Page 53 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMdisk: A circle of flexible plastic coated with iron oxide (the same sort of thing they make
Page 54 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMExtended 80-Column Text Card: A circuit board that doubles the number of characters shownac
Page 55 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMin the monitor.industry specific software: Programs designed for a particular audience doct
Page 56 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMletter quality printer: See daisy wheel printer.line feed: Act of advancing to the next lin
Page 57 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMmouse-driven: A phrase used to describe a program that lets you use a mouse.MousePaint: A s
Page 58 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMmuch human intervention.PL/1: A complex, but flexible programming language said to combine
Page 59 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMdisplay device.RAM: See random-access memory.RAM card: A card that lets you expand the memo
Page 6 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMMany devices, including printers, monitors, and modems need to be plugged into three-hole,gr
Page 60 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMtelevision, and other electronic devices.Shift: A key that you can press in combination wit
Page 61 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMtemplate: A form, or electronic overlay, that allows non-accountant types to use spreadshee
Page 62 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMZ80 Card: A circuit board containing a Z80 microprocessor. An Apple IIe equipped with a Z80
Page 63 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMOne of the enhancements makes it possible for programmers to use special symbols that makeu
Page 64 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMCheck the manual to see if you did the procedure correctly.Get help from someone who knows
Page 65 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMwhat's on the disk. You can run any of the programs with the letter A in front of them
Page 66 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMThe wrong disk drive whirs when you start up a program.The disk drive that whirs when you t
Page 67 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMonly 40 columns clearly. If the program gives you a choice, select the 40-column displayopt
Page 68 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMTurn off the power.Problems Decoding an Error MessageYou see the message: SYNTAX ERRORSome
Page 69 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AM16K ROM, including Applesoft BASICMemory expansion slotSeven slots for peripheral device in
Page 7 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMWhich Is Drive 1?On a DuoDisk, drive 1 is the drive on the left. If you have two or more Dis
Page 70 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMProFileMouseHand controls, joystickNumeric keypad80-column card with 64K memory expansion80
Page 71 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMHow much do I need to know about operating systems?Unless you're planning on some heav
Page 72 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMHow much electricity does my Apple use?Your Apple IIe system, complete with monitor, uses l
Page 73 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMcomputer, you can get questions answered. You'll enjoy the social and informational to
Page 74 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMYes. The Apple I was the first computer that Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak created. Thecompu
Page 8 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMPower light on keyboard doesn't come on.Make sure your Apple IIe is plugged in. If you&
Page 9 of 74IIePrinted: Tuesday, March 4, 2003 10:40:15 AMApple Lore:Early models of the Apple II didn't have a DELETE key, so don't be surp
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