. Welcome to Project 64! The goal of Project 64 is to preserve Commodore 64 related documents in electronic text format that might otherwise cease to exist with the rapid advancement of computer technology and declining interest in 8- bit computers on the part of the general population.
Fife Poppy Patch by the contemporary artist Deborah Phillips available to buy online at The Leith Gallery, a Scottish contemporary art gallery based in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK| E. Opening and closing of the frame does not require manual dexterity or strength. DIMENSIONS (HxWxD): 5.25. Ableware 703270000 Hand Band Grip Enhancer-Small-2/pack. Gives people with limited grip and hand strength additional control of walkers and canes. Band attaches to the handgrips of the walker or the cane shaft using hook-and-loop fastener.
If you would like to help by converting C64 related hardcopy documents to electronic texts please contact the manager of Project 64, Cris Berneburg, at. Extensive efforts were made to preserve the contents of the original document. However, certain portions, such as diagrams, program listings, and indexes may have been either altered or sacrificed due to the limitations of plain vanilla text. Diagrams may have been eliminated where ASCII-art was not feasible. Program listings may be missing display codes where substitutions were not possible. Tables of contents and indexes may have been changed from page number references to section number references.
Please accept our apologies for these limitations, alterations, and possible omissions. The author(s) of the original document and members of Project 64 make no representations about the accuracy or suitability of this material for any purpose. This etext is provided 'as-is'. Please refer to the warantee of the original document, if any, that may included in this etext. No other warantees, express or implied, are made to you as to the etext or any medium it may be on.
Neither the author(s) nor the members of Project 64 will assume liability for damages either from the direct or indirect use of this etext or from the distribution of or modification to this etext. The Project 64 etext of the Commodore 64 Programmer's Reference Guide, first edition. Converted to etext by Ville Muikkula. Some errors in the original document were corrected in this etext. C64PRG10.TXT, June 1996, etext #46. I would like to thank the following persons for their valuable help: Jouko Valta for the memory maps on pages 310-334. Marko Makela for the combined table of memory maps on pages 264-266.
Cris Berneburg for proof reading. Kimmo Hamalainen for proof reading. There was a lot of work, but finally, after five weeks of correcting.
OCR-errors and formatting the text to readable format, it is ready. I hope that this massive project shows to the C= community that it is in a fact possible for one man to convert a 500 page book to ASCII text.
One just have to be dedicated, believe that it can be done and have the PATIENCE for it. And lots of free time. So, who's going to etext Inside Commodore DOS? If you find errors in the text, please report them so that they can be fixed. There should not be many, though.
There are some pictures missing on pages 132,157,162-163,195,364-365, 377-378,380-381,404,406-407,416-417,421,459,476-477 and 481. Also the schematics of C-64 are not available. I apologize for the possible inconvenience this might cause. Ville Muikkula.
Note: To extract the ascii text basic programs all at once from this etext use 'tok64' by Cris Berneburg. Windows 95 MS-DOS Edit is the ideal program for reading this etext.
Just check that ANSI.SYS is loaded in CONFIG.SYS and issue the command: mode con lines=50 Now a whole page fits nicely on the screen and you can use Page Up/Page Down keys to flip pages. Just be sure that the characters are always on the last line of the screen. COMMODORE 64 PROGRAMMER'S REFERENCE GUIDE.