--
den...@usb.com Universal Savings Bank.
The three most dangerous things are a programmer with a soldering
iron, a manager who codes, and a user who gets ideas.
Right. There is no INIT for ProDOS.
Besides using the standard ProDOS utilities to format a disk for ProDOS, you
can use any of the later versions of Copy II Plus (e.g. version 7.2). This formats
each track and sets up a couple boot blocks and a directory block; and, you have a
named ProDOS volume.
The disk can be used to store ProDOS files; but, it is still not bootable. To
have a disk which is bootable and can launch Applesoft BASIC programs, you would
usually copy the files PRODOS and BASIC.SYSTEM from some other ProDOS disk to the
newly formatted disk. If you want a BASIC program to be run automatically when
ProDOS is booted, the program should be named "STARTUP".
For diskettes you want to be able to boot on 64k Apple II's, the best version
of ProDOS is 1.9 (along with the BASIC.SYSTEM on the same disk as the v1.9 PRODOS
file). Version 2.0.3 is the latest ProDOS. It requires a 128k Apple II and lets
you access more volumes.
There is more about ProDOS (and DOS 3.3) in the FAQs. See the DOS & ProDOS
page at http://home.swbell.net/rubywand/Csa2DOSMM.html .
Rubywand
Matt Jenkins wrote:
[deleted]
I've been in many news groups since my freshmen year of college (1994).
This by far has to be the most fun group, and the group where people are
the most polite/nicest. Relearning all of the Apple II stuff that I
sued to do (1988-1994) is a great deal of fun. Anyway, thanks for the
answers. I had forgotten all about the "-" thing in ProDos.
After booting the disk, from basic type
-FILER.SYSTEM
Then press V for volume commands, then I think F for format, or it might
be I for initialize (been a looong time)
then initialize the device in slot 5, drive 1. Make sure you put the blank
disk in first.
That's it.
--
Matt(hew) Jenkins. Computer Science (RMIT Bundoora)
email: m...@cs.rmit.edu.au
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