How do I use !Help! ? (1)ÊWhen !Help! is first opened it walks through the Ò*:System:Desk.Accs:Help.Files:Ó folder looking for folders. When a folder is found, its contents are checked for a ÒSubject.AliasÓ file. If that file is found, up to the first 34 characters are added to the ÒSubjectÓ popup menu, otherwise the folder name itself is added. NOTE: The subject menu is built in the order that the folders exist on disk. To alphabetize the Subject menu, create a new ÒTempÓ folder then drag each item from the ÒHelp.FilesÓ folder into the ÒTempÓ folder in the order you want them to appear on the subject menu. When the Help.Files folder is empty, put it into the Trash then Special/Empty Trash. Finally, rename the ÒTempÓ folder to be ÒHelp.FilesÓ. (2)ÊNext !Help! gets the disk name of the currently-running application, then looks on the ÒSubjectÓ menu for a matching name. If that name is found the Subject menu automatically selects that name, otherwise the first item on the Subject menu is selected. For example, if you were using GraphicWriterÊIII, and it was named ÒGraphicWriterÓ on disk, !Help! would attempt to select an item named ÒGraphicWriterÓ from the Subject menu. (3)Ê!Help! then uses the selected Subject to look for an ÒIndexÓ file. For example, if the chosen subject is ÒSpectrumÓ, !Help! attempts to load Ò*:System:Desk.Accs:Help.Files:Spectrum:IndexÓ. If the Index file does not exist, the ÒTopicÓ popup menu will be empty. If the Index file is found, it is used to build the ÒTopicÓ menu, and the first Topic is selected automatically. Choose any Topic, and the associated help text will appear (unless the Index file references a file that does not exist). You can also choose any Subject, so you can get !Help! on Spectrum while you are using GraphicWriterÊIII, and vice-versa. This feature is also handy if youÕve added your own help files to supplement an applicationÕs standard !Help!. TIP:ÊYou can highlight any of the help text you see, then press OpenApple-C to Copy the text to the systemÕs Clipboard. The text can then be pasted into most IIGS applications.