HTMLcat.HLP is the HTML Catalog, an extensive collection of
well-organized, up-to-date information. This is a Windows
help file, requiring Windows 3.1 or later, and optimized for
Windows 95 and later. Look and feel are virtually the same
in any Windows-based help viewer--portability.

This is try-before-you-buy software. This is not free software.
If you use these materials, you must pay for the registered
version. Evaluation versions have limited features. When you
register, you will receive access to the latest, complete package.

You may use this book for up to 7 days for evaluation. After a
week, if you have received fair value from this book or you are
still using it, you might as well register and get the benefits of
the complete book.

If you use this information, please pay for it. Please pay $8
(US funds) per user for this release; this modest fee entitles you
to the complete, latest release. If you would like the book
shipped on 3.5-inch disk with a written receipt, the shipping
price is $13; outside the US, $15 on disk. for shipping and
handling. Please provide the following information:

Your name:       _____________________________  (required)

E-mail Address:  _____________________________  (required)

Company:         _____________________________

Street:          _____________________________

City/State/ZIP:  _____________________________

Number of Users: _____________________________  ($8 each, US funds)

On Disk:         _____________________________  ($5 per disk US, $7 foreign)

Total:           _____________________________


Send $8 per user to this address:

Send payment to:

  Richard E. Harvey
  P. O. Box 5695
  Glendale AZ 85312 USA

  Email: r_harvey@compuserve.com

When you register, we will send you information telling you how
to receive the complete version of this book. Be sure to include
your complete name, mailing address (if applicable) and your
Email address. You must include your Email address so that we can
send you electronic mail pointing you to the complete, registered
version.

Please visit the home page for updates and additional information
and utilities for programmers, writers, and computer users.

 http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/r_harvey

If you do not pay for this tool, you cannot legally or ethically
use it. If you do not agree with this, please delete this book
from your computer.


--( Registration Benefits )--
* Faster and easier to use one Windows help file to look-up HTML
  information than to search giant HTML files or outdated
  ink-on-paper reference books.
* No more annoying registration reminders.
* The >> button won't stop at the registration screen any more,
  because the topic will not be there!
* Latest, complete version. There's a mountain of information in
  this evaluation version, but the release book contains even
  more, and updated information, because it is very likely a later
  release than this.
* Registered users can ust then included example documents.
* Support for separate Contents window for Microsoft Windows 95
  and Windows NT.
* Additional help for 32-bit Windows users! When you register,
  you will receive the exclusive HTML-color help file with
  pop-up swatches of all HTML screen colors.
* It's a CD-ROM worth of reference without the CD. This book
  represents hundreds of hours of work. Supporting the tools
  you use makes it possible for developers to create even more
  useful tools.
* It's a bargain!


--( Installation )--
The ZIP archive contains this file (HTMLCAT.TXT), the help file,
plus (in the registered version) a help contents file named
HTMLCAT.CNT. Also included are HTMLCAT.GIF and HTMLCAT2.GIF.
These are the files you need:

  htmlcat.hlp  The Windows help file
  htmlcat.dll  Required macros and utilities.
  htmlcat.txt  This text file.

All of the text and graphics are in one highly-compressed file,
named HTMLCAT.HLP. Copy the HTMLCAT.HLP and HTMLCAT.DLL to the
same directory on your hard drive. Click on the help file with
Windows Explorer or File Manager. You can also load the help file
into WINHELP.EXE.

Tip:
  In Windows, try making a "Reference" group or menu, with
  links to often-used help files. This is also a great place for
  saved HTML pages, Encyclopedias, and text file notes. Now,
  when we need to look-up something, it's all in our custom
  reference library.

  Get a copy of ASCIICAT.HLP from the web site--it's a useful (and
  free) tool for programmers, writers, and web designers. Look
  for additional reference books on the web site--it changes
  all the time.

NOTE:
  See HTMLCAT.HLP for additional information about configuration,
  included sample files, and troubleshooting. In the table of
  contents, click the Support book, then select the Setup item.
  You can also search the index for "Setup".

  See the Setup topic for information about using additional
  files included with this book.


--( Pop-up Contents Window )--
If you are using a 32-bit Windows help viewer, you may want to
use the separate pop-up Contents and Index window. This feature
requires the file HTMLCAT.CNT to be present in the same
directory as HTMLCAT.HLP and HTMLCAT.DLL. If you are using Windows
3.x, the file HTMLCAT.CNT is not needed.

If you change your mind later and don't want to use the separate
contents window (after all, the built-in Contents is very good),
see the "Help Tips" section of HTMLCAT.HLP for instructions.

--( Free GIF files )--
We've included three pictures you can use on your web pages:

  htmlcat2.gif  50x47 pixels 0.7KB. The "<?>" logo.
  htmlcat.gif   88x31 pixels 0.7KB. "Supports HTMLcat <?>"
  anything.gif  88x31 pixels 0.7KB. "Best with Anything" logo.

All pictures are as small as possible (bandwidth isn't free). They use
16-color palettes and horizontal-optimization to minimize file sizes.

htmlcat2.gif is a cool "<?>" picture without text. Here's the HTML
to use it:

  <A HRef="http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/r_harvey" Target="_top">
  <IMG Src="htmlcat2.gif" Width=50 Height=47 Border=0 Alt="HTMLcat"></A>

The second picture, htmlcat.gif, is the same proportions as other
"supports" GIFs, such as Netscape's Internet Explorer's. One
difference is size, because it's only 700 bytes. Here's how
to use it:

  <A HRef="http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/r_harvey" Target="_top">
  <IMG Src="htmlcat.gif" Width=88 Height=31 Border=0 Alt="HTMLcat"></A>

HTML is a portable document specification. The ideal document looks
good on *anything* -- any display device or printed output. If yours
are portable, not beholding to one company's proprietary standards,
say so with anything.gif:

  <P>Best viewed with:
  <A HRef="http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/r_harvey" Target="_top">
  <IMG Src="anything.gif" Width=88 Height=31 Border=0 Alt="Anything!"></A>
