Vintage Palmtops Tips & Tricks

17Jun/1120

Atari Portfolio and no file transfer device

Sounds familiar? Unfortunately, I won't tell you how to copy files using psychokinetic abilities. Instead I'll write about a brilliant idea by Viktor T. Toth, who found out how to write programs on Portfolio without any external compiler. If you're an assembler coder, you'll probably find it useful to write your own small applications. If not, I'll try to put some listings on my blog, including a serial transmission program (that is, the program that is not built-in, so you must copy it somehow to your Portfolio; if you don't have a parallel interface or a card, you're in deep ass).

The idea behind Viktor's solution was that you're - in limited fashion - able to machine-code from within DOS. The only obstacle is that not all ASCII codes may be entered using keypresses (e.g. 03 - Ctrl+C ). His workaround consists of two short programs that don't contain any "illegal" codes, so you can type them from DOS prompt. When you have successfully finished the second one, you'll be able to "compile" text files with hex-coded programs. Now you only need to write your program on a regular PC, compile it to a .com file, view that file with a hex editor and re-type the codes on your Portfolio.

The original step-by-step instructions are here, but I'll write a short tutorial, just in case 😉

First, you need to create CAT.COM. This tiny program allows you to enter any character (except Ctrl+C and Ctrl+S) and redirect it to a file. When in the DOS prompt, press Atari+LOCK to turn on NUM LOCK and type:

echo \180^G\128\196^A\205!\136\194\180^B\205!\235\241>cat.com

NOTE: \xxx means "hold Alt and type three digits from the numeric (red) keyboard". You should see a semigraphic character when you release Alt. ^x means Ctrl+X. ! is simply an exclamation mark (Shift+1).

If you made no mistakes, the file should be 17 bytes long and run without hanging the computer. And now, here comes the hard part. With CAT.COM you'll write the next program, H2C.COM, but this time the characters won't show up. Type:

cat>h2c.com

Now, make sure that NUM LOCK is on (the cursor changes to underline) and then hit the following keys:

\180 ^H \205 ! < x t (
< : | ^B ^D ^I \177 ^D
\210 \224 $ \240 P \180 ^H \205
! < x t \233 < : |
^B ^D ^I $ ^O [ ^H \216
\136 \194 \180 ^B \205 ! \235 \208
\205 spc ^C

If you're lucky, you'll get a 50-byte-long file.

Now it's time to test the compiler. The example code on Viktor's page is long and complicated. Instead, open the built-in editor and type this:

b4 09 ba 0b 01 cd 21 b4 4c cd 21 x

without spaces and newlines! Save the file as HELLO.HEX and execute:

h2c<hello.hex>hello.com

Yet you have to merge the text to your code. You may use either the text editor or CAT.COM, but remember to redirect CAT.COM's output to append the text to the end of HELLO.COM:

CAT.COM>>HELLO.COM

Type:

Hello world!$

(the string must be terminated with $). Hit Ctrl+C (or save the file and hit Esc, when using editor).

If everything went right, typing HELLO should result in the good old hello message.

 

[Edit: 2013/10/13]

Read the comments to this post to find another solution to this problem by DH.

Comments (20) Trackbacks (2)
  1. I don’t know whether you actually read comments so I don’t know if anyone will ever see this, however, I’ve come up with a better solution based on this article. Basically, I thought the whole “Write one program to write another to write a third” was a bit of a faff, so I came up with something that can be written directly from the command prompt that can do something along the lines of the final program. My program doesn’t use Hexadecimal – that would make it far too complicated to easily implement on the command line – it instead uses Octal. All Octal triplets should be separated by spaces (which prompts the program to output the value of the current total as a character and then clear the total) and the string/file should be ended with a letter. No linebreaks are allowed, which is a bit of an issue, but shouldn’t cause too many problems.

    The program is called B8CAT.COM (abbreviation of “Base 8 CAT”, can be pronounced “B-8-Cat” or “Bate-Cat”, whichever’s easier) and is 40 Bytes in length.

    In the following listing, a number preceded by a “/” denotes ALT must be held before typing the number on the numpad (E.G. “/180” means “hold ALT and type 1 8 0” (ALT+180)), a letter preceded by a “^” denotes that CTRL must be held before typing the letter (E.G. “^A” means “hold CTRL and press a” (CTRL+A)) and “” is used in place of a space character:

    /180 ^P /208 /236 /205 ! /168 /223 t ^Q /168 @ u ^U /131 /224 ^O /177 ^D /254 /201 /211 /226 ^A /194 /235 /229 /180 ^B /205 ! 1 /210 /235 /221 /205 /144

    As in the posted version, this should be typed following “echo ” and before “>B8CAT.COM”, E.G. echo ┤^Pðý═!¿▀t^Q¿@u^UâÓ^O▒^D■╔ËÔ^A┬ÙÕ┤^B═!1ÊÙ¦═ É>b8cat.com (your character set may vary).

    The “/144” at the end isn’t strictly necessary, however I have noticed that ending the string with a space occasionally causes problems, so this adds a “NOP” to the end.

    I hope this information is of use.

    • Using a little program I quickly wrote to output the contents of a file in Octal, I converted DEBUG.COM from the Original MS-DOS 2.0 disk (the Portfolio’s DIP DOS is based on MS-DOS 2.0) into a format that can be interpreted with B8CAT.COM. You can find the listing here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/eekyurmxcpd62zo/debug.oct

    • It seems my original comment was stuffed up by wordpress. Here’s a second attempt at the part that got corrupted:

      In the following listing, a number preceded by a “/” denotes ALT must be held before typing the number on the numpad (E.G. “/180” means “hold ALT and type 1 8 0” (ALT+180)), a letter preceded by a “^” denotes that CTRL must be held before typing the letter (E.G. “^A” means “hold CTRL and press a” (CTRL+A)) and “[spc]” is used in place of a space character:

      /180 ^P /208 /236 /205 ! /168 /223 t ^Q /168 @ u ^U /131 /224 ^O /177 ^D /254 /201 /211 /226 ^A /194 /235 /229 /180 ^B /205 ! 1 /210 /235 /221 /205 [spc] /144

      Apologies for the inconvenience.

  2. Thanks for the feedback! Indeed, the “write-a-program-to-write-a-program-to-write-a-program” approach may be a bit annoying, especially when you need to repeat the sequence each time your Portfolio freezes to death 🙂 On the other hand, hexadecimal notation is a little bit easier to encode when paper-coding your program (or not?).

    PS. Don’t worry, people still read this post, so your advice can still save lives 😉

    • As requested, I put in an afternoon of work and managed to get a full HEX version working! I’ve called it B16CAT.COM to keep it separate from the above HEXCAT program. B16CAT can be pronounced as either “B Sixteen Cat” or “Big Cat”, whichever takes your fancy.

      Here’s a listing. As usual, “\” is “ALT+”, “^” is “CTRL+” and “[SPACE]” is the space bar. I’ve spaced out the characters for easier reading:
      1 \210 \180 ^P \208 \236 \205 ! \168 @ u ^T \168 [SPACE] t \242 \168 ^P u ^P \168 ^A u ^X \180 ^B \205 ! 1 \210 \235 \226 ^D ^E ^D ^D $ ^O \177 ^D \211 \226 0 \228 ^A \194 \235 \210 \205 [SPACE] \144

      When typed in, it should look something like this:
      echo 1Ò´^PÐìÍ!¨@u^T¨ tò¨^Pu^P¨^Au^X´^BÍ!1Òëâ^D^E^D^D$^O±^DÓâ0ä^AÂëÒÍ >B16CAT.COM

      • I forgot to mention: all bytes represented in Hex should be separated by spaces (E.G. “4E 51 7A” etc) and to exit the program, type “!”. Also, line breaks will be ignored, so, while your Hex code can include line-breaks, you should not use these as a replacement for spaces.

        • I think that your program deserves a new post on this blog 🙂 Give me a few days.

          • Thanks!!!

            Here’s the entirety of the MORE.COM program from MS-DOS 2.0 (written in the Hex format supported by B16CAT), since it doesn’t come with the Portfolio. The significance of this will become clear when I comment on a different post…

            B4 30 CD 21 86 E0 3D 00 02 73 09 BA FC 01 B4 09 CD 21 CD 20 C6 06 E7 01 19 B4 0F CD 10 88 26 E8 01 BA 17 02 B4 09 CD 21 33 DB B4 45 CD 21 8B E8 B4 3E CD 21 BB 02 00 B4 45 CD 21 FC BA 1A 02 B9 00 10 8B DD B4 3F CD 21 0B C0 75 02 CD 20 8B C8 8B F2 AC
            3C 1A 74 F5 3C 0D 75 07 C6 06 EA 01 01 EB 4C 3C 0A 75 06 FE 06 E9 01 EB 42 3C 08 75 0D 80 3E EA 01 01 74 37 FE 0E EA 01 EB 31 3C 09 75 12 8A 26 EA 01 80 C4 07 80 E4 F8 FE C4 88 26 EA 01 EB 1B 3C 07 74 17 FE 06 EA 01 8A 26 EA 01 3A 26 E8 01 76 09 FE
            06 E9 01 C6 06 EA 01 01 8A D0 B4 02 CD 21 8A 26 E9 01 3A 26 E7 01 72 20 BA F0 01 B4 09 CD 21 B4 0C B0 01 CD 21 BA 17 02 B4 09 CD 21 C6 06 EA 01 01 C6 06 E9 01 01 4E 41 49 74 03 E9 6E FF E9 54 FF 18 50 01 01 00 00 00 00 00 0D 2D 2D 20 4D 6F 72 65 20
            2D 2D 24 4D 4F 52 45 3A 20 49 6E 63 6F 72 72 65 63 74 20 44 4F 53 20 76 65 72 73 69 6F 6E 0D 0A 24 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
            00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 !

          • Ah, it’s taken out my spaces at the ends of the lines. Those will need to be put back…

          • I have created a version of MORE.COM that can be typed in from the command line. It’s quite long, so it has to be typed in in stages using the “>>” redirect to append data to the end of the file. As usual, the “\” is “ALT+”, the “[SPACE]” is the space-bar and “^” is “CTRL+”.

            (The “characters” are separated by spaces for ease of reading – don’t enter these at the prompt):
            \176 ^N \254 \200 \162 4 ^B \162 \92 ^B , ^D \254 \192 \162 5 ^B \162 ] ^B \180 0 \205 ! \134 \224 H = \254 ^A w ^K \186 A ^B \180 ^R \208
            \236 \205 ! \205 [SPACE] \198 ^F 0 ^B ^Y \180 ^O \205 ^P \134 \224 \162 1 ^B \144 \144 \144 \144 1 \219 \180 E \205 ! \137 \197 \180 = \254
            \196 \205 ! \187 ^B \128 \129 \227 ^O ^A \180 E \205 ! \252 \186 _ ^B \185 ^A ^P I \137 \235 \180 ? \205 ! ! \192 u ^B \205 [SPACE] \137 \193
            \137 \214 \172 0 \228 \254 \196 \168 \128 t ^D ^D \128 \235 Z ^L \128 = \154 ^A t \230 = \141 ^A u ^K \144 \144 \144 \198 ^F 3 ^B ^A \235 ]
            \144 = \138 ^A u ^F \254 ^F 2 ^B \235 Q = \136 ^A u ^U \144 \138 ^V 3 ^B 0 \246 \254 \198 \129 ^Y0 ^A ^A t = \254 ^N 3 ^B \235 7 = \137 ^A u
            ^T \138 6 3 ^B \128 \198 ^F \254 \198 \128 \230 \248 \254 \198 \136 6 3 ^B \235 \30 = \135 ^A t ^Y \254 ^F 3 ^B \138 6 3 ^B : 6 1 ^B v ^K
            \144 \144 \254 ^F 2 ^B \198 ^F 3 ^B ^A , \128 \136 \194 \180 ^B \205 ! \138 6 2 ^B : 6 0 ^B r $ \186 4 ^B \180 ^R \208 \236 \205 ! \180 ^L
            \176 ^A \205 ! \186 \92 ^B \180 ^R \208 \236 \205 ! \198 ^F 3 ^B ^A \198 ^F 2 ^B ^A N A I \144 \144 t ^D \144 \233 A \255 \233 & \255 ^X P ^A
            ^A \141 \138 – – [SPACE] M o r e [SPACE] – – $ M O R E : [SPACE] I n c o r r e c t [SPACE] D O S [SPACE] V e r s i o n \141 \138 $

            This should look something like this (depending upon your character set):
            ECHO ░^N■╚ó4^Bó\^B,^D■└ó5^Bó]^B┤0═!åÓH=■^Aw^K║A^B┤^Rð>MOREPT.COM
            ECHO ý═!═ ã^F0^B^Y┤☼═^PåÓó1^BÉÉÉÉ1█┤E═!ë┼┤=■>>MOREPT.COM
            ECHO ─═!╗^BÇüÒ☼^A┤E═!³║_^B╣^A^PIëÙ┤?═!!└u^B═ ë┴>>MOREPT.COM
            ECHO ëͼ0õ■─¿Çt^D^DÇÙZ^LÇ=Ü^Atµ=ì^Au^KÉÉÉã^F3^B^AÙ]>>MOREPT.COM
            ECHO É=è^Au^F■^F2^BÙQ=ê^Au^UÉè^V3^B0÷■ãü·^A^At=■^N3^BÙ7=ë^Au>>MOREPT.COM
            ECHO ^Tè63^BÇã^F■ãǵ°■ãê63^BÙ▲=ç^At^Y■^F3^Bè63^B:61^Bv^K>>MOREPT.COM
            ECHO ÉÉ■^F2^Bã^F3^B^A,Çê┬┤^B═!è62^B:60^Br$║4^B┤^Rðý═!┤^L>>MOREPT.COM
            ECHO ░^A═!║\^B┤^Rðý═!ã^F3^B^Aã^F2^B^ANAIÉÉt^DÉÚA Ú& ^XP^A>>MOREPT.COM
            ECHO ^Aìè– More –$MORE: Incorrect DOS Versionìè$>>MOREPT.COM

            This will give a complete version of MORE that I have entitled MOREP for reasons I can’t quite remember right now…

            Hope this helps!

        • Just for fun, here’s the Hex code for a program I wrote that uses the Portfolio’s additional BIOS commands:
          B4 16 B9 19 00 B2 3C CD 61 B2 3B CD 61 B2 3C CD 61 B2 3B CD 61 B2 3C CD 61 B2 38 CD 61 B2 29 CD 61 B2 39 CD 61 B2 36 CD 61 CD 20 !

          Be sure to use spaces between the bytes when entering them.

  3. Hi,

    i recently got a pofo by a friend and now i’m playing around with it. Got some problems creating h2c.com. It’s always 52 bytes in size. i recreated cat.com but this didn’t help. h2c doesn’t work.

    maybe it would help if you only use / and ^ in the code?

    BTW, is there any way to persist data on board or is there an internal battery i can change to keep data on “disk”?
    (a mmc card hack would be funny..)

    • Congratulations on getting your hands on a Portfolio! It seems that you misunderstood me a bit. The code generating h2c.com isn’t meant to be typed exactly as it reads. Instead, press Portfolio key+LOCK to turn on NumLock (the cursor will change to an underscore) and then, when you encounter a backslash followed by a number, press Alt, type that number on the numeric keyboard (red digits) and release Alt. ^ means Control key; press Control, then a letter following the “^” sign, and release Control.

      • I did understand this but still, h2c.com is about 52 bytes long and i don’t understand why. To my mind, it would prevent several mistakes if there would only be ALT-Codes or at least ALT and CTRL..
        I tried to translate this on my own now and hope this works..

        echo \180 ^G \128 \196 ^A \205 \136 \194 \180 ^B \205 33 \235 \241 > cat.com

        and for h2c (i’ll try it in next few hours..)

        \180 ^H \205 33 60 \120 \116 40
        60 58 \124 ^B ^D ^I \177 ^D
        \210 \224 36 \240 80 \180 ^H \205
        33 60 \120 \116 \233 60 58 \124
        ^B ^D ^I 36 ^O 91 ^H \216
        \136 \194 \180 ^B \205 33 \235 \208
        \205 spc ^C

        • my replacement of cat.com missed a ! (33) sorry for that..

          echo \180 ^G \128 \196 ^A \205 33 \136 \194 \180 ^B \205 33 \235 \241 > cat.com

        • Getting 50 Bytes for h2c.com now but my hello.com is 0 bytes in size and h2c.com doesn’t end running, so i had to reset the portfolio.

          btw. i even saw that this discussion system erases \ 0 .. since my code only has CTRL and ALT in it (besides the spc) the rest has to be a ALT-0 plus the two digits…

          • You know, usually the devil is in the details – maybe you made a mistake when typing alt-codes? If you print out the contents of h2c.com using type h2c.com, you should see if your codes have been translated to the characters from this post (like “!”, “x” etc.).

    • > a mmc card hack would be funny..
      I agree 😉
      So far there’s no such mod available, however there were succesful attempts to make the Portfolio read CF cards. There are instructions on the Internet, so if you’re not afraid of a soldering iron, you can easily make your Pofo read CF’s.
      For various hardware mods, take a look at http://pofowiki.de (in German).


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