Difference between revisions of "TSR"

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TSR's were popular in the MS-DOS days as psudo multitasking.  They would 'terminate and stay resident'.  You could call them up with a hotkey and you could have them accessible from another program.
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'''TSR''''s were popular in the [[MS-DOS]] days as pseudo [[multi-tasking]].  They would 'terminate and stay resident'.  You could call them up with a hotkey and you could have them accessible from another program.
  
 
These were VERY hard to program as MS-DOS was intended as a single tasking program.
 
These were VERY hard to program as MS-DOS was intended as a single tasking program.
  
Many debuggers ran as TSR's.
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Many [[debugger]]s ran as TSR's.
  
 
I think the most popular TSR was Sidekick from Borland.  Sidekick included a calculator, notepad, appointment book, basic terminal program, clip board among other things.
 
I think the most popular TSR was Sidekick from Borland.  Sidekick included a calculator, notepad, appointment book, basic terminal program, clip board among other things.
  
TSR's typically hooked the keyboard interrupt looking for a special sequence that would call them up, and interrupt the underlying program.  More sophisticated ones would also hook the timer, and allow the 'foreground' program to continue to execute, a form of multitasking.
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TSR's typically [[hook]]ed the [[keyboard]] [[interrupt]] looking for a special sequence that would call them up, and interrupt the underlying program.  More sophisticated ones would also hook the timer, and allow the 'foreground' program to continue to execute, a form of multitasking.
  
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[[Category: DOS Enhancements]]

Latest revision as of 14:28, 1 January 2019

TSR's were popular in the MS-DOS days as pseudo multi-tasking. They would 'terminate and stay resident'. You could call them up with a hotkey and you could have them accessible from another program.

These were VERY hard to program as MS-DOS was intended as a single tasking program.

Many debuggers ran as TSR's.

I think the most popular TSR was Sidekick from Borland. Sidekick included a calculator, notepad, appointment book, basic terminal program, clip board among other things.

TSR's typically hooked the keyboard interrupt looking for a special sequence that would call them up, and interrupt the underlying program. More sophisticated ones would also hook the timer, and allow the 'foreground' program to continue to execute, a form of multitasking.