Caselinr is a Windows 2.0 program which prints case liners (a.k.a. J-Cards) for audio cassettes. The image displayed on the CRT screen approximates what will actually be printed. The printed result is extremely accurate and can be cut, folded, and then inserted into an empty (preferably clear plastic) audio cassette box. Operation of the program follows the Windows style guide and all of the terminology should (hopefully) be apparent except, perhaps, for the term "feature". I use feature to refer to Source, Date/Time, Noise Reduction, and Mode. A "Feature Name" is the constant literal text (e.g. Source), whereas "Feature" is the variable text entered by the user (e.g. Disc, FM 97.9 WLUP, etc.). The actual feature text can be entered through predefined buttons, editbox text, or a combination of both. A value of either 0 or blank for a feature order will cause that feature to be omitted. Feature orders are relative, in that the sequence "1 3 4" is treated identical to the (more normal) sequence "1 2 3". The New, Open..., Save, and Save As... menu options follow the "normal" windows file handling protocol (the default file extension is ".CAS"). The Title area in the Open... dialog box is a multi-line editbox with scroll bars. You cannot modify the titles from this box. Rather, its purpose is to allow you to determine the contents of a case liner. When you "click" on a valid caselinr file, the titles contained within the file will be displayed. Needless to say, if you click/open a file which was not created by caselinr (e.g. an EXE file) you will probably notice some pretty erratic behavior on your machine! The Save button in the Global Layout and Font dialog boxes saves the data entered, in the corresponding dialog box, to the file WIN.INI. These saved values are then used when caselinr is first initiated, when New is requested from the File menu, and when Reset is requested from a dialog box. Reset will only use the values associated with the dialog box in which it is contained, whereas the other two will use all saved values. The saved values can be removed, thus returning to the "stock values", by deleting the appropriate lines from WIN.INI with any text editor -- the section will begin with [CaseLinr]. As you can tell from perusing the menus and dialog boxes, you have control over many variables determining the final result. The "stock fonts" look fairly nice on my Epson LQ850, but you can change them to fit your own printer. The font dialog boxes allow access to all variables which are part of a Windows font definition (TWIPS stands for 20th of a point or about 1/1440 of an inch). The Title and Song dialog boxes are multi-line editboxes with horizontal and vertical scrolling, and as such you use the Enter key to actually enter multiple lines. When entering songs, just enter each song on a separate line and let the program perform word-breaks and spacing, it's by no means perfect but it tries. The Invert menu item, within the Layout menu, flips the entire liner. A flipped liner is oriented like a liner that accompanies a pre-recorded cassette, whereas an un-flipped liner looks like one that accompanies a blank cassette. If you can, compare the two, I didn't realize there was a difference until this feature was requested. All suggestions, comments, criticisms, modification requests, and donations are welcome and will be appreciated (especially the latter). Enjoy!? Ed Adasiewicz 45 Parkview Ct. Crystal Lake, IL 60012