WEB site:
http://www.goscreen.info
Copyright © 1998-2003 Andrei Gourianov,
andrew-guryanov@usa.net
Translation to
Bulgarian | - Yavor Christov | Web page... |
Croatian | - Donald Rumac | |
Czech | - Jan Novák | |
Danish | - Martin Nørby | |
Dutch | - Martin van Es | |
Estonian | - Birgy Lorenz, | Web page... |
French | - Alan Manach | |
German | - Wolfgang Brodowski | |
Hebrew | - Doron Meiraz | |
Hungarian | - Sándor Soós | |
Korean | - Joohwan John Kim | |
Russian | - Andrei Gourianov, | Web page... |
Slovak | - Ján Hric | |
Slovenian | - Boris Grzina | |
Swedish | - Anders Blom, | Web page... |
What is it.
All features at a glance.
How does it work.
Why goScreen?
How to...
Think of your computer monitor screen as a sheet of paper. It has one visible surface.
Now imagine that there is a number of surfaces, or screen pages, with only one visible at a time.
All the pages are of the same size − size of the monitor screen and are placed "one above
the other". This is how goScreen works.
It creates up to 40 virtual pages on the monitor screen.
When a program is started, it is placed on the current - "active" screen page. When one then goes
to another page, the program is left on the page where it has been started - one can always find it there.
It is possible to move programs from one screen page to another.
Organize your work by creating multiple workspaces. Run each application, or group of applications
on a separate screen. Never minimize any of the applications, what is more, never close any of them
(if you have enough RAM).
When you switch screen pages, all running Windows programs just disappear from the screen
and from the taskbar, but they are right there waiting when you switch back.
When you start goScreen for the first time, you see several
numbered buttons plus <?> and <x> buttons.
Each numbered button represents a virtual page. Raised button is for inactive page,
sunken − for the current one. Button "with ribs" means that this page is empty, that is
there are no running applications on the page. One can change number of pages from 2 to 40.
But this is only the beginning. The visual appearance is highly configurable. It is possible to change size,
font, color, put icons on buttons and so on. Also, there is a number of screen management commands,
that you may want to define.
goScreen is a way to organize your everyday work, not a beautification tool.
It helps you work with other applications trying to remain as unobtrusive as possible.
When using goScreen, what you can rely on is absolute stability and solid functionality.
In some cases there is more than one way to do the same thing. Expect the best. GoScreen requires some tuning, but the reward is huge: your completely personalized desktop management utility, which lets you use your computer resources at fullest and saves your time.
There is no magic. There are two Windows API functions that make goScreen possible:
ShowWindow and GetWindowText. So, as long as Microsoft supports this sort of
interprocess communication, goScreen will work. When you go from one screen page to another,
goScreen just hides all visible windows on the previous page and shows ones on the next.
Hiding and showing a window is a legal operation and all applications should react properly -
for example, redraw itself properly. It is one of the major requirements in developing for
Microsoft® Windows.
Of course, there is no guaranty of how fast they will respond. Here I depend on them -
if they are slow, please do not blame me. Also this explains sometimes bizarre behavior of other
applications - they might call ShowWindow themselves, or not call it when it would be
nice to do so.
GoScreen does not monitor Windows shell activity - this would require installing
Windows hooks, which I believe is unsafe. For example, when one double clicks a file in Windows
Explorer, shell finds in the registry which application can open this file, starts this application
and commands it to open the file. GoScreen is not involved in this scenario.
GoScreen has no initiative. It can do many things, but only when you command it to do so.
That is, as long as you do not touch goScreen, it does not touch your system.
"Left click" stands for "single click with the left mouse button"
"Right click" stands for "single click with the right mouse button"
No installation is necessary. There is a single
EXE
file −
goScreen.exe. Just run it. That is, having unpacked distribution package,
you can immediately try goScreen. Still, for convenience, there is also a
Setup program.
Distribution package contains: goScreen.exe − main executable,
gsSetup.exe − setup program, several
DLL
files, each of which contains
language-dependent resources (goScreen is multi-lingual) and goScreen.htm,
which you are reading now.
The purpose of gsSetup.exe is to copy the package files to a
specified location, to configure goScreen to be started at Windows start-up
and to install desktop shortcut to it.
So, run it, specify desired options and press Install.
The purpose of de-installation is to remove goScreen files from
computer and to clean up registry.
Unlike many other programs, goScreen, when uninstalled, leaves no traces in the registry.
It means that all configuration information will be erased. That is, if you plan to
re-install it later - you will have to configure it again. In this case, maybe it is
worth to consider saving configuration information
into a file.
Close goScreen if it is running.
Go to Start - Settings - Control Panel menus and invoke Add/Remove Programs.
Then select Andrew Guryanov's goScreen item and press Add/Remove button.
When setup program starts - press Uninstall.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
In case you stop using registered copy of goScreen (at all, or on a
given computer), you have to uninstall it. It is not a problem, if you have never
installed it before. Just find gsSetup.exe, run it and press Uninstall.
One might want to install goScreen into another directory,
change its behavior at Windows start-up (run it automatically or not), or
install or remove a desktop shortcut to it.
Close goScreen if it is running.
Go to Start - Settings - Control Panel menus and invoke Add/Remove Programs.
Then select Andrew Guryanov's goScreen item and press Add/Remove button.
When setup program starts - specify desired options and press Install.
Please note, in case you are re-installing it into another directory, you have
to remove files in the previous directory manually.
For example, you have got new
PC
and would like to transfer goScreen there without
re-configuring it again. Or, you would like to share you configuration settings with the rest
of the world (say for instance, you are system administrator and have to install it
on several computers in your organization). Whatever the reason is, here is how.
Close goScreen if it is running (it saves all the settings).
Run regedit. Find and select the key named
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Andrew Guryanov\goScreen. Select
Registry - Export Registry File menus. Specify the file name to which settings will be
saved. This is actually a text file, so one can look on its contents using notepad.
Then copy this file to another computer,
make sure goScreen is not running, right click the file
with settings in Explorer and select Merge menu item.
Please note, all references to other files (paths - it can be Windows
icons, pictures, other programs) are absolute. That is, on another computer goScreen should
be able to find these files on same locations. Still, nothing happens if it is unable,
it just ignores it.
By default, goScreen saves all configuration settings in the Windows registry, but there is a way to make it use configuration file instead. I would ask you to think twice before using this option and do not use it unless you really need it. The solution is to specify name of the file in the goScreen command line. That is it. If the command line is not empty, goScreen interprets it as a configuration file name. Put the file name in quotes if it contains blanks. Also, I would recommend to specify full path names only.
Invoke the Properties dialog box,
go to the General pane and select a language in the Language combo box.
The language will be changed only after you close the Properties dialog window.
If you do not find your favorite language in the list - visit
goScreen's WEB site -
there is a chance it has been added recently. This feature is only available due to
invaluable contributions of volunteers, who took time
to translate it. Please join me in praising them.
All language-dependent resources are stored in special DLLs, each of which has a unique name like gsResXX.dll. Only one such DLL is used at any given time, so one can remove unused or add new ones. There is only one exception: never remove nor rename gsRes.dll - the one, which provides resources for the English version.
This is actually a Windows-wide parameter. Invoke the Properties dialog box, just to see the effect. Right click the monitor screen and select Properties menu item. Go to Appearance pane and select Message Box in Item combo box. Change font, press Apply, enjoy the effect.
Left click the <x> button, or activate goScreen (click on it) and press Alt+F4 on the keyboard, or left click the non-button area and select Close goScreen menu item.
Move the mouse cursor to the non-button area. Press the left mouse button and, while holding it down, move the mouse. Release the left mouse button to drop goScreen. If you move it to a screen edge and do not want to dock it there - hold the keyboard Ctrl key down while moving.
Move the mouse cursor to the top or bottom of non-button area of goScreen until it changes to a resize cursor. Press the left mouse button and, while holding it down, move the mouse. Release the left mouse button to release goScreen.
Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Control bar pane and check or uncheck Most topmost check box. When set, this property means that goScreen panel cannot be covered by other topmost windows.
Move goScreen to a screen edge until
it goes a bit out of the screen and drop it there. goScreen disappears immediately
(if you do not want to dock it there - hold the keyboard Ctrl key down
while moving).
To show that it is about to be docked, goScreen changes the color of its non-button area.
To show goScreen up - just move the mouse cursor to the same screen edge.
Or use a keyboard shortcut command.
Docking makes goScreen panel invisible while you are working with other applications.
Please be careful when using this option: goScreen becomes completely invisible
and it is very easy to forget about it.
Double click the non-button area with the left mouse button. Or
invoke the Properties dialog box,
go to the Control bar pane and check or uncheck Put on system tray check box.
This works pretty much the same as docking. That is, its
purpose is to hide goScreen panel while you are working with other applications. But comparing
with docking it has a couple of benefits - one can see a
list of all running applications and
find an application and go to the corresponding screen page
without showing goScreen panel.
In version 2.5 and earlier this mechanism worked differently: instead of
putting icon on the system tray it attached goScreen panel to the task bar. I was not
completely satisfied with that solution and replaced it in version 2.6. Which in turn
caused a number of complains from users. Well, now there is a possibility to use
either of this mechanisms. Changing it is a bit tricky though:
Close goScreen, if it is running.
Go to Start - Run Windows menu and type regedit in the dialog box shown, press OK.
Find entry HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Andrew Guryanov\goScreen\Main and double click the
Attach value. Change the value data from 0 to 1. Now, when you start goScreen next time, the old
"attachment" mechanism will be active. If you do not like it - change this value back to 0.
It is also possible to put screen page buttons on the system tray: invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Control bar pane and check Page buttons on system tray check box. These icons resemble "normal" screen page buttons and act like ones. Still, there are several limitations in system tray icon's visual appearance imposed by the operating system:
Left click the <?> button. Or right click the non-button area and select Properties menu item. Or click on goScreen window and press F1 on the keyboard.
Right click a page button and select Properties menu item.
Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Control bar pane and check or uncheck Show window controls check box. When the controls are invisible, use F1 to display Properties dialog box, Alt+F4 to close goScreen.
Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the General pane and press Tool tip font button.
Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Control bar pane and select a color in the Color combo box.
Invoke the Page properties dialog box, go to the Name pane and enter the name in the Name edit control.
Just drag and drop an icon, or a program file, or a shortcut to it on the page button. Or,
Invoke the Page properties dialog box,
go to the Name pane and enter the Windows icon or application file name in the
Icon edit control.
It is also possible to drag and drop an icon file on the Icon edit control.
You can also change the size of page icons.
If a program file contains more than one icon, goScreen always selects the first one.
Still, it is possible to select a different icon: create a desktop shortcut to the program,
change the icon of the shortcut by editing its properties, drag and drop the shortcut on the page button,
delete the desktop shortcut.
This changes the size of the picture - how an icon is displayed on a page button. Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Page buttons pane and enter the number in the Icon size edit control (the icon is displayed in a square shape).
Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Page buttons pane and press Page button font button.
Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Page buttons pane and check or uncheck Current page, Empty page and/or Non-empty page check boxes in Colors group. Then press the nearby button(s) to edit the colors. This option is useful when using only page icons - "ribs" and raised/sunken state may be difficult to distinguish in this case.
Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the General pane and enter the number in the Number of pages edit control. One has to restart goScreen for this change to come into effect.
Left click corresponding goScreen panel button.
It is also possible to setup a specific
keyboard hot key for each page,
or move from page to page by page switching.
Another option is to use Window map.
[New in version 4.0]
GoScreen is capable of playing a sound when a screen page gets activated.
One can assign a specific sound to each page:
invoke the Page properties dialog box,
go to the Name pane and specify a sound in the Sound combobox.
For those of you who have a keyboard with programmable keys: sometimes such keys
can only be programmed "to start applications". It is possible to
switch screen pages using such keys: use command line in the form
"C:\Program Files\goScreen\goScreen.exe" -page=N
Naturally, goScreen must be up and running before you invoke such a command.
Invoke the Page properties dialog box, go to the Keyboard activation pane and specify key combination you like. Setting up your own hot keys is necessary to avoid possible conflicts with other applications. And... it is nice to be able to use your own preferences instead of being forced to use someone's else, isn't it?
Just drag and drop a picture file on the page button. Or, Invoke the Page properties dialog box, go to the Background pane and enter the picture file name in the Background picture edit control. Also, it is possible to drag and drop a picture file on the Background picture edit control.
Invoke the Page properties dialog box, go to the Background pane and check or uncheck Desktop color check box. Then press the nearby button to edit the color.
Invoke the Page properties dialog box,
go to the Name pane and check or uncheck Hide page button check box. When hidden, the page
is accessible only by the keyboard hot key (so it must be set as well)
and is excluded from the page switching mechanism. Use this option
with caution and never forget the access key.
There is another, closely related option - Guard. It answers the question
"What should goScreen do when someone tries to close it while there are some running applications on hidden pages?" -
just exit or never exit?
Right click the non-button area and select Window list menu item,
or use a shortcut command.
By clicking on an application here one activates it.
It is also possible to drag and drop an application from one screen page to another.
In case there are empty pages, Window list creates
a special drop zone. Here one can select a drop page by moving a cursor from left to right.
[New in version 4.0]
Window list was designed to be a lightweight window, which is easy to create and easy
to destroy - something like the standard Windows Alt -Tab selector. That is why, each time
one selects an application in it, the Window list gets closed. Still, it is possible
to change this default behavior:
invoke the Properties dialog box,
go to the Window list pane and uncheck the Close on select checkbox.
Also, here one can choose whether to show applications' icons in Window list or not.
Right click the non-button area and select Window map menu item,
or use a shortcut command.
Unlike textual Window list, Window map is
a graphical representation of existing screen pages and what applications are running on what page.
Each application is shown here by its icon.
By clicking on an application icon one activates it.
It is also possible to drag and drop an application from one screen page to another.
Window map can be docked to any side of the monitor screen or left in a floating state.
As usual, when you move Window map to a screen side and do not want to dock it there -
press and hold keyboard Ctrl key down.
An interesting possibility is to "auto-hide" Window map while in a floating state:
move it to a screen edge while holding keyboard Ctrl key down and drop it there. Try it,
maybe you will like it more than the plain docking.
Window map also has a keyboard interface: use
Tab or Shift+Tab to select a screen page,
Arrow keys to select an application on the page,
Enter or Spacebar to activate the selected item (page or application).
[New in version 4.0]
There are numerous possibilities of optimizing the Window map's visual appearance and behavior:
invoke the Properties dialog box,
go to the Window map pane and specify the desired options.
Right click the non-button area and select Run menu item,
or use a shortcut command.
Run tool makes it possible to start other applications or open documents.
Unlike standard Windows Run dialog box, this one can start several applications at once.
Also, each screen page has its own list of applications (documents), which gives better opportunities
for customization - goScreen remembers what applications you usually run on a particular screen page.
Invoke the Properties dialog box,
go to the Miscellanea pane and check X-Mouse checkbox.
X-Mouse tool makes it possible to activate an application
on the current screen page by pointing on it, not only by clicking.
Please note, implementation of this feature has absolutely nothing to do with
the similar option provided by Microsoft. In fact, they work differently - you decide,
which one is better.
Right click an inactive page button. A menu will be shown with the list
of applications on that page and on the current page. By selecting an item you move the
application to (upward, to the top) or from (downward) the current, active page.
Another option is to drag and drop application's title in
Window list
or icon in Window map.
It is also possible to copy an application from an inactive screen page
to the current one: hold the keyboard Ctrl key down while moving the application.
Please note, it is only possible to copy to the current page, not from any page to any.
As a result, application's windows will be shown, but the application itself remains marked
in goScreen as belonging to another, inactive screen page and
at the earliest convenience
goScreen will send it where it belongs.
[New in version 4.0] Instead of moving applications from one page to another as desribed above, in many cases it is way easier just to say "I am about to go to another page, and I want to take this application with me". To be able to do so, define a keyboard or mouse shortcut to the Follow me command. Invoke this command right before switching screen pages. The application's window title flashes once to indicate that goScreen has included this window in its Follow me list. Now, when you go to another page (no matter how), the window remains visible - that is, gets relocated to the new page. GoScreen cleans up the Follow me list after each screen change.
Sometimes an application on an inactive screen page gets active. It is possible to instruct goScreen what to do in this case: ignore it, move or copy this application to the current screen page, or go to that page. Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Miscellanea pane and select an action in the Hidden activation combobox.
Right click the current page button and select an action.
Right click the non-button area. A menu will be shown with the list of all
applications on all screen pages. By selecting an item one activates corresponding
page, if necessary, and the application.
Another option is to use Window list
or Window map.
Yet another option is to use "contents menu" feature:
Invoke the Properties dialog box,
go to the General pane and select menu in Show contents as
combobox. In this case, instead of showing the list of applications running on a screen page
in text format, goScreen will show it as a menu. So, one can select
an item there.
Left click the current page button. Or, click keyboard hot key which corresponds to the current page.
Sometimes (very rarely, as I believe) you may want this action to be executed automativally on goScreen startup. To configure goScreen to do it for you, close goScreen, if it is running. Go to Start - Run Windows menu and type regedit in the dialog box shown, press OK. Find entry HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Andrew Guryanov\goScreen\Main and double click the WaitBeforeClean value. Its default is 0xffffffff, which means that this function is disabled. Change the value data to 0 or any positive integer. When the value data is greater than zero, that means the number of seconds on Windows startup to wait before executing this command. When the value data is zero, goScreen waits 20 seconds, which I believe would suffice in most cases. Again, this value means how many seconds to wait on Windows startup, when your computer is very busy starting many different applications. I am unable to detect programmatically when it is finished, that is why I ask you to configure it yourself. Otherwise, when you just restart goScreen, the waiting period is 2 seconds always.
Right click the current page button, go to the Stick
menu item and select a window. A sticky window is shown on all screen pages.
Another option is to specify rules as for how to find window(s) which should be sticky.
goScreen can distinguish windows by who has created it and by window title or title pattern.
It is good idea to have an application for which you are going to define a rule running.
In this case you can just select appropriate information from the list and maybe modify it slightly:
Invoke the Properties dialog box,
go to the Stick pane and define a rule.
Exact title means that window should have this exact title,
All - all the specified words should be present in the title, Any - any one of the specified
words should be in the title. If you specify empty string as a title and say it is Exact - this means
a window with no title (which is a very rare case). At the same time, if you say All or Any -
this means a window with any title.
Another option to differentiate windows is by an application which has created it. When you select
a title from the list of available (running on the current screen page), this application is shown in
the Process combo box. If you clean this entry - that means a window with the specified title (pattern)
which has been created by any application.
So, defining a rule, think what is more appropriate for you in each case. For example, you have
a text document (MyText.txt) opened in Notepad. On the goScreen "rule"
panel you will be able to find
the window title (MyText.txt - Notepad) and the application which has created it (Notepad.exe).
Now, what do you want?
If you want all the documents opened by Notepad be sticky - specify Notepad in the
Title edit control,
select All, and select Notepad.exe in the Process (and click Add button,
which adds this rule
to the list of defined). Otherwise, if you want MyText.txt document, which, potentially, can be opened by many
different text editors, be sticky - specify MyText.txt in the Title, select All and clean any text
in the Process edit control.
[New in version 4.0]
In case you specify All or Any, window title
part of the rule is interpreted as a
blank separated list of words. To include a blank itself, put the word combination into quotes.
For example, Task Manager is interpreted as two words: Task and Manager, while
"Task Manager" is interpreted as a single word.
On Windows NT, for goScreen to be able to see the names of running processes you need PSAPI.DLL. This is a standard Microsoft DLL, but not all NT computers have it installed. This DLL is not included in the goScreen package.
Another rule-oriented feature (see previous paragraph please) is assignment of a window
to a specific screen page.
One possible scenario is as follows: imagine that you have multiple applications starting at Windows start-up
and would like to have them running on different screen pages. How to tell goScreen to relocate them
to a "proper" page? The answer is - define assignment rules.
Another scenario may be like this: a mail program which runs on an inactive
screen page notifies you that there was a new message - "Would you like to read it now?".
You open the message, read it and go to another page without closing it. Now, where have you left that
message? It takes time to recall. Possible solution would be to define a rule for goScreen to relocate
all messages to the page where the mail program is running.
Invoke the Page properties dialog box,
go to the Applications pane and define a rule.
What is important to note here is that applications are not relocated automatically,
that is not unless you ask for it. From the other hand, such a request is simple: each time you
switch screen pages or invoke clean command, all the windows on
the current, or previous page are being examined and sent to appropriate page(s), if necessary.
Say for instance you want all windows created by Notepad.exe to be assigned to page 3 and have
defined the rule for it. When on page 2, for example, you can open a text document in Notepad,
edit it and still be on page 2. But when you switch to page 1, goScreen will relocate your
Notepad window to page 3. So, next time you go to page 2 you will not find your document there.
Do not tell me it is inconvenient (if you think it is - do not define any rules for it). Now,
instead of remembering where you have left that window, you are supposed to remember
where that window should be next time you want it.
What if you specify rules, described in previous paragraph, for several screen pages?
- goScreen will show such windows whenever you go to any one of pages for which you did it.
For example, you have specified the rule "keep all windows created by notepad.exe on this page" both
for pages 1 and 3. Being on page 1, you start notepad. Then you go to page 2. Notepad is left on page 1.
Then you go to page 3. goScreen relocates notepad from page 1 to page 3.
It is evident, that if you specify such rule for all screen pages, the result
will be the same as if you have made such window sticky.
Invoke the Properties dialog box,
go to the Keyboard or Mouse pane, select a command, and specify key combinations you like.
Setting up your own keyboard hot keys and mouse hot zones is necessary to avoid
possible conflicts with other applications.
[New in version 4.0]
GoScreen is also capable of playing a sound when such a command gets executed.
There are four page switching commands: Previous/Next, Back/Forward. They let you to
go to the previous or next screen page in numerical order or in order of usage.
Other commands include:
There is no way to assign a desktop icon to a specific screen page in goScreen. Still, one might want to consider this option: Create a desktop folder (Right click on the desktop, select New - Folder menu item, rename and open it), move some desktop shortcuts into it. Now, when this desktop folder is closed it will be shown on all screen pages, but when it is open one can assign it to a specific screen page. This possibly can help you to keep desktop icons in a more organized way.
This is similar to displaying the channel number on TV screen. Invoke the Properties dialog box, go to the Display pane and specify what to display, where and how: font, color, position [New in version 4.0] and transparency.
Stop the mouse cursor over the page button.
Stop the mouse cursor over the non-button area.
Stop the mouse cursor over the page button while holding Ctrl key down.
Stop the mouse cursor over the non-button area while holding Ctrl key down.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. In no event the author of this program is liable to you for damages, including any general, special, incidental, or consequential damages arising out of the use or inability to use the program. The entire risk as to the quality and performance of the program is with you.
This is a shareware program. You may try it for a period of one month. After that all the navigation features "expire". To be able to use the full-featured product afterwards you must purchase a usage license - that is register goScreen. The product is licensed, not sold to you. As a result of the registration, you will be given a special alpha-numeric key that "unlocks" the program and prevents it from expiration in the future. That is, you will be using the same program after the registration. I send registration keys by e-mail.
There are two types of registration keys that you may acquire: personal and corporate:
For information of how to register goScreen, click here:
http://www.goscreen.info/register
Should you have any questions, comments or problems
please do not hesitate to write me to
andrew-guryanov@usa.net