Talk:DOS Shell

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[edit] TUI/GUI

Is the distinction that fine? It did have a graphics mode...

Yes it did, you could start it either with dosshell /g, or choose the desired display resolution from the settings. I can even provide with some screenshots, but I haven't ever edited wikipedia (or uploaded images into wiki[p/m]edia, for that matter), so I guess I'll leave it for someone else to do. 82.128.200.230 17:34, 12 September 2007 (UTC)

It had a graphics mode, though the File Services portion of the shell didn't use it much. It displayed symbols (for disks, files and directories) that were not available in text mode. That disqualifies it as a TUI, as per the TUI article.--74.229.8.169 (talk) 04:59, 8 December 2007 (UTC)

First Criticism: ::This statement is incorrect at least for version 4.01. The "mem" command executed before running dosshell and from within dosshell shows that only 7 KB were used. It seems that just like Norton Commander, DOSSHELL was composed of a "resident" part and of a "transient" part, which was removed from memory during the execution of other programs.

It's been a while, but I seem to distinctly remember that it had a resident portion that re-loaded the shell when the launched application terminated. I'm quite sure the first versions didn't take up 384k, their usually wasn't that much available.