Changes to SD in the Fall 1986 delivery: 1. Wildcarding can now be used in directory names. For example, the command "SD .PRO*" would go to the first directory under your cur- rent default, whose name begins with "PRO". 2. The "SD \" and "SD >" operations will not flow from one master dir- ectory into the adjacent one. 3. Options now exist to either (a.) not automatically execute SDENTRY and SDEXIT procedures, or (b.) execute them, with a notice that they were executed, or (c.) execute them without notice (the default). 4. A new procedure, SDCONTEXT, saves and restores the context of SD (i.e. the current default and the last seven defaults) over logouts. Changes to SD in the Spring 1986 delivery: 1. Entering "SD ..SUB" will now work as "SD . .SUB" (i.e. the blank be- ween the periods is no longer necessary). (Note that DCL in some cases allows you to omit the blank after the verb.) 2. Entering "SD 000000.AAA" will set the default to [AAA], instead of the previous [000000.AAA]. Similarly, "SD 000000.000000.AAA", etc. will set default to [AAA]. 3. Entering "SD ^" when in [AAA] did not move you to [000000]. It now does, IF you have SYSPRV. My philosophy is that unprivileged users do not need to browse in [000000]. 4. If ROOT is a rooted directory, you can now "SD ROOT:[000000]" without error, and if in ROOT:[A] you can now "SD ^". Example: $ SD SYS$MANAGER SYS$SYSROOT:[SYSMGR] $ SD ^ SYS$SYSDEVICE:[SYS0] $ . . . 5. There are new operations "SD \" and "SD >" (note distinction between the new "SD >" and the previously-available "SD >XXX"). See the help file or document for definitions. 6. You can use logical names which contain file names, types, versions, etc. SD will go to the file's directory. Example: $ DEFINE ZZZ DISK:[DIR]FILE.TYP;99 $ SD ZZZ DISK:[DIR] $ . . . 7. Entering "SD >XXX" from a master directory will now work; before, it did nothing (note that this has same effect as "SD XXX"). 8. "SD *" will now correctly display underscore characters which appear in directory names.