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Atari 400 - Page 61

Atari 400
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The
RETURN
key
is
an example
of
a key
which
does
not
put
a character
on
the screen.
When
you
are using the
BASIC
language in
your
Atari,
the
RETURN
key acts
as
an
ENTER
key.
You
use
it
to
enter information
into
the
part
of
the com-
puter
that
actually does the
thinking
(or calcu-
lating). As
you
type, letters and numbers appear
on the
screen,
but
the computer
doesn't
try
to
do
anything
with
those characters until
you
press the
RETURN
key.
This means
that
pressing
RETURN
does more than tell the computer
to
begin a
new
line;
it
also tells the
computer
to
act
on
whatever
information
is
in the line
that
you
just
typed.
The
computer recognizes
only
a very specific set
of
words
called
commands.
For example,
if
you
typed in the command
to
LOAD a program and
then pressed the
RETURN
key.
the computer
would
load the program from
your
cartridge,
cassette,
or
disk
into
the computer's memory
You'll learn some
of
the
BASIC
commands in the
section on using the
BASIC
language.
59