Loadstar

Loadstar was a diskmagazine for the Commodore 64, originally a sister publication to Softdisk for the Apple (and other later Softdisk publications like Softdisk PC), but later spun off as a separate small company which managed to outlast those publications. For much of its run, Fender Tucker was its editor, and later publisher.

Disk format
Loadstar was published originally on 5 1/4" floppy disks of the Commodore 1541 disk format. Later other formats became available including downloadable disk images for those using C-64 emulators on other platforms.

Program files; launching the issue
Many programs on the issues were in Commodore BASIC tokenized files, and these files often had names beginning with "B." (B and a period). Some others were machine-language. The main program file was named "STAR", so you could start the issue with. You could also  to load the first program on the disk, which is where "Loadstar" got its name. On some issues, a program called "!" was actually the first on the disk, before even "STAR", apparently launching an issue title screen or some such thing before launching the main issue menu.

Text files
Text files with diskmagazine articles, editorials, program instructions, and the like were stored as PRG-type files (usually the indicator of programs), although they were actually text (with a few characters having special meanings to the text presenter program). In a Commodore disk-and-file-viewer like DirMaster it may help to change the file type to SEQ instead (DirMaster has a command to do this), where it will then be viewable as a text file. The files are in PETSCII, in the upper-and-lower-case mode, formatted for 40 columns. Filenames begin with "T." (T followed by a period).

FEATURES file
A file named FEATURES was the main menu used by the presenter program, listing the items on the disk. This had the following sequence of lines (separated by CR as was normal for Commodore text files):


 * Issue number
 * Issue Title
 * Issue Subtitle
 * Blank line ending issue header

Then a sequence of sections for each article/feature:


 * Name of feature
 * Subtitle/description
 * Filename of text file (omitting the "T." prefix)
 * A number (e.g., 100 or 111); perhaps something to do with which disk the article is on?
 * Another number (seems to usually be 1)
 * Blank line ending item

Other files
A number of other file types might be present on an issue, including graphics, music, etc., sometimes with file extensions to distinguish them. Most were stored as type PRG. Dummy files with dashed lines as their names were used as separators in the disk directory to delineate which files were part of which program or feature; these separator files were of type DEL and didn't take any disk space.

Links

 * Wikipedia article