-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Names of the chess engines and working directories in which they are to be run. The second chess engine is started only\r
- in Two Machines (match) mode. These arguments are parsed as filenames; that is, the \\ character is interpreted literally, not as a C-style escape.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 argument specifies the initial working directory for the chess engine. It should usually be the dire\r
-ctory where the engine and its working files are installed. If }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 is not an absolute pathname, it is interpreted relative to the directory from which WinBoard.exe itself was loaded. The }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 \r
- argument is ignored if the chess engine is being run on a remote machine (see firstHost and secondHost below). The default value for }{\i\f1 dir }{\f1 "", meaning that the chess engine is expected to be installed in the same directory as WinBoard.\r
-\par The }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 argument is actually the command line to the chess engine, so if the engine itself needs command line arguments, you can include them by enclosing }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 \r
- in single or double quotes. If the engine name or an engine argument has a space in it, use single quotes around the whole }{\i\f1 command, }{\f1 and inside them use double quotes around eac\r
-h item that contains spaces. If the engine name has more than one period in it (for example, }{\f2 QChess1.5.exe}{\f1 ), you must include the "}{\f2 .exe}{\f1 " extension; otherwise you can leave it out. The default value for }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 \r
- is "", which brings up the startup dialog to ask which engines you want.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+Names of the chess engines and working directories in which they are to be run. The second chess engine is started only in Two Machines (match) mode. These arguments are parsed as filenames; that is, the \\ \r
+character is interpreted literally, not as a C-style escape.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 \r
+ argument specifies the initial working directory for the chess engine. It should usually be the directory where the engine and its working files are installed. If }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 is not an absolute p\r
+athname, it is interpreted relative to the directory from which WinBoard.exe itself was loaded. The }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 argument is ignored if the chess engine is being run on a remote machine (see firstHost and secondHost below). The default value for }{\r
+\i\f1 dir }{\f1 "", meaning that the chess engine is expected to be installed in the same directory as WinBoard.\r
+\par The }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 argument is actually the command line to the chess engine, so if the engine itself needs command line arguments, you can include them by enclosing }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 in sing\r
+le or double quotes. If the engine name or an engine argument has a space in it, use single quotes around the whole }{\i\f1 command, }{\f1 \r
+and inside them use double quotes around each item that contains spaces. If the engine name has more than one period in it (for example, }{\f2 QChess1.5.exe}{\f1 ), you must include the "}{\f2 .exe}{\f1 \r
+" extension; otherwise you can leave it out. The default value for }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 is "", which brings up the startup dialog to ask which engines you want.\r