
I suggest that you do not drop the .HTM files you drag from the
Web Explorer on the desktop.  Instead, open a file folder and use it
as the destination for the Web pages you drag from the Web Explorer.
I have the working directroy in the PMStripper program object set to
the same directory where the .HTM files are dropped.

If you used the install program to install PMStripper, the file
associations have been set to .HTM and .HTML. This means that you
do not need to keep the program object on the desktop to be able to
double click on a .HTM or HTML file and load it into PMStripper.

Install PMStripper as the HTML source viewer in the Web Explorer
instead of the OS/2 system editor E, and you can use the Ctrl+V
keystroke combination to load the Web page source directectly into
PMStripper.  This will eliminate the need to save the Web Page to disk
before using PMStripper.

When installed as the HTML source viewer, PMStripper will look in the
Web Explorer working directory to see if the PMSTRIP.INI file exists
before checking the environment variable. 

When PMStripper is installed as the HTML source code viewer, PMStripper
displays characters from the codepage 850 character set when it is
launched from Web Explorer.  If your default codepage is 850, this is
normal.  For those users whose default codepage is 437, saving a stripped
file may result in unexpected characters in the stripped text.  Evidently,
Web Explorer sets the codepage to 850 and any application started by it
inherits that codepage setting instead of the default codepage.
