Many of the early users of PCs were mainframe programmers or users, who were accustomed to and liked the ISPF panel system. This led several companies to create partial clones of ISPF that run on
DOS,
OS/2,
Windows or
Unix PC systems. In 1984 IBM introduced the
EZ-VU dialog manager for DOS PCs, and later
OS/2. In 1991 Tritus, Inc introduced Tritus SPF (TSPF), a program to allow use of mainframe ISPF applications and edit macros written in
REXX on DOS, OS/2 and Windows; the last release was 1.2.8 in 1994. Freeware ISPF-style editors for Windows include
SPF/SE and SPFlite. In 1994 IBM introduced a built-in downloadable client program called the ISPF Workstation Agent (WSA) that can install and run on OS/2, Windows and selected Unix workstations; the z/OS version of ISPF only includes WSA for Windows and selected Unix workstations. WSA communicates directly with ISPF on z/OS and provides a point-and-click
graphical user interface automatically. The ISPF Workstation Agent can be used to edit PC based files from the ISPF editor to take advantage of the editor's strengths. ==See also==