
Message Formats
Appendix A
A7
Hex
Binary ASCII Display[1] Hex Binary ASCII Display[1]
55 1010101 U (none) 6A 1101010 j (none)
56 1010110 V 6B 1101011 k
57 1010111 W 6C 1101100 l
58 1011000 X 6D 1101101 m
59 1011001 Y 6E 1101110 n
5A 1011010 Z 6F 1101111 o
5B 1011011 [ 70 1110000 p
5C 1011100 \ 71 1110001 q
5D 1011101 ] 72 1110010 r
5E 1011110 73 1110011 s
5F 1011111 _ 74 1110100 t
60 1100000 \ 75 1110101 u
61 1100001 a 76 1110110 v
62 1100010 b 77 1110111 w
63 1100011 c 78 1111000 x
64 1100100 d 79 1111001 y
65 1100101 e 7A 1111010 z
66 1100110 f 7B 1111011
67 1100111 g 7C 1111100 |
68 1101000 h 7D 1111101
69 1101001 i 7E 1111110 ~
7F 1111111 DEL +
[1]
Will be display when Control Code Display option is set on.
8. Type G to select auto linefeed off.
9. Type I to select control code display on.
10.Press ENTER to put these selections into effect.
Now as you send a command from the 1775–KA or the RS–232–C
device, ASCII characters will appear on the industrial terminal. Use
Table A.A to find the command bytes (DLE, FNC, etc.) that these
characters represent. You may not care what the actual numeric value is
for control characters such as DLE STX; on the other hand, you will
probably want to know the numeric value of DATA sent with a command.
Figure A.3 shows an example of a command as it might appear on the line
monitor, and how it is translated.
Comentarios a estos manuales