Ricoh INFOPRINT XT GLD0-0025-01 Benutzerhandbuch

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not
 
have
 
to
 
start
 
at
 
the
 
same
 
column
 
location
 
as
 
the
 
second
 
keyword
 
of
 
another
 
entry.
 
You
 
might
 
want
 
to
 
use
 
a
 
specific
 
columnar
 
format,
 
for
 
readability,
 
as
 
you
 
make
 
entries.
 
After
 
you
 
create
 
the
 
manual
 
correlation
 
tables,
 
use
 
the
 
pdxtloadres
 
command
 
to
 
apply
 
the
 
updates.
 
Note:
  
If
 
Xerox
 
spacing
 
characters
 
in
 
fonts
 
cause
 
code
 
page
 
conflicts
 
after
 
you
 
manually
 
correlate
 
a
 
Xerox
 
font
 
to
 
an
 
AFP
 
font,
 
you
 
can
 
change
 
how
 
InfoPrint
 
XT
 
interprets
 
the
 
spacing
 
characters.
 
See
 
the
 
-b
 
command
 
option
 
in
 
Creating
 
manual
 
correlation
 
entries
 
for
 
single-byte
 
Xerox
 
fonts
 
To
 
make
 
manual
 
correlations
 
for
 
single-byte
 
fonts,
 
create
 
a
 
tab.mft
 
file
 
in
 
the
 
appropriate
 
metrics
 
directory.
 
In
 
the
 
table,
 
you
 
can
 
correlate
 
a
 
Xerox
 
font
 
to
 
an
 
AFP
 
coded
 
font,
 
to
 
an
 
AFP
 
character
 
set
 
and
 
code
 
page
 
pair,
 
or
 
to
 
an
 
AFP
 
page
 
segment.
 
The
 
syntax
 
for
 
single-byte
 
character
 
set
 
(SBCS)
 
font
 
entries
 
in
 
the
 
correlation
 
table
 
is:
 
F
  
XName
 
A2ETable
 
CFont
 
|
 
CSet
 
Cpage
 
|
 
PSeg
 
{Char
 
|
 
XChar}
 
[X=nn]
 
[Y=nn]
 
F
 
The
 
entry
 
is
 
an
 
SBCS
 
font.
 
XName
 
The
 
name
 
of
 
the
 
Xerox
 
font
 
in
 
uppercase,
 
without
 
the
 
.FNT
 
extension.
 
P0612C
 
is
 
an
 
example.
 
A2ETable
 
The
 
name
 
of
 
the
 
ASCII-to-EBCDIC
 
translation
 
table
 
that
 
InfoPrint
 
XT
 
uses.
 
Unless
 
instructed
 
otherwise
 
by
 
a
 
technical
 
support
 
representative,
 
this
 
value
 
is
 
X2AFP
.
 
CFont
 
The
 
name
 
of
 
the
 
AFP
 
coded
 
font
 
to
 
use
 
in
 
place
 
of
 
the
 
Xerox
 
font.
 
X0KY96
 
is
 
an
 
example.
 
CSet
 
CName
 
The
 
name
 
of
 
an
 
AFP
 
character
 
set
 
and
 
code
 
page
 
pair
 
to
 
use
 
in
 
place
 
of
 
the
 
Xerox
 
font.
 
C0H01030
 
T1H01030
 
is
 
an
 
example.
 
PSeg
 
{Char
 
|
 
XChar}
 
[X=
nn]
 
[Y=
nn]
 
PSeg
 
is
 
the
 
name
 
of
 
an
 
AFP
 
page
 
segment
 
to
 
use
 
in
 
place
 
of
 
one
 
character
 
in
 
the
 
Xerox
 
font.
 
You
 
can
 
use
 
these
 
methods
 
to
 
identify
 
the
 
character:
 
v
   
Char
 
specifies
 
the
 
literal
 
ASCII
 
character
 
in
 
the
 
font.
 
v
   
XChar
 
specifies
 
the
 
code
 
point
 
of
 
the
 
character
 
in
 
hexadecimal
 
notation.
 
If
 
you
 
have
 
access
 
to
 
a
 
Xerox
 
printer,
 
you
 
can
 
sample
 
the
 
font
 
to
 
determine
 
the
 
code
 
point.
These
 
are
 
examples
 
of
 
both
 
methods:
 
F
 
ABC
 
X2AFP
 
S1ABCA
 
A
 
  
F
 
ABC
 
X2AFP
 
S1ABC41
 
41
 
As
 
an
 
option,
 
you
 
can
 
also
 
adjust
 
the
 
positioning
 
of
 
the
 
character
 
that
 
the
 
page
 
segment
 
represents.
 
The
 
adjustments
 
that
 
you
 
make
 
are
 
relative
 
to
 
the
 
page
 
segment
 
when
 
you
 
look
 
at
 
it
 
in
 
the
 
portrait
 
orientation.
 
You
 
can
 
use
 
X=
nn
 
to
 
make
 
a
 
horizontal
 
adjustment.
 
nn
 
is
 
a
 
value
 
in
 
pels.
 
A
 
positive
 
value
 
moves
 
the
 
page
 
segment
 
to
 
the
 
right.
 
A
 
negative
 
value
 
moves
 
it
 
to
 
the
 
left.
 
Use
 
Y=
nn
 
to
 
make
 
a
 
vertical
 
adjustment.
 
A
 
positive
 
value
 
moves
 
the
 
page
 
segment
 
down
 
on
 
the
 
page.
 
A
 
negative
 
value
 
moves
 
it
 
up.
 
52
 
InfoPrint
 
XT
 
Guide
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