Teledyne MODEL T703 Manual Do Utilizador

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Operating The T703 over the Serial I/O Ports 
Teledyne API T703 Calibrator Operation Manual 
114  
 
  Floating-point numbers are used to specify continuously variable values such as temperature set points, 
time intervals, warning limits, voltages, etc.  They consist of an optional plus or minus sign, followed by 
zero or more digits, an optional decimal point and zero or more digits.  (At least one digit must appear 
before or after the decimal point.)  Scientific notation is not permitted.  For example, +1.01234.5678-
0.1
1 are all valid floating-point numbers. 
  Boolean expressions are used to specify the value of variables or I/O signals that may assume only two 
values.  They are denoted by the keywords ON and OFF
  Text strings are used to represent data that cannot be easily represented by other data types, such as 
data channel names, which may contain letters and numbers.  They consist of a quotation mark, 
followed by one or more printable characters, including spaces, letters, numbers, and symbols, and a 
final quotation mark.  For example, “a”“1”“123abc”, and “()[]<>” are all valid text strings.  It is not 
possible to include a quotation mark character within a text string. 
  Some commands allow you to access variables, messages, and other items.  When using these 
commands, you must type the entire name of the item; you cannot abbreviate any names. 
7.1.7.4. Status Reporting 
Reporting of status messages as an audit trail is one of the three principal uses for the RS-232 interface (the 
other two being the command line interface for controlling the instrument and the download of data in electronic 
format).  You can effectively disable the reporting feature by setting the interface to quiet mode (Section 7.1.4, 
Table 7-1). 
Status reports include warning messages, calibration and diagnostic status messages.  Refer to Appendix A-3 
for a list of the possible messages, and this for information on controlling the instrument through the RS-232 
interface. 
General Message Format 
All messages from the instrument (including those in response to a command line request) are in the format: 
X DDD:HH:MM [Id] MESSAGE<CRLF> 
Where: 
 
X  
is a command type designator, a single character indicating the message type, as 
shown in the Table 6-27. 
DDD:HH:MM  is the time stamp, the date and time when the message was issued.  It consists of the 
Day-of-year (DDD) as a number from 1 to 366, the hour of the day (HH) as a number 
from 00 to 23, and the minute (MM) as a number from 00 to 59. 
[ID]  
is the calibrator ID, a number with 1 to 4 digits. 
MESSAGE  
is the message content that may contain warning messages, Test Functions, variable 
values, etc. 
<CRLF>  
is a carriage return / line feed pair, which terminates the message. 
The uniform nature of the output messages makes it easy for a host computer to parse them into an easy 
structure.  Keep in mind that the front panel display does not give any information on the time a message was 
issued, hence it is useful to log such messages for trouble-shooting and reference purposes.  Terminal 
emulation programs such as HyperTerminal can capture these messages to text files for later review. 
07223B DCN6378