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Xerox ALLY PLUSTM 6287 User Manual

Page 63

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Page 3-23

CONFIGURATION

Note: In either trigger method, the only valid characters following the

trigger sequence are the numerals 0 through 9 and the letters A through F.

In the one-trigger method, all invalid characters are translated and printed

after exiting transparency mode. In the two-trigger method, any invalid

character acts as a terminator unless a terminator has been defined with

Option 68 or 69.
In the one-trigger method, the user selects the trigger, using any single

character that is not commonly found in the printable data stream (see

Options 63 and 65). The one-trigger mode requires a count byte following

the trigger that tells the ALLY PLUS how many pairs of additional

characters will follow the count byte (the count byte is not included in the

count). In the following examples, we use the cent sign (¢) as the trigger

character:
To send 1 ASCII escape character requires 5 input characters — the trigger

(¢), the hexadecimal count byte (01) and the hexadecimal ASCII escape

character (1B):

¢011B

To send the Xerox 4045 reset sequence requires 13 characters — the trigger

(¢), the hexadecimal count byte (05) and the hexadecimal reset sequence

(1B2B580D0A):

¢051B2B580D0A

In the two-trigger method, the user selects the trigger using any two

characters that are not commonly found together in the printable data

stream (see Options 63-66). In this method, no count byte is required.

Rather, all pairs of bytes following the triggers are combined until

terminated with an invalid character (valid characters are 0-9 and A-F).
Note: The system may insert an NL command (an invalid character) in the

data stream. This will terminate two-trigger transparency unless the

terminator is restricted to a specific invalid character with Option 68 or 69.

Option #67 gives the user the choice of printing or discarding the

terminator.
In the following examples, we use a cent sign (¢) and a dollar sign ($) as the

trigger sequence. Note that in the examples, a cent sign (an invalid

character) is also used as the terminator.
To send 1 ASCII escape character requires 5 input characters — the first

trigger (¢), the second trigger ($), the hexadecimal ASCII escape character

(1B) and an invalid character/terminator (¢):

¢$1B¢