INFICON STC-2000A Thin Film Deposition Controller Operating Manual User Manual
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STC-2000A DEPOSITION CONTROLLER
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Manner in which relays and events are set or triggered. By providing several different types of output functions, counters and shift
registers can be implemented. See Section 5.6
Table 5.1: Glossary Of Terms continues on following page...
TC "I/O Programming: Glossary of Terms" \ft \l2
Input Function
This is the manner in which states and events are tested or examined. All states and events are examined or read with the same 'I'
input function. See Section 5.5
Output Function
The relational operators included are: greater than, less than and equal to.
Selection
This is a type of IF... THEN... ELSE conditional operator. If something is true, then use value A, if something is not true then use
value B. The selection is between two values (values A or B) and is based upon the truth or falsity of the main argument (something).
Arithmetic
The Arithmetic operators included are: multiply, divide, add and subtract.
Relational
A variable whose constituent parts are independent Boolean values combined in a single variable entity. See Section 5.2
AND, OR, NOT
These are logical operators. 'ANDing' can be thought of as relays in series, 'ORing' as relays in parallel, and 'NOTing' or
complementing as using the normally closed contacts instead of the normally open ones. (for complications of, see section x5.4) See
Section 5.2
Scalar
A variable with a range of 0...N. Also, a special non-Boolean type of scalar whose set is {0,1}. See Section 5.2
Bit Map Scalar (combined bit weights)
A testable condition of the Model 880. Examples of states are stopped, deposit, manual, idle, etc. A state does not have anything to
do with time (see Edges). See Section 5.3
Event
An event can be either triggered or tested. It is normally an internal occurrence in the Model 880. Examples of events are zeroing,
reaching the final thickness limit, etc. An event is triggered by an Edge.
see Section 5.3
Boolean
A Boolean state can take on only one of two values, commonly referred to as True (on) and False (off). See Section 5.2
Terms and Definitions
State
SECTION 5.XX
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