Copying and pasting crosspoint data, Copy – Grass Valley CRSC v.3.2 User Manual
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Router Crosspoints Page
Page Basics
Copying and Pasting Crosspoint Data
Using the Copy and Paste commands (available in the context menu) you can transfer cross-
point data to and from any file in your file system that will accept the data (which is plain text).
Microsoft Excel, Word, and Notepad are suitable file formats.
You can copy or paste a selected part of a crosspoint as small as a single row, or you can copy or
paste entire matrix. Any set of selected rows will always be contiguous.
Copy
To copy a portion of a crosspoint matrix (to the clipboard), select a set of rows in the displayed
crosspoint matrix. Then type Ctrl-C or select Copy from the context menu.
To copy an entire crosspoint matrix (to the clipboard), deselect all rows in the displayed cross-
point matrix. Then type Ctrl-C or select Copy from the context menu.
A copy places the data on the Windows “clipboard.” As long as the data remain on the clipboard,
you can paste it any document that will accept the data.
This is an example of a range of crosspoint data copied to NotePad:
Load Salvo
Opens a salvo file and executes it. A salvo is a “snapshot” of the entire cros-
spoint matrix that has been saved earlier.
See
Save As Salvo
Saves the entire crosspoint matrix as a salvo file (a “snapshot”) for later use.
See
Jump to . . .
Opens the ‘Jump to . . .’ dialog. This command causes CRSC to display the
specified input and output in the crosspoint view.
See
Diagonal Take
Opens the ‘Diagonal Take’ dialog. In this dialog, you can connect a contig-
uous range of inputs to a contiguous range of physical outputs. For exam-
ple, input 1 to output 1, input 2 to output 2, and so on.
You can click Reverse in the dialog to obtain a reverse diagonal take.
See
Range Take
Opens the ‘Range Take’ dialog. Using this dialog, you can connect one
input to a contiguous range of outputs.
See
Menu Option
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