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9560 Transaction Manager User's Manual - Intermec

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<strong>9560</strong> <strong>Transaction</strong> <strong>Manager</strong> User’s <strong>Manual</strong><br />

8-4<br />

Entering Data Entry Commands<br />

You enter data commands in three ways:<br />

• Typing commands or control codes from a 1700 keyboard or terminal. To<br />

enter a command as data, precede the command with the DLE character,<br />

Ctrl P.<br />

• Downloading data from the host computer. The host system may send<br />

commands one at a time or combine up to 254 characters in a command<br />

string. Use the host communications protocol currently in effect to send<br />

commands.<br />

• Scanning bar code labels in this manual or labels you make yourself. You<br />

can combine several Data Entry commands into a single label of up to 48<br />

characters.<br />

The reader transmits the data according to the current configuration parameter<br />

settings. For more information on configuring the reader, see Chapter 6,<br />

“Configuring the <strong>9560</strong>.”<br />

Regardless of how you enter the Data Entry commands, several general rules<br />

apply:<br />

• The reader executes concatenated commands in the order that they appear<br />

in the string. If the reader finds an invalid command in the string, it sounds<br />

three low beeps and ignores all subsequent commands.<br />

• A string may contain preambles, postambles, commands, and data. The<br />

order is: Preamble A, Preamble B, commands, data, Postamble.<br />

• When the reader is running IRL, the Data Entry commands operate<br />

differently . For example, the Enter command returns from an IRL input<br />

statement rather than transmitting data to the host. For more information,<br />

refer to the IRL Programming Reference <strong>Manual</strong>.<br />

• Some Data Entry commands have equivalent Configuration commands;<br />

entering a Data Entry command overrides the Configuration command for<br />

the current operation, but does not change the configuration setting.<br />

For example, if the reader is configured for Computer Response Required<br />

mode (CRRM enabled) and the reader receives an Exit Computer Response<br />

Required command, then the reader exits Computer Response Required<br />

mode. Prompting Configuration still displays Computer Response<br />

Required, even if the power is turned off or a Reset label is scanned.

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