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9560 Transaction Manager User's Manual - Intermec

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Data Communications and Operating Options<br />

• The EOF (End of File) is only transmitted after the last record of a file.<br />

• Time is never appended to the transmitted files.<br />

Preambles and the postamble are described more completely in Chapter 8,<br />

“Data Entry Commands.”<br />

EOR Characters (End of Record)<br />

5<br />

Your destination for the data from the <strong>9560</strong> may require an end of record<br />

character in the data files. If you enable EOR, the reader adds the EOR<br />

character at the end of all the individual records within the file. EOR is disabled<br />

in Polling Mode D, Multi-Drop, and Point-to-Point protocols.<br />

EOF Characters (End of File)<br />

Your destination for the data from the <strong>9560</strong> may require an end of file character<br />

in the data file. The EOF character follows the last record transmitted within<br />

any record block, regardless of the size of the record block. If you enable EOF,<br />

the reader adds the EOF character after the last EOR character (if EOR is<br />

enabled).<br />

EOF is disabled in Point-to-Point protocol. The default EOF character in Polling<br />

Mode D and Multi-Drop protocols is SOH.<br />

Record<br />

A record is a maximum of 128 data characters that can be stored in the reader’s<br />

memory. A record can be:<br />

• Data from a regular label<br />

• Data from several multiple-read labels<br />

• Data from regular or multiple-read labels when the reader is in Accumulate mode<br />

• Data entered from a 1700 keyboard or terminal keyboard<br />

Records per Block<br />

For all protocols except User-Defined protocol, the number of Records per<br />

Block is one. You can set Records per Block from 0 to 99 in User-Defined<br />

protocol. Setting this value to zero transmits the whole file within a single<br />

block.<br />

5-11

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