After you have created your own characters with our programs, certain keys that you seldom use will generate the user-defined char- acters. For example, you will be able to type < to print .

Your user-defined characters can be utilitarian or imaginative, anything from a scientific symbol to script letters for your initials. Just follow the simple steps below.

The only restriction on your creativity is that the characters you define must follow the same rules that govern the rest of the characters printed by the LX-86. They must fit into an 11 x 9 matrix, no dot can overlap another, and either the top or the bottom row must be empty. Look at the enlargements of sample letters in Chapter 3 to see how the standard IX-86 characters are designed.

Designing Process

Suppose that you want to print the scientific symbol for the planet Mercury. Although the LX-86 has a number of special symbols, that is not one of them. You can, however, create and print such a symbol with ease. First, use a grid like the one in Figure 8-lto plan where to place the dots.

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Figure 8-1.Grid for designing draft characters

Because the last two columns are reserved for the space between characters, we have not included them in the grid. And since most characters do not use the bottom two rows, we have used a heavy line to indicate the usual lower limit for an IX-86 character.

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