Terminal ID Table

Terminal

Model(s)

Terminal ID

USB

PC keyboard (HID)

124

 

Mac Keyboard

125

 

PC Keyboard (Japanese)

134

 

Serial (COM driver required)

130

 

HID POS

131

 

USB SurePOS Handheld

128

 

USB SurePOS Tabletop

129

 

IBM USB POS Tabletop Scanner/Scale (SurePOS)

140

Serial

RS232 TTL

000

 

RS232 True

000

 

RS485 (IBM-HHBCR 1+2, 46xx)

051

 

IBM Tabletop Scanner/Scale (SurePOS)

140

Keyboard

PS2 compatibles

003

Data Format Editor Commands

When working with the Data Format Editor, a virtual cursor is moved along your input data string. The following commands are used to both move this cursor to different positions, and to select, replace, and insert data into the final output. For examples that use the Data Format Editor commands, refer to Data Formatter on page 8-11.

Send Commands

Send all characters

F1 Include in the output message all of the characters from the input message, starting from current cursor position, followed by an insert character. Syntax = F1xx where xx stands for the insert character’s hex value for its ASCII code. Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), beginning on page A-3for decimal, hex and character codes.

Send a number of characters

F2 Include in the output message a number of characters followed by an insert character. Start from the current cursor position and continue for “nn” characters or through the last character in the input message, followed by character “xx.” Syntax = F2nnxx where nn stands for the numeric value (00-99) for the number of characters, and xx stands for the insert character’s hex value for its ASCII code.

Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), beginning on page A-3for decimal, hex and character codes.

F2 Example: Send a number of characters

Send the first 10 characters from the bar code above, followed by a carriage return. Command string: F2100D

F2 is the “Send a number of characters” command

10 is the number of characters to send

0D is the hex value for a CR

The data is output as: 1234567890

F2 and F1 Example: Split characters into 2 lines

Send the first 10 characters from the bar code above, followed by a carriage return, followed by the rest of the charac- ters.

Command string: F2100DF10D

F2 is the “Send a number of characters” command

10 is the number of characters to send for the first line

0D is the hex value for a CR

F1 is the “Send all characters” command

8 - 3

Page 119
Image 119
Honeywell 2700 manual Terminal ID Table, Data Format Editor Commands, Send Commands, Send all characters