GM47/GM48 INTEGRATOR’S MANUAL

< >

The term enclosed in angle brackets is a syntactical

 

element. The brackets do not appear in the command

 

line.

[ ]

Square brackets are used to indicate that a certain item

 

is optional. For example, sub-parameters of a

 

command or an optional part of a response. The

 

brackets do not appear in the command line.

Value

The default values of the supported parameters are

 

indicated by using bold text when presenting the

 

value.

Other characters, including ‘?’, ‘=’, parenthesis, etc., appear in commands and responses as written.

The final result codes OK, ERROR, +CME ERROR: <err> and CMS ERROR:<err> (see sections 1.2.3, AT Response Syntax and 1.3, Error Codes) are not listed under “Possible Responses” for each AT command.

OK and ERROR are listed if these are the only possible responses.

1.2.2AT Command Syntax

The AT standard is a line-oriented command language. Each command is made up of the following three elements:

the prefix;

the body;

the termination character.

The prefix consists of the letters “AT”, which are derived from the first two letters of the word attention. The body is made up of the command, the parameter, and if applicable the associated values.

Commands may be combined in the same command line. Spaces between the individual bodies are ignored.

Basic Syntax Command

The format of basic syntax commands is as follows:

AT<command>[=][<parameter>]<CR>

Example! ATL=0<CR> (sets the volume of the speaker)

Additional commands may follow a command on the same command line without any character being required for separation. For the command D parameters, see the description for the command in question.

A version of the basic syntax is:

AT<command><parameter>

82

LZT 123 7263 R1C

Page 82
Image 82
Sony Ericsson GM48, GM47 manual Example! ATL=0CR sets the volume of the speaker