
4 - 5
Send the first 10 characters from the bar code above, followed by a
carriage return, followed by the rest of the characters.
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
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 1234567890
ABCDEFGHIJ
<CR>
Send all characters up to a particular character
F3 Include in the output message all characters from the input message,
starting with the character at the current cursor position and continuing
to, but not including, the search character “ss,” followed by an insert
character. The cursor is moved forward to the “ss” character. Syntax
= F3ssxx where ss stands for the search character’s hex value for its
ASCII code, and xx stands for the insert character’s hex value for its
ASCII code.
Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-4 for
decimal, hex and character codes.
F3 Example: Send all characters up to a particular character
Using the bar code above, send all characters up to but not including
“D,” followed by a carriage return.
Command string: F3440D
F3 is the “Send all characters up to a particular character” command
44 is the hex value for a 'D”
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 1234567890ABC
<CR>
Send all characters up to a string
B9 Include in the output message all characters from the input message,
starting with the character at the current cursor position and continuing
to, but not including, the search string “s...s.” The cursor is moved
forward to the beginning of the “s...s” string. Syntax = B9nnnns...s
where nnnn stands for the length of the string, and s...s stands for the
string to be matched. The string is made up of hex values for the
characters in the string. Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code
Page 1252), beginning on page A-4 for decimal, hex and character
codes.
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