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Programming
How the Commands are Described
09/14/2009 TTP 2000 Technical Manual P1002902-002
How the Commands are Described
Mnemonic
Is the popular command name that should be easy to remember.
Hex
Give the command in hex representation
Decimal
Give the command in decimal representation
Values
n1, n2, etc. represent values that you specify to control how the command behaves. These are
different for each command and are explained in the text that follows each command
description.
Examples
Command examples are formatted in Courier and typed in the same way as used in the
Zebra Toolbox:
<ESC>&P<1><19>
Where <ESC> means the escape character 27 (hexadecimal 1B). Numbers between less-than
and greater-than characters, for example <1><19>, means 1 and 19 decimal. When the
numbers indicate a hex value, a leading h and then a space is placed before the hex value
(<h 1><h 13>).
Description of command
Mnemonic
Decimal representation of command
Hex representation of command
Example • <65>, <h 41> and A are three different ways of expressing the character A.