
2009/06/29
CHAPTER 4 HP-GL/2 - 18
7.3. Pen Control and Plot Instructions
Instruction Function
PU Pen
Up
PD Pen
Down
PA Plot
Absolute
PR
Relative Coordinate Pen Move
AA
Absolute Arc Plot
AR
Relative Arc Plot
AT
Absolute Three Point Arc
RT
Relative Three Point Arc
PE Polyline
Encoded
CI Circle
BR Bezier
Relative
BZ Bezier
Absolute
PU - Pen up
PU [ X,Y [,...]] [;]
X ; X coordinate of the cursor movement destination
Y ; Y coordinate of the cursor movement destination
•
X and Y are either relative or absolute, depending on whether a PA or a PR was the last plot command
executed. The absolute coordinates are set as default.
•
You can specify as many coordinate pairs as you wish. The cursor moves to each point in turn without
drawing.
•
Using this instruction without a parameter field raises the pen without changing the cursor position.
•
Coordinates are specified in the currently selected unit.
•
In symbol mode PU draws the specified symbol at each point in the parameter list.
•
In polygon mode the specified coordinate pairs are placed in the polygon buffer.
•
If an odd number of coordinates are specified, the final (unpaired) coordinate is ignored.
PD - Pen down
PD [ X, Y [,...]] [;]
X ; X coordinate of the cursor movement destination
Y ; Y coordinate of the cursor movement destination
•
X and Y are either relative or absolute, depending on whether a PA or a PR was the last plot command
executed. The absolute coordinates are the default setting.
•
You can specify as many coordinate pairs as you wish. The cursor moves to each point in turn, drawing
lines on the page.
•
Using this instruction without a parameter lowers the pen without changing the cursor position.
•
Coordinates are specified in the currently selected unit.
•
In symbol mode PD draws the specified symbol at each defined point on the x- and y-axis.
•
In polygon mode the specified coordinate pairs are placed in the polygon buffer.
•
If an odd number of coordinates are specified, the final (unpaired) coordinate is ignored.
Summary of Contents for HL-2600CN Series
Page 4: ......
Page 15: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION ...
Page 20: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 6 ...
Page 21: ...7 17 2009 CHAPTER 2 PCL 1 CHAPTER 2 PCL PRINTER CONTROL LANGUAGE ...
Page 129: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 3 PCL5C 1 CHAPTER 3 PCL5C ...
Page 147: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 4 HP GL 2 1 CHAPTER 4 HP GL 2 GRAPHICS LANGUAGE ...
Page 200: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 4 HP GL 2 54 ...
Page 201: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 5 PJL 1 CHAPTER 5 PJL PRINTER JOB LANGUAGE ...
Page 276: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 6 EPSON 1 CHAPTER 6 EPSON FX 850 ...
Page 304: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 7 IBM PROPRINTER 1 CHAPTER 7 IBM PROPRINTER XL ...
Page 325: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 7 IBM PROPRINTER 22 ...
Page 326: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 8 BAR CODE CONTROL 1 CHAPTER 8 BAR CODE CONTROL ...
Page 337: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 9 HP GL 1 CHAPTER 9 HP GL GRAPHICS LANGUAGE ...
Page 364: ...2009 06 29 CHAPTER 9 HP GL 28 ...
Page 365: ...2009 06 29 CARBON COPY FUNCTION 1 CHAPTER 10 CARBON COPY FUNCTION ...
Page 373: ...2009 06 29 APPENDIX A COMPARISON LIST 1 APPENDIX A COMPARISON LIST ...
Page 475: ...2009 06 29 APPENDIX C HBP MODE COMMANDS 14 ...
Page 485: ...2009 06 29 APPENDIX D REFERENCE LIST OF MX 2000 4000 5000 7000 SERIES UNIQUE COMMANDS 10 ...