
2 If necessary, reposition the keyboard cursor to the location where you want to
paste the text.
3 If necessary, choose the insert or replace mode for the command entry area.
4 Click the middle mouse button to paste the text into the command line entry
area at the current cursor position.
Note
You should paste to the command line only when the command line is
expecting an address or a string. The characters from the entry buffer will be
treated as if they were typed from the keyboard. If the command line is
expecting keyword tokens, pasting can have unexpected results. For example,
pasting "delta" into an empty command line will generate a "Debugger
Execution Load_State ta" command!
Although a paste from the display area to the entry buffer affects all displayed
entry buffers in all open windows, a paste from the entry buffer to the
command line only affects the command line of the window in which you are
currently working.
See “To copy-and-paste to the entry buffer” for information about pasting
information from the display into the entry buffer.
To use the action keys
1 If the action key uses the contents of the entry buffer, place the desired
information in the entry buffer.
2 Position the mouse pointer over the action key and click the action key.
Action keys are user-definable pushbuttons that perform interface or system
functions. Action keys can use information from the entry buffer — this
makes it possible to create action keys that are more general and flexible.
Several action keys are predefined when you first start the debugger’s
graphical interface. You can use the predefined action keys to make, load,
Chapter 3: Entering Debugger Commands
Using Menus, the Entry Buffer, and Action Keys
67
Summary of Contents for B1476 68020
Page 1: ...User s Guide HP B1476 68020 030 Debugger Emulator ...
Page 25: ...Part 1 Quick Start Guide ...
Page 26: ...Part 1 2 ...
Page 39: ......
Page 76: ...Chapter 2 Getting Started with the Standard Interface To end the debugging session 52 ...
Page 77: ...Part 2 User s Guide ...
Page 78: ...Part 2 54 ...
Page 112: ...Chapter 3 Entering Debugger Commands Viewing Debugger Status 88 ...
Page 152: ...Chapter 4 Loading and Executing Programs Using the Debugger with the Branch Validator 128 ...
Page 153: ...5 Viewing Code and Data How to find and display source code and memory contents 129 ...
Page 206: ...Chapter 5 Viewing Code and Data If problems occur when using simulated I O 182 ...
Page 230: ...Chapter 6 Making Trace Measurements If tracing is not triggered as expected 206 ...
Page 270: ...Chapter 8 Using Macros and Command Files Using Command Files 246 ...
Page 307: ...10 Configuring the Emulator How to configure the emulator for your target system 283 ...
Page 321: ......
Page 353: ...Part 3 Concept Guide ...
Page 354: ...Part 3 330 ...
Page 355: ...11 X Resources and the Graphical Interface An introduction to X resources 331 ...
Page 368: ...Chapter 11 X Resources and the Graphical Interface 344 ...
Page 369: ...Part 4 Reference ...
Page 370: ...Part 4 346 ...
Page 371: ...12 Debugger Commands Detailed descriptions of command line commands 347 ...
Page 524: ...Trace Trigger Chapter 12 Trace Trigger 500 ...
Page 574: ...Chapter 13 Expressions and Symbols in Debugger Commands Symbolic Referencing 550 ...
Page 575: ...14 Reserved Symbols 551 ...
Page 579: ...15 Predefined Macros 555 ...
Page 616: ...Chapter 15 Predefined Macros write 592 ...
Page 617: ...16 Debugger Error Messages A list of the error messages generated by the debugger 593 ...
Page 638: ...Chapter 17 Debugger Versions 614 ...
Page 639: ...Part 5 Installation Guide ...
Page 640: ...Part 5 616 ...
Page 641: ...18 Installation How to install the debugger software on your computer 617 ...
Page 671: ...Chapter 18 Installation Configuring Terminals for Use with the Debugger 647 ...
Page 722: ...Index 698 ...