prog.book : chapter1.fm 25 Mon Feb 15 09:24:37 1999
Power Meter Remote Operation
Making Measurements
HP E4418B/E4419B Programming Guide
1-25
Example 4 - Specifying the Resolution Parameter
The previous examples detailed the use of the expected value and source
list parameters. The resolution parameter is used to set the resolution of
the specified window. This parameter does not affect the resolution of the
HP-IB data, however it does affect the auto averaging setting (refer to
Figure 1-3 on page 1-49).
Since the filter length used for a channel with auto-averaging enabled is
dependent on the window resolution setting, a conflict arises when a given
channel is set up in both windows and the resolution settings are
different. In this case, the higher resolution setting is used to determine
the filter length.
The following example uses the resolution parameter to specify a
resolution setting of 3. This setting represents 3 significant digits if the
measurement suffix is W or %, and 0.01 dB if the suffix is dB or dBm (for
further details on the resolution parameter refer to the commands in
Chapter 2, “MEASurement Instructions”). Also, in this example the
expected power and source list parameters are defaulted. The expected
power value will be left unchanged at its current setting. The source list
parameter will be defaulted as described in the note on page 1-18. Note
that as the source list parameter is the last specified parameter you do not
have to specify
DEF
.
Using
READ?
Some fine tuning of the above program segment can be carried out for
example, by setting the trigger delay off. The following program segment
assumes that channel A is currently being measured on the upper window.
ABOR1
CONF1 DEF,3
TRIG1:DEL:AUTO OFF
READ1?
Using
INITiate and FETCh?
ABOR1
Aborts channel A.
CONF1 DEF,3
Configures the upper window to make a
measurement using the current setting of the
expected power and source list and a resolution
setting of 3.
READ1?
Takes the upper window’s measurement. This will be
a channel A or B measurement depending on current
window setup
Summary of Contents for E4418B
Page 25: ...prog book chapter1 fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 1 Power Meter Remote Operation ...
Page 138: ...prog book ch2meas fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 2 MEASurement Instructions ...
Page 200: ...prog book ch3calc fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 3 CALCulate Subsystem ...
Page 228: ...prog book ch4cal fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 4 CALibration Subsystem ...
Page 242: ...prog book ch5disp fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 5 DISPlay Subsystem ...
Page 260: ...prog book ch6form fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 6 FORMat Subsystem ...
Page 264: ...prog book ch7mem fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 7 MEMory Subsystem ...
Page 294: ...prog book ch8out fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 8 OUTput Subsystem ...
Page 302: ...prog book ch9sens fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 9 SENSe Subsystem ...
Page 360: ...prog book ch10stat fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 10 STATus Subsystem ...
Page 384: ...prog book ch11syst fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 11 SYSTem Subsystem ...
Page 420: ...prog book ch12trig fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 12 TRIGger Subsystem ...
Page 434: ...prog book ch13unit fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 13 UNIT Subsystem ...
Page 442: ...prog book ch14serv fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 14 SERVice Subsystem ...
Page 452: ...prog book ch15ieee fm 1 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 15 IEEE488 2 Command Reference ...
Page 481: ...prog book progIX doc 6 Mon Feb 15 09 24 37 1999 Index 6 HP E4418B E4419B Programming Guide ...