Crestron
e-control Vote SW-VOTE
108
••
Appendices
Installation & Reference Guide — DOC. 5822
Req
q,s
Request-to-Speak Console
Description
Tied directly to the request-to-speak button for queue
q
at seat
s
Direction
control system to Voting Computer
Type
Digital
Value
Pulse (the Voting Computer responds to the trailing edge of the signal)
Expected Reply
Req-fb
assert or de-assert; or nothing, depending on the circumstances
The interpretation of this signal by the Voting Computer depends on the states
listed in the following table. Given a certain
Current State,
a pulse of this signal
will transition to the
next state.
The
FB
column refers to the seat’s button
feedback (the
Req-fb
signal, see below); the
Mark
column refers to the mark
shown on the console touchpanel page. Some of these state transitions (actions)
are optional, as per the configuration of the signal block. (See “Request-to-Speak
Console signal blocks: Summary of Seat functions,” page 16.)
Current State
FB
Mark
Next State
FB
Mark
Not yet in queue
O
—
Placed into queue
P
™
(
j
)
WAITING
In queue but not
yet recognized
P
™
(
j
)
WAITING
Removed from
queue
O
—
Has the floor
P
ã
SPEAKING
Yields the floor
O
˜
(
u
)
DONE
Has finished
speaking
O
˜
(
u
)
DONE
Waiting to speak
again
P
k
WAITING
-2
Has the floor again
P
ã
SPEAKING
Yields the floor
O
v
DONE
-2
Not yet recognized
(for the 2
nd
time)
P
k
WAITING
-2
Returned to
previous state
O
u
DONE
Comments
The
s
index varies more frequently. That is, all the
Req
signals are contiguous
within the signal block definition, with all the seats for the first queue appearing
first, followed by all the seats for the second queue,
etc.
For example, with a
console defined with 2 queues and 3 seats, the
Req
signals would appear in the
following order:
Req
1,1
Req
1,2
Req
1,3
Req
2,1
Req
2,2
Req
2,3
Click the signal block in the
Signal Analyzer
window for a visual reference.
See Also
Req-fb