
Programming
Examples
Example
6:
Using
=MARKER
Use
of
the
=
Marker
(\EQU
A;")
function
is
demonstrated
for
reference
value
,
stimulus
settings
,
and
oset
values
.
This
may
be
very
useful
when
combined
with
marker
searches
.
Use
of
the
4
=MARKER
5
(EQUA; )
function
to
position
the
trace
on
the
display
is
shown
in
the
following
example
.
OUTPUT
Rec;"CHAN2;
LOGM;
MARK1;
MARKMAXI;
REFV;
EQUA;"
This
sequence
selects
channel
2,
selects
the
LOG
MA
G
display
,
moves
the
marker
to
the
maximum
point
on
the
trace
,
then
assigns
the
current
marker
value
to
the
REF
V
ALUE.
In
all
EQUA;
applications
,
the
current
marker
value
becomes
the
value
of
the
current
active
function.
V
alid
functions
for
use
with
EQUA;
are
start,
stop
,
center
,
span,
reference
value
,
electrical
delay
,
phase
oset,
and
the
cuto
frequency
for
waveguide
delay
.
Example
7:
Trace
Data
Output
and
Input
In
this
example
,
the
receiver
measures
a
single
sweep
,
then
outputs
a
201
point
Corrected
Data
array
using
FORM
3.
After
this
,
the
array
of
real
and
imaginary
pairs
is
written
back
to
the
receiver
.
Before
writing
the
data,
the
receiver
is
put
in
Hold
mode
(this
prevents
the
receiver
from
acquiring
new
data
and
over-writing
the
data
being
written
by
the
program).
The
current
data
is
rst
zeroed
(by
re-setting
the
number
of
points
while
in
Hold
mode).
This
forces
the
data
array
to
be
re-allocated
and
be
initially
loaded
with
zeros
(-857
dB).
Then
the
data
is
written.
Example
8:
FORM
1
Data
Conversion
After
taking
a
single
sweep
,
the
receiver
outputs
the
current
data
array
using
FORM
1
output
format.
This
is
the
fastest
form
for
data
transfer
.
The
FORM
1
data
is
then
converted
to
real,imaginary
pairs
,
which
are
then
converted
to
linear
magnitude
,
log
magnitude
and
phase
data.
Example
9:
Using
the
Disc
Drive
The
rst
part
of
this
example
stores
(to
disc)
and
then
loads
(from
disc)
the
instrument
state
,
F
ormatted
and
Raw
data
arrays
,
display
memory
,
and
cal
kit
les
.
The
le
transfer
can
be
done
using
the
receiver's
internal
drive
,
or
a
compatible
external
drive
connected
to
the
receiver's
System
Bus
.
The
program
prompts
the
user
to
choose
which
drive
to
use
(internal
or
external).
In
the
second
part
of
the
example
program,
the
computer
reads
and
displays
the
disc
les
(which
were
stored
in
part
1
of
the
program).
This
is
done
to
show
the
CITIle
format.
A
disc
drive
must
be
connected
to
the
computer
during
this
part
of
the
example
program.
The
receiver
disc
drive
is
very
useful
during
large
tests
because
it
provides
capacity
to
store
instrument
states
,
cal
sets
,
calibration
kits
,
trace
data,
and
other
types
of
data.
Refer
to
the
Disc
menu
in
Chapter
15
for
a
complete
list
of
data
types
.
The
menu
maps
in
the
keyword
dictionary
show
all
disc
functions
and
HP-IB
commands
.
Using
the
Internal
Disc
The
following
example
shows
how
to
store
les
using
the
built-in
disc
drive
.
Store
Instrument
State
1
to
a
le
named
\IS
INST1"
OUTPUT
Rec;"STOR;
INSS1;
DISF
""INST1"";"
Notice
that
you
do
not
have
to
include
the
prex
(IS
).
The
receiver
does
this
automatically
.
HP-IB
Programming
18-21
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