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Rev 1.0 • 13 Oct 09
4. Configuration
Button Definitions
S
The X-Y destination shown will be the default destination when the panel is in MD “hold”
mode and multiple destinations are selected
—
if a default destination is specified in the
configuration. Otherwise, no destination will be selected.
• Flip-flop source and preset after take.
Swaps the preset source and the currently routed source for this destination after a take.
• Enable force release.
Allows operators to execute a force release.
• Jump back after source selection.
After you make a source selection, the panel reactivates the
default
button page.
• Jump back after destination selection.
After you make a destination selection, the panel reactivates the
default
button page.
S
Jumping back to the default page is usually helpful, but in some configuration designs,
might not be. You can design your panel configuration to take advantage of the jump-back
behavior.
• Src/dst immediate take.
A ‘Src/Dst’ button connects a source to a destination. When this box is checked (as it is in the
default NV9642 configuration) the button performs an immediate take. When the box is clear,
the button sets up the take and the operator must press a ‘Take’ button to complete the take.
Button Definitions
There are four classes of button functions:
• Dedicated functions, such as ‘Default State’ or ‘Chop’.
• Variable functions, such as ‘Category’ or ‘Source’. With this type of button, additional selec-
tions are needed to complete the button configuration.
• Special functions, such as ‘Navigate’ and ‘Back’. These functions allow the panel operator to
move from one button page to another. (The Navigate button is unique: it initiates a dialog in
which you create a subtree.)
• System-generated button functions. These are buttons that are generated dynamically (by the
router control system) during operation. An example of system-generated buttons is a device
list generated when the user presses a category button. The set of devices in a category can
change over time (as the configuration database changes); the NV9642 device list changes also.
The number and names of categories can also change over time and the NV9642 will track
those changes too.
When a device list appears on the panel, the system lights the ‘up’ button so the operator can
easily return to the page containing the category button.
Note
Certain button fields, such as for categories, sources, destinations, or salvos,
contain a colon (:) and number, after the data in the field. The number is the
record ID of the device (or other configuration object) in the NV9000 configu-
ration database. The record IDs can be ignored but might be of some use when
the configurer is searching for items in the configuration database.
Содержание NV9642
Страница 10: ...x Rev 1 0 13 Oct 09 Table of Contents ...
Страница 52: ...42 Rev 1 0 13 Oct 09 4 Configuration Global Navigation ...
Страница 78: ...68 Rev 1 0 13 Oct 09 6 GPIO Configuring Inputs ...
Страница 84: ...74 Rev 1 0 13 Oct 09 7 Technical Details Drawings ...
Страница 90: ...80 Rev 1 0 13 Oct 09 8 Misc Topics Ordering Information ...