Stat:ques ntr, Stat:ques ptr, System commands – Agilent Technologies 664xA User Manual

Page 44: Syst:err, Stat:ques ntr stat:ques ptr

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44 Language Dictionary

STAT:QUES NTR
STAT:QUES PTR


These commands allow you to set or read the value of the Questionable NTR (Negative-Transition) and PTR (Positive-
Transistion) registers. These registers serve as polarity filters between the Questionable Enable and Questionable Event
registers to cause the following actions:

When a bit of the Questionable NTR register is set to 1, then a 1-to-0 transition of the corresponding bit of the

Questionable Condition register causes that bit in the Questionable Event register to be set.

When a bit of the Questionable PTR register is set to 1, then a 0-to-1 transition of the corresponding bit in the

Questionable Condition register causes that bit in the Questionable Event register to be set.

If the same bits in both NTR and PTR registers are set to 1, then any transition of that bit at the Questionable

Condition register sets the corresponding bit in the Questionable Event register.

If the same bits in both NTR and PTR registers are set to 0, then no transition of that bit at the Questionable

Condition register can set the corresponding bit in the Questionable Event register.

Note

Setting a bit in the PTR or NTR filter can of itself generate positive or negative events in the
corresponding Questionable Event register.

Command Syntax

STATus:QUEStionable:NTRansition <NRf>

STATus:QUEStionable:PTRansition

<NRf>

Parameters

0 to 32727

Suffix

(None)

Default Value

0

Examples

STAT:QUES:NTR 16 STATUS:QUESTIONABLE:PTR 512

Query Syntax

STAT:QUES:NTR? STAT:QUES:PTR?

Returned Parameters

<NR1> (Register value)

Related Commands

STAT:QUES:ENAB

System Commands

SYST:ERR?


This query returns the next error number followed by its corresponding error message string from the remote programming
error queue. The queue is a FIFO (first-in, first-out) buffer that stores errors as they occur. As it is read, each error is
removed from the queue. When all errors have been read, the query returns 0,NO ERROR. If more errors are accumulated
than the queue can hold, the last error in the queue will be -350,TOO MANY ERRORS (see Table 5-1 in "Chapter 5 - Error
Messages" for other error codes).

You can use the power supply front panel

key to read errors from the queue. Errors generated at the front panel are

not put into the queue but appear immediately on the display.

Query Syntax

SYSTem:ERRor?

Parameters

(None)

Returned Parameters

<NRI>,<SRD>

Examples

SYST:ERR? SYSTEM:ERROR?

Related Commands

(None)

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