Forms creation commands, Baseline placement absolute, Text placement absolute – Agilent Technologies N-Series User Manual

Page 44: Forms creation commands -20

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Page

4-23

XES COMMANDS

Forms Creation Commands

This section describes the commands used in the creation of forms. The

unit of measure in forms creation commands is always 1/300", regardless

of the setting determined by the “Units” commands

s

zf and

s

zg.

Some of the commands in this section are dependent upon the orientation

of the page and its point of origin. The following illustrations show the

differences between portrait and landscape orientations. Note that the x

coordinate is always the shorter page dimension, and the y coordinate is

always the longer page dimension. In portrait orientation, the origin is at

the lower left corner of the page. In landscape orientation, the origin is at

the top left corner of the page.

Note: Unlike XES printers, page orientation must first be set correctly for

the XLi to use these commands.

Baseline Placement Absolute

COMMAND:

COMMAND:

COMMAND:

COMMAND:

COMMAND:

s

za#

za#

za#

za#

za#

1

1

1

1

1

,#

,#

,#

,#

,#

2

2

2

2

2

d

text

text

text

text

text

d

RANGE:

RANGE:

RANGE:

RANGE:

RANGE:

See Below

See Below

See Below

See Below

See Below

This command places the baseline of any character of text in any specified

location on the page relative to the page origin, where #

1

is the x (short

edge) coordinate and #

2

is the y (long edge) coordinate. If using a portrait

font, this command is identical to “Text Placement Absolute.” If using a

landscape font, this command uses the bottom left corner of the character

cell as the origin.

Text Placement Absolute

COMMAND:

COMMAND:

COMMAND:

COMMAND:

COMMAND:

s

a#

a#

a#

a#

a#

1

1

1

1

1

,#

,#

,#

,#

,#

2

2

2

2

2

d

text

text

text

text

text

d

RANGE:

RANGE:

RANGE:

RANGE:

RANGE:

See Below

See Below

See Below

See Below

See Below

This command will place text anywhere on the page relative to the page

origin, where #

1

is the x (short edge) coordinate and #

2

is the y (long edge)

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