Command format used in this manual 112, Command format used in this manual – Agilent Technologies E3632A User Manual

Page 115

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Chapter 4 Remote Interface Reference

An Introduction to the SCPI Language

112

Command Format Used in This Manual

The format used to show commands in this manual is shown below:

CURRent {<current>|MINimum|MAXimum|UP|DOWN}

The command syntax shows most commands (and some parameters) as a

mixture of upper- and lower-case letters. The upper-case letters indicate the

abbreviated spelling for the command. For shorter program lines, send the

abbreviated form. For better program readability, send the long form.

For example, in the above syntax statement,

CURR

and

CURRENT

are both

acceptable forms. You can use upper- or lower-case letters. Therefore,

CURRENT

,

curr

, and

Curr

are all acceptable. Other forms, such as

CUR

and

CURREN

, will generate an error.

Braces

( { } ) enclose the parameter choices for a given command string. The

braces are not sent with the command string.

A

vertical

bar

( | ) separates multiple parameter choices for a given command

string.

Triangle brackets

( < > ) indicate that you must specify a value for the enclosed

parameter. For example, the above syntax statement shows the

current

parameter enclosed in triangle brackets. The brackets are not sent with the

command string. You must specify a value for the parameter (such as ‘‘

CURR

0.1

”).

Some parameters are enclosed in

square brackets

( [ ] ). The brackets indicate

that the parameter is optional and can be omitted. The brackets are not sent

with the command string. If you do not specify a value for an optional

parameter, the power supply chooses a default value.

Some portions of commands are enclosed in square brackets( [ ]). The brackets

indicate that this portion of the command is optional. Most optional portions

of the command are not shown in the command description. For the full

command showing all the options, see ‘‘SCPI Command Summary’’, starting

on page 73.

A

colon

( : ) separates a command keyword from a lower-level keyword. You

must insert a

blank space

to separate a parameter from a command keyword.

If a command requires more than one parameter, you must separate adjacent

parameter using a

comma

as shown below:

‘‘

SOURce:CURRent:TRIGgered

’’

‘‘

APPLy 3.5,1.5

’’

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